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Syria

Photo Booth

Syria Faces Its Past and Its Future

Images taken just after the precipitous end of the civil war reveal a secret legacy that is just becoming visible.
2024 in Review

The Remarkable Collapse of Iran’s Powerful Alliances

The Islamic Republic is weaker—on multiple fronts—than it’s been in nearly half a century.
The Lede

How the U.S. Can Learn from Its Policy Failures During the Arab Spring

The American Ambassador to Syria at the start of the uprising believes that the U.S. could still help give the Syrians a fighting chance at stable self-governance.
The Lede

Reasons to Leave Syria—and to Return

In one border town, some Syrians were fleeing to Lebanon, as others celebrated Bashar al-Assad’s ouster, or returned from exile in search of the missing.
The Lede

Searching for Loved Ones in a Newly Liberated Syrian Prison

After the fall of Bashar al-Assad, the country tries to discern the fate of people the regime locked away.
Q. & A.

How Assad’s Regime Crumbled

Iran’s weakness, a faltering economy, and new political fissures led to the stunning end of a dynasty.
The Lede

The Fall of Assad’s Syria

In the wake of President Bashar al-Assad’s remarkable abdication of power, jubilation and fear collide as the country—and the region—faces an uncertain future.
Q. & A.

How the Syrian Opposition Shocked the Assad Regime

A historian explains why U.S. sanctions and Iran and Russia’s entanglements in other wars helped create an opening for rebel groups to overrun the Syrian Army.
A Reporter at Large

The Secret Life and Anonymous Death of the Most Prolific War-Crimes Investigator in History

When Mustafa died, in the earthquakes in Turkey, his work in Syria had assisted in the prosecutions of numerous figures in Bashar al-Assad’s regime.
Q. & A.

How Erdoğan Set the Stage for Turkey’s Disastrous Earthquake Response

The authoritarian President has stuffed his government with corrupt and inexperienced loyalists. Can a kneecapped civil society fill the gap?
Dispatch

How Assad Blocked Aid to Syrian Earthquake Victims

In the country’s rebel-held northwest, none of the assistance delivered so far has included rescue equipment.
Annals of Appearances

A Life Begun Amid the Ruins of a Syrian City

A baby rescued from the earthquake’s rubble was named Aya, meaning “a sign of God’s existence.” But what is the life ahead of her?
As Told To

“I Owe Turkey, Because I Was a Refugee”: A Young Syrian on the Earthquake’s Devastation

A first-person account from Serbest Salih, a twenty-eight-year-old photographer in a border city.
Daily Comment

Turkey’s Earthquake Response Is as Political as the Conditions That Increased The Devastation

The ethnic minorities and refugees leading the community response in Turkey already knew not to rely on the government.
Photo Booth

A Syrian Photographer’s Gift to Refugee Children

After fleeing his native country for Turkey, Serbest Salih created a mobile darkroom and went on the road teaching kids to make pictures.
Q. & A.

Reëxamining Putin’s Military Interventions in the Middle East

Can Russia’s conduct in Syria and Libya predict what’s in store for Ukraine?
Daily Comment

Ties with Russia Compromise Israel’s Stance on Ukraine

Putin’s invasion raises questions about whether protecting Jewish national interests eclipses democratic solidarity.
Daily Comment

ISIS After the American Strike

For an indication of the terrorist group’s future, look to its recent past.
Daily Comment

ISIS Loses Its Leader as Biden Navigates Global Crises

Hajji Abdullah is the latest jihadi leader eliminated in a U.S. raid, but the President still faces challenges in Russia, China, and Iran, as well as the pandemic. 
Annals of a Warming Planet

A Syrian Seed Bank’s Fight to Survive

Scientists have raced to safeguard a newly precious resource: plants that can thrive in a changing climate.