
What's next for Syria after Assad, with Beirut-based journalist and author Kim Ghattas
After 14 years of brutal civil war and, recently, a largely frozen conflict, Syria's regime fell this week like a house of cards. So what comes next? Middle East expert and Beirut-based journalist Kim Ghattas joins Ian Bremmer on the GZERO World Podcast to help make sense of these shocking past few weeks and the potential power vacuum to come.
GZERO World with Ian Bremmer · ian bremmer, kim ghattas
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Show Notes
How did Syria’s government rule with an iron fist for five decades, only to collapse in two weeks? And after 14 years of bloody civil war, why was now the moment that a frozen war exploded into the global spotlight? The cost Syrians have already paid is greater than any nation could reasonably be expected to bear. Since 2011, more than 500,000 Syrians have died, including 200,000 civilians, and nearly six million refugees flooded neighboring Arab States and some European nations, most notably Germany.
But what comes next? Nature abhors a vacuum, and so does geopolitics. Iran, Russia, Israel, the Gulf states, and the United States all have vested interests in Syria's future, a country that this week's GZERO World with Ian Bremmer Podcast guest calls "the crown jewel" of proxy influence in the Middle East. Here to help make sense of these shocking past few weeks and the potential power vacuum to come is Kim Ghattas, a contributing editor at the Financial Times and author of Black Wave.
Host: Ian Bremmer
Guest: Kim Ghattas
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