Syrian President Bashar Assad has fled the
country after a coalition of rebel groups stormed Damascus, ending his
family’s five-decade rule over the Arab Republic, Reuters reported on Sunday morning.
Syria’s army command notified officers on
Sunday that the regime had fallen, an officer who was informed of the
move told the press agency.
Syrian Air plane took off from Damascus International Airport as the capital was being taken by the rebels. Reuters said it could not immediately ascertain the destination or who was on board.
Rebel fighters declared the capital
“liberated” in a televised statement carried on state television on
Sunday. “Damascus has been liberated, and the tyrant Bashar al-Assad
has been overthrown,” a spokesman stated, adding that “prisoners in
regime prisons have been released.”
“We ask people and fighters to protect all
property in Free Syria,” added the rebel spokesman. “Long live Syria
free for all Syrians of all sects.”
Footage verified by CNN showed rebel fighters entering the presidential palace in Damascus on Sunday morning, firing in the air in celebration.
U.S. National Security Advisor Jake
Sullivan told reporters on Saturday Assad had been largely abandoned by
his key allies, Russia and Iran.
Assad’s brutal and repressive reign left
his government vulnerable and the people of Syria “fed up,” said
Sullivan. At the same time, the wars in Ukraine and Lebanon had robbed
Assad of his allies’ backing, he added.
On Friday, The Wall Street Journal reported
that Assad remained in the country, though Egypt and Jordan had urged
the dictator, who took over from his father in 2000, to flee and
announce a government in exile.
Syria’s Arab Socialist Baath Party came to
power in a 1963 coup. In 1970, Hafez Assad seized power in an internal
party coup. Following his father’s death in 2000, Bashar Assad inherited
control of the regime.
After the Syrian president in August 2013
launched a chemical attack on his own citizens, killing more than 1,000,
then-U.S. President Barack Obama failed to enforce a “red line” set the
year prior. The government in Damascus proceeded to gas thousands of
Syrian civilians to death.
Government resistance appeared to be
crumbling elsewhere as well on Friday, with U.S.-backed Kurds taking the
city of Deir al-Zour in the east and rebel uprisings around Daraa
province near the border with Israel.
On Nov. 30, opposition forces stormed the
Iranian consulate in Aleppo as part of their advance into the city,
Tehran’s Foreign Ministry said at the time, after footage on social
media showed fighters in the building.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi
claimed late last month that the surprise offensive was part of “a plot
by the Israeli regime and the U.S. to undermine regional security,”
Iran’s IRNA broadcaster reported.
Syrian experts told Fox News on Sunday that Hayat Tahrir al-Sham seeks to impose a “Talibanesque society with a few tweaks.”
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