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Syria

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28 November 2024

The Syrian regime and, in particular, the Asad clan has managed to survive the Arab uprisings, recover lost territory, and retain its authority over state institutions and diplomatic missions outside of the country. Syria’s foreign policy, as developed under former president Hafez al-Asad, has effectively enabled the current regime’s survival.
Neil Quilliam examines how Syria, a country that operates at the margins of the international political system, has been able to project its power beyond its size and capability by leveraging relations with key states that typically oppose US policy in the region. He explains how Syria’s relations with its major partners, including Russia and China and regional actors like Iran, are key to sustaining the regime and securing its survival. But this has come at a price. In a compelling analysis Quilliam shows that by effectively mortgaging the state to Russia and Iran, Bashar al-Asad has severely limited his margin for manoeuvre in the future. The book offers an insightful and balanced analysis of both the continuity and change within the Syrian state and the threat it poses in its regional context and the persistent challenge it presents to the international community.

POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, International relations, Geopolitics

Neil Quilliam has produced one of the most readable and analytically-rich studies of modern Syria to date. Using a wide analytical lens, he takes the reader on a journey that perfectly contextualizes the longevity of the Asad dynasty. He not only ably provides an explanation for the regime’s survival strategy but also explains in detail Asad’s carefully crafted regional and international relationships to shield it from pressure. Successfully securing readmission into the Arab League, despite over a decade of regional isolations and civil strife, provides the final example of this brutal regime’s survival strategy, which rightly forms the subtitle of this outstanding book.
Introduction
1. Syria and World Order
2. The Assad regime: a study in survival
3. From Arab uprising to civil war
4. Russia's ally or Putin's poodle?
5. Iran and regional relations
6. The limits of Western interest
Conclusion