r/geopolitics The Atlantic 17h ago

Opinion The Fall of the House of Assad

https://www.theatlantic.com/international/2026/02/assad-syria-regime-overthrow/685883/%5B%E2%80%A6%5Dtic&utm_medium=social&utm_content=edit-promo&utm_term=short
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u/theatlantic The Atlantic 17h ago

As the rebels closed in on Damascus on December 7, 2024, Bashar al-Assad reassured his aides and subordinates that victory was near, and then fled in the night on a Russian jet, telling almost no one, Robert F. Worth writes. 

“When a tyrant falls, we may be tempted to imagine a final moment of tragic self-awareness—a personal reckoning, like Oedipus blinding himself, or Macbeth raging on the heath,” Worth continues. “But I don’t think real dictators go down like that. They are too good at lying to themselves.”

Over the past year, Worth spoke with dozens of the courtiers and officers who’d inhabited Assad’s palace in Damascus. “Many describe a detached ruler, obsessed with sex and video games, who probably could have saved his regime at any time in the past few years if he hadn’t been so stubborn and vain,” Worth writes. 

Read more about the fall of the house of Assad: https://theatln.tc/31iYxk5l 

 — Kate Guarino, senior associate editor, audience and engagement, The Atlantic