Toronto Star

Gen. Soleimani ruthlessly transforme­d Syria’s civil war in Assad’s favour

- SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT— When Syrian President Bashar Assad made a rare visit to Tehran last year, the powerful Revolution­ary Guard commander Qassem Soleimani was there to greet him, along with Iran’s supreme leader and president. Iran’s foreign minister wasn’t, and he resigned in protest at being excluded from talks with a crucial ally.

It was a telling episode on who controls Iran’s policy in Syria.

Iran’s frontman in Syria since 2011, Soleimani helped turn the tide in the now nearly nine-year-old civil war, intervenin­g to save Assad as armed rebels neared the capital, Damascus, and seized key cities. He welded together Shiite militias from across the region to back Syria’s military and waged sieges that captured back territory, wreaked destructio­n and prevented the collapse of Assad’s state.

His killing in a U.S. airstrike in Iraq is likely to rattle thousands of Iranianbac­ked fighters in Syria. The networks of militias he set up will remain in place, and Syria is likely to become a scene for confrontat­ion with hundreds of U.S. troops stationed there.

The Iranian-backed militias are scattered all over Syria, including near civilians and some near American positions, said Danny Makki, a Syria analyst based in Britain. If the U.S.-Iranian conflict escalates the U.S. or Israel could strike the militias, or the Iranian-backed fighters could attack American positions, which are in the eastern part of Syria, including near Kurdish-controlled oilfields that Damascus is eager to regain.

“The battlegrou­nd will be Syria and Iraq,” Makki said. “It could go bad on multiple levels.”

(Iran and the U.S. appeared to be standing down for the moment after missiles hit two U.S. bases in Iraq but didn’t cause casualties.)

Soleiman’s killing could also have a resounding knock-on effect in Syria. If Baghdad forces U.S. troops to leave Iraq in protest, U.S. soldiers in Syria would lose a vital logistics and supply line and would likely have to pull out as well. That would leave the Americans’ ally, the Syrian Kurds, vulnerable. Iraq’s par

“The loss of Soleimani … will be a big blow for Syria and Iran on a policy level and in terms of regional clout.”

DANNY MAKKI SYRIA ANALYST

liament on Sunday demanded U.S. troops leave, but it is not immediatel­y clear if the government will carry out the threat.

Soleimani, known simply as the General, transforme­d Iran’s traditiona­l role of supporting proxies focused on challengin­g western influence to forging paramilita­ry forces that could prop up a ruler and a traditiona­l army.

He led Iran’s interventi­on in Syria when it became clear to Tehran, early on in the war, that its only state ally in the region was on the verge of collapse. That would have endangered a vital hub for Tehran: Assad’s state provided access to Iran’s most important and profession­al militia ally, Lebanon’s Hezbollah, gave depth and protection to its influence in Iraq and put Iranian influence on the border with Israel.

Soleimani, at the head of the Revolution­ary Guards’ Quds Force, brought in and organized thousands of Shiite militiamen from Lebanon, Iraq, Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Iran to back Assad’s overstretc­hed military, providing firepower and skills. He reorganize­d Syria’s own various paramilita­ry groups into one force, injecting discipline­d fighters into the otherwise drained troops.

It was also Soleimani who negotiated joint military operations with Russia in 2015, two months before Russia began its airstrikes in Syria. In April 2016, Russia carried out airstrikes inside Syria from Iran, the first time a foreign state operated inside Iran since the Second World War, according to the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

Soleimani set battlefiel­d priorities, wresting strategic areas from opposition control one by one. An early objective was Qusayr, a town near the Lebanese border key to supply lines with Hezbollah, then central cities and suburbs around Damascus and a top prize, Syria’s largest city, Aleppo. When Aleppo was fully recaptured in 2016, it was Soleimani, not Assad, who visited the city.

At home in Iran, he may have been seen as a war hero fighting extremists, but his opponents say he introduced some of the most brutal tactics of the Syrian war, particular­ly the use of long, devastatin­g sieges of populated areas that strangled civilians and clawed back territory until resistance collapsed. The tactic killed or displaced hundreds of thousands and left urban areas in ruins. Moreover, pitting Shiite militias against the largely Sunni opposition deepened the war’s sectarian nature and fuelled atrocities.

“He was the godfather of demographi­c change in Syria … His hallmarks are on every massacre that happened in an area cleared of its people, starting from Homs, Ghouta, Daraa and Aleppo,” said Tarek Muharram, an opposition fighter from Aleppo who fought against Iranianbac­ked militias. “Those tactics won’t change much after he dies,” said Abdul-Salam AbdulRazek, a defecting Syrian army officer who also fought against Soleimani’s militias.

Displaced Syrians celebrated Soleimani’s killing, distributi­ng sweets or shouting thanks to U.S. President Donald Trump. In one of the last opposition­held cities in northern Syria, men danced and sang.

“We woke up to the best news,” said Jamil Andani, a displaced man in Idlib. Soleimani “made us suffer. He was our worst enemy.”

For Assad and his forces, Soleimani was a saviour. Eulogizing Soleimani, Assad said he left “clear marks in his victories against terrorist groups” in Syria.

The question now is how much impact Soleimani’s death will have on the forces he led. Besides his skill as a strategist and tactician, Soleimani was a powerful presence in the field, often showing up in operations rooms to direct fighting or at front lines to boost morale.

“The Syrian-Iranian alliance will continue, that’s for sure,” Makki said. “But the loss of Soleimani, the mastermind of so many victories, plans and strategies, will be a big blow for Syria and Iran on a policy level and in terms of regional clout.”

Assad said the tactics used by the general will only grow and be entrenched in the men he trained. Reflecting concerns over the effect of Soleimani’s killing, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah said advances made in Syria should not stall.

“No one should be shaken or worry or be afraid,” Nasrallah said Sunday. “We should continue the path firmly toward victory.“

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Qassem Soleimani transforme­d Iran’s traditiona­l role of supporting proxies focused on challengin­g western influence to forging paramilita­ry forces.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Qassem Soleimani transforme­d Iran’s traditiona­l role of supporting proxies focused on challengin­g western influence to forging paramilita­ry forces.

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