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Life inside Syria’s al-Hol camp
Photo by DELIL SOULEIMAN/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Life inside Syria’s al-Hol camp

    After the fall of ISIS in 2019, many relatives of fighters who were detained or killed, including 10,000 families of foreign fighters, were housed in camps like Roj and al-Hol in territory controlled by the Syrian Democratic Forces. Like any closed society, the foreigners’ annex in al-Hol has its own dynamic and life there is much more complicated than is often portrayed.

    July 9, 2020

    Iran’s influence in Afghanistan
    Photo by WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s influence in Afghanistan

    Despite strong religious and cultural ties and a long shared border, Iran has a somewhat complicated relationship with Afghanistan. Since the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan some four decades ago, Iran’s attempts to preserve its interests in conflict-ridden Afghanistan have not received much attention from the outside world, but it remains one of the most important neighboring countries for Tehran’s foreign policy.

    June 23, 2020

    Is Ahmad al-Oda winning the “hearts and minds” of Daraa’s people?
    Photo courtesy of the author
  • Analysis
  • Is Ahmad al-Oda winning the “hearts and minds” of Daraa’s people?

    On June 20 a bus carrying soldiers from the Eighth Brigade of the Fifth Corps, travelling from Latakia to Busra al-Sham, hit a roadside IED near the town of Kahil in eastern Daraa, leaving nine dead and 13 injured. The following day, the funeral for the nine soldiers who died in the IED attack quickly turned into the largest protest Daraa has seen since 2018, including both Eighth Brigade fighters and hundreds of civilians from several nearby areas.

    Syria: The Caesar Act takes effect amid unprecedented economic turmoil
    Photo by LOUAI BESHARA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Syria: The Caesar Act takes effect amid unprecedented economic turmoil

    While the regime and its allies have cast the current crisis as the result of Western sanctions, Syria’s economic troubles are largely due to the regime’s “Assad or we burn the country” policies.

    June 22, 2020

    The Syrian Regime’s Combat Losses in Spring 2020, and What Lies Ahead
    Photo by AAREF WATAD/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • The Syrian Regime’s Combat Losses in Spring 2020, and What Lies Ahead

    After a brief but deadly Turkish offensive in Idlib, a new phase of the Syria war began on March 5 with the signing of a Turkish-Russian cease-fire deal. Reported deaths dropped drastically following the cease-fire, and this spring has been defined by the slow attrition of pro-regime forces due to the two ingoing insurgencies in south and central Syria and the two frozen frontlines in the northwest and northeast.

    June 19, 2020

    Syrians respond to COVID-19 with renewed volunteer and community efforts
    Photo by AAREF WATAD/AFP via Getty Images
  • Analysis
  • Syrians respond to COVID-19 with renewed volunteer and community efforts

    With an economy already on the brink of collapse and a shocking devaluation of the Syrian pound — hitting 3,175 pounds to the dollar earlier this month — the COVID-19 pandemic has come at an exceptionally dangerous time in Syria.

    June 17, 2020

    New sanctions won’t move Assad
    Photo by LOUAI BESHARA/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • New sanctions won’t move Assad

    The administration hopes additional economic pressure will compel Damascus to take a series of political gestures, including releasing political prisoners and establishing an accountability process for the atrocities its forces committed.

    Disarray in Pakistan’s health crisis
    Photo by FAROOQ NAEEM/AFP via Getty Images
  • Commentary
  • Disarray in Pakistan’s health crisis

    Mainly at issue for the country is the difficult choice of whether to prioritize saving lives or saving the economy for a Pakistan that can ill afford to ignore either.