The Denver Post

The M5 highway is Bashar Assad’s road to victory.

- By Zeina Karam Aaref Watad, AFP/Getty Images

It is one of the most coveted prizes in Syria’s civil war, and after eight years of fighting, Syrian President Bashar Assad has got it back.

The Damascus-Aleppo highway, or the M5, is known to Syrians simply as the “Internatio­nal Road.” Cutting through all of Syria’s major cities, the motorway is key to who controls the country.

Assad gradually lost control over the motorway from 2012, when various rebel groups fighting to topple him began seizing parts of the country.

Protests against his family’s rule had erupted the year before amid a wave of uprisings in the Arab world. This soon turned into a civil war, after a brutal government crackdown on dissent and the interventi­on of foreign powers in the growing conflict.

Historical­ly a bustling trade route, one Syrian analyst, Taleb Ibrahim, called the M5 “the most basic and strategic highway in the Middle East.”

For the Turkey-backed rebels fighting Assad, the motorway was a cornerston­e in holding together their territory and keeping government forces at bay. Its loss marks a mortal blow for opposition fighters whose hold on their last patches of ground in northweste­rn Syria is looking more and more precarious.

The M5 is a strategic highway that starts in southern Syria, near the border with Jordan, and runs all the way north to the city of Aleppo near the Turkish border.

The 280-mile highway links the country’s four largest cities and population centers: Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo, cutting through Idlib province.

Before the war, the M5 motorway served as an economic artery for Syria — mainly feeding the country’s industrial hub of Aleppo.

Experts estimate the road carried business worth $25 million a day at the height of Syria’s trade boom before the war.

The highway was a passageway for the crossing of wheat and cotton from the Syrian east and north to the rest of the country. It was also a road used for the exchange of commoditie­s with regional trade partners

such as Jordan, Saudi Arabia and other Arab states, as well as Turkey.

Regaining control over the highway has been a top priority of the Assad govern

ment since the early days of the war.

Its slow and tortuous recovery, in many ways, traces the arc of the Syrian war, which has killed nearly half a million people and uprooted half the country’s pre-war population.

The Syrian government began winning back segments of the highway, starting in 2014. That’s when Russia joined the war on the side of Assad and essentiall­y tipped it in his favor.

Towns and cities along parts of the highway, including in the Ghouta region and in the suburbs of Damascus, now lie in ruins after long sieges and incessant bombardmen­t forced them into submission. The Russian-backed recapture of Aleppo in December 2016 was another game-changer.

Under a September 2018 agreement between Russia and Turkey, the M5 and M4 highways were supposed to be open for traffic, linking the government’s stronghold on the coast with Aleppo before the end of that year. That never happened, as insurgents refused to move away and allow joint Russian-Turkish patrols to protect the traffic there.

That eventually led to the latest government offensive in Idlib, the last rebel-held bastion in the country.

Government troops backed by Russia carried out several major advances in Idlib, retaking towns and villages on both sides of the motorway. The capture of Khan Sheikhoun was the first major breakthrou­gh, followed by Maaret al-Numan and Saraqeb, on the intersecti­on between the M4 and M5.

This week, Syrian troops recaptured the last rebel-controlled section of the highway around Khan al-Assal. That brought the road under the full control of Assad’s forces for the first time since 2012.

The victory statement came not from the Syrian government, but from Russia’s defense ministry. It said in a statement Wednesday that “Syria’s most important transport artery” had been “freed” from rebel control.

 ?? Omar Haj Kadour, AFP/Getty Images ?? An aerial view shows the M5 highway running through Maaret al-Naasan, in Syria’s Idlib province, and the damage done during a weeks-long offensive by regime forces in the country’s last major rebel bastion.
Omar Haj Kadour, AFP/Getty Images An aerial view shows the M5 highway running through Maaret al-Naasan, in Syria’s Idlib province, and the damage done during a weeks-long offensive by regime forces in the country’s last major rebel bastion.
 ??  ?? Syrian Saleh al-Sheikh kisses the gate of his house as he prepares to flee the regime’s recent offensive in Idlib.
Syrian Saleh al-Sheikh kisses the gate of his house as he prepares to flee the regime’s recent offensive in Idlib.
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