Photo: Sasha Mordovets, Getty Images
Take a closer look back at how the Islamic State rose to power.
Bashar al-Assad is pictured in this file photo.
Take a closer look back at how the Islamic State rose to power.
Bashar al-Assad is pictured in this file photo.
Photo: Sasha Mordovets, Getty Images
Here's a look at the evolution of the Islamic State group, its atrocities and the world's response to the extremists.
Here's a look at the evolution of the Islamic State group, its atrocities and the world's response to the extremists.
November 13, 2015
129 people were killed in Paris during a coordinated attack planned by Islamic State involving multiple attackers, automatic weapons and multiple suicide bombs.
November 13, 2015
129 people were killed in Paris during a coordinated attack planned by Islamic State involving multiple attackers, automatic weapons and multiple suicide bombs.
Photo: KENZO TRIBOUILLARD, Staff / AFP / Getty Images
Nov. 13, 2015
U.S. officials overnight say they launched a drone strike targeting Jihadi John. Emwazi's status isn't immediately unclear.
Nov. 13, 2015
U.S. officials overnight say they launched a drone strike targeting Jihadi John. Emwazi's status isn't immediately unclear.
Photo: HO / AFP / Getty Images
Nov. 12, 2015
Kurdish Iraqi fighters launch a long-awaited offensive to retake the strategic town of Sinjar from the IS, severing a militant supply line. Islamic State militants also claim a nighttime bombing in Beirut killing at least 43 people.
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Nov. 12, 2015
Kurdish Iraqi fighters launch a long-awaited offensive to retake the strategic town of Sinjar from the IS, severing a militant supply line. Islamic State militants also claim a nighttime bombing in
... more Photo: Anadolu Agency, Getty Images
Oct. 31, 2015
A Russian passenger plane crashes in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, killing 224 people. An IS affiliate claims responsibility. U.S. and British officials later say it's likely a bomb brought the plane down.
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Oct. 31, 2015
A Russian passenger plane crashes in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, killing 224 people. An IS affiliate claims responsibility. U.S. and British officials later say it's likely a bomb brought the plane
... more Photo: Maxim Grigoriev, Associated Press
Sept. 30, 2015
Russia, an ally of Syria's embattled president, begins airstrikes it says target the Islamic State group and other extremists in Syria. The West maintains the campaign is bolstering Assad against his foes.
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Sept. 30, 2015
Russia, an ally of Syria's embattled president, begins airstrikes it says target the Islamic State group and other extremists in Syria. The West maintains the campaign is bolstering Assad against
... more Photo: Ho, AFP / Getty Images
Aug. 5, 2015
An affiliate of the Islamic State group threatens to kill Croatian hostage Tomislav Salopek in 48 hours unless Egypt releases "Muslim women" it holds in prison.
Aug. 12
Salopek was executed
Sept. 10
The Islamic State group claims to hold Norwegian Ole Johan Grimsgaard-Ofstad and Chinese consultant Fan Jinghui as hostages and demands a ransom for their release. less
Aug. 5, 2015
An affiliate of the Islamic State group threatens to kill Croatian hostage Tomislav Salopek in 48 hours unless Egypt releases "Muslim women" it holds in prison.
Aug. 12
Salopek was executed
Sept. ... more
Photo: Uncredited, Associated Press
July 23, 2015
Turkey agrees to let the United States launch airstrikes against the Islamic State group from its strategic Incirlik Air Base. Turkey later begins striking Islamic State targets in Syria, as well as Kurdish forces it considers a threat.
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July 23, 2015
Turkey agrees to let the United States launch airstrikes against the Islamic State group from its strategic Incirlik Air Base. Turkey later begins striking Islamic State targets in Syria, as well
... more Photo: Vadim Ghirda, STR
June 16, 2015
Kurds take the crucial Syrian border town of Tal Abyad from the Islamic State group.
June 16, 2015
Kurds take the crucial Syrian border town of Tal Abyad from the Islamic State group.
Photo: Lefteris Pitarakis, Associated Press
May 17, 2015
The contested Iraqi city of Ramadi falls to the Islamic State group as Iraqi forces abandon their weapons and armored vehicles and flee, despite intensified U.S.-led airstrikes.
May 17, 2015
The contested Iraqi city of Ramadi falls to the Islamic State group as Iraqi forces abandon their weapons and armored vehicles and flee, despite intensified U.S.-led airstrikes.
Photo: Uncredited
April 19, 2015
Islamic State affiliates in Libya release a video showing them behead and shoot dead groups of Ethiopian Christians, slayings resembling the February beheadings of the Egyptian Coptic Christians.
April 19, 2015
Islamic State affiliates in Libya release a video showing them behead and shoot dead groups of Ethiopian Christians, slayings resembling the February beheadings of the Egyptian Coptic Christians.
Photo: Uncredited, Associated Press
April 18, 2015
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani blames the Islamic State group for a suicide bombing in the country that kills at least 35 people and wounds 125.
April 18, 2015
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani blames the Islamic State group for a suicide bombing in the country that kills at least 35 people and wounds 125.
Photo: Massoud Hossaini, STF
April 1, 2015
Iraq declares a "magnificent victory" over the Islamic State group in Tikrit, its biggest gain yet against the militants.
April 1, 2015
Iraq declares a "magnificent victory" over the Islamic State group in Tikrit, its biggest gain yet against the militants.
Photo: Ahmad Al-rubaye, AFP / Getty Images
March 25, 2015
The U.S.-led coalition begins airstrikes on Tikrit after Iraqi efforts to take the city stall. Shiite militias pull out of Iraqi forces in protest, but later rejoin the offensive.
March 25, 2015
The U.S.-led coalition begins airstrikes on Tikrit after Iraqi efforts to take the city stall. Shiite militias pull out of Iraqi forces in protest, but later rejoin the offensive.
Photo: Khalid Mohammed, AP
March 20, 2015
An emerging IS affiliate in Yemen claims a series of suicide bombings killing 137 people and wounding 345. A Saudi-led war in Yemen against Shiite rebels there slowly draws away Arab support for the U.S. anti-IS campaign.
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March 20, 2015
An emerging IS affiliate in Yemen claims a series of suicide bombings killing 137 people and wounding 345. A Saudi-led war in Yemen against Shiite rebels there slowly draws away Arab support for
... more Photo: Uncredited, Associated Press
March 11, 2015
Iraqi troops and allied Shiite militiamen enter the Islamic State-held city of Tikrit, backed by Iranian advisers and forgoing the air support of the U.S.-led coalition.
March 11, 2015
Iraqi troops and allied Shiite militiamen enter the Islamic State-held city of Tikrit, backed by Iranian advisers and forgoing the air support of the U.S.-led coalition.
Photo: AP
Feb. 16, 2015
Egypt launches airstrikes in Libya in retaliation for the beheadings.
Feb. 16, 2015
Egypt launches airstrikes in Libya in retaliation for the beheadings.
Photo: Uncredited, AP
Feb. 15
Libyan militants who earlier pledged their loyalty to the Islamic State group behead a group of Coptic Christians from Egypt in an online video.
Feb. 15
Libyan militants who earlier pledged their loyalty to the Islamic State group behead a group of Coptic Christians from Egypt in an online video.
Photo: AP
Feb. 15, 2015.
Libyan militants who earlier pledged their loyalty to the Islamic State group behead a group of Coptic Christians from Egypt in an online video.
Feb. 15, 2015.
Libyan militants who earlier pledged their loyalty to the Islamic State group behead a group of Coptic Christians from Egypt in an online video.
Photo: Hassan Ammar, AP
Feb. 6, 2015
The Islamic State group claims a Jordanian airstrike kills American hostage Kayla Jean Mueller. U.S. officials later confirm her death, but say it wasn't caused by a Jordanian airstrike.
Feb. 6, 2015
The Islamic State group claims a Jordanian airstrike kills American hostage Kayla Jean Mueller. U.S. officials later confirm her death, but say it wasn't caused by a Jordanian airstrike.
Photo: Jo. L. Keener, AP
Feb. 3, 2015
The Islamic State group releases a video of it burning al-Kaseasbeh to death in a cage, sparking outrage in Jordan, which launches new strikes targeting the militants.
Feb. 3, 2015
The Islamic State group releases a video of it burning al-Kaseasbeh to death in a cage, sparking outrage in Jordan, which launches new strikes targeting the militants.
Photo: Nasser Nasser, AP
Jan. 31
The Islamic State group releases video saying it beheaded Goto.
Jan. 31
The Islamic State group releases video saying it beheaded Goto.
Photo: Reportr By Independent Press And Pacific Bridge Media & Consulting, AP
Jan. 26, 2015
Kurdish fighters take control of the Syrian border town of Kobani near Turkey after fighting the Islamic State group for months. U.S.-led airstrikes helped turn the tide for the Kurds.
Jan. 26, 2015
Kurdish fighters take control of the Syrian border town of Kobani near Turkey after fighting the Islamic State group for months. U.S.-led airstrikes helped turn the tide for the Kurds.
Photo: Jake Simkin, AP
Jan. 24, 2015
A message claims the Islamic State group beheads Japanese hostage Haruna Yukawa, right, a 42-year-old adventurer, after earlier demanding $200 million for him and captive Japanese journalist Kenji Goto. Japanese and Jordanian officials attempt to negotiate a prisoner swap to free him and captured Jordanian pilot 1st Lt. Mu'ath al-Kaseasbeh.
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Jan. 24, 2015
A message claims the Islamic State group beheads Japanese hostage Haruna Yukawa, right, a 42-year-old adventurer, after earlier demanding $200 million for him and captive Japanese journalist Kenji
... more Photo: HONS
Jan. 10, 2015
An online video shows Taliban fighters in Pakistan pledge loyalty to the Islamic State group and behead a man they identify as a soldier. Similar pledges previously arose from Egypt, Yemen and elsewhere in the Mideast. Afghan authorities later acknowledge a similar presence in their country.
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Jan. 10, 2015
An online video shows Taliban fighters in Pakistan pledge loyalty to the Islamic State group and behead a man they identify as a soldier. Similar pledges previously arose from Egypt, Yemen and
... more Photo: Ishtiaq Mahsud, Associated Press
Nov. 16, 2014
An Islamic State group video shows extremists behead a dozen Syrian soldiers and U.S. aid worker Peter Kassig.
Nov. 16, 2014
An Islamic State group video shows extremists behead a dozen Syrian soldiers and U.S. aid worker Peter Kassig.
Photo: HANDOUT
Nov. 8, 2014
Iraqi officials say al-Baghdadi is wounded in an airstrike on an Iraqi town near the Syrian border. Days later, an online audio message purportedly from al-Baghdadi urges his followers to "explode the volcanoes of jihad everywhere."
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Nov. 8, 2014
Iraqi officials say al-Baghdadi is wounded in an airstrike on an Iraqi town near the Syrian border. Days later, an online audio message purportedly from al-Baghdadi urges his followers to "explode
... more Photo: Hasan Jamali, AP
Oct. 3, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead British hostage Alan Henning.
Oct. 3, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead British hostage Alan Henning.
Photo: Family Handout, HONS
Sept. 13, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead British aid worker David Haines.
Sept. 13, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead British aid worker David Haines.
Photo: Associated Press
Sept. 2, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead American-Israeli journalist Steven Sotloff.
Sept. 2, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead American-Israeli journalist Steven Sotloff.
Photo: HO, Handout
Aug. 19, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead James Foley, a 40-year-old journalist from Rochester, New Hampshire, in response to the U.S.-led airstrikes. This marks the first of many videos showing militants behead Western captives.
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Aug. 19, 2014
The Islamic State group releases a video showing a jihadi behead James Foley, a 40-year-old journalist from Rochester, New Hampshire, in response to the U.S.-led airstrikes. This marks the first of
... more Photo: Nicole Tung, AP
Aug. 8, 2014
The U.S. begins targeting the Islamic State group with airstrikes, citing the humanitarian plight of Iraq's minorities, like the Yazidi.
Aug. 8, 2014
The U.S. begins targeting the Islamic State group with airstrikes, citing the humanitarian plight of Iraq's minorities, like the Yazidi.
Photo: Tech. Sgt. Russ Scalf, HOPD
June 29, 2014
The group declares the establishment of an Islamic state, or caliphate, in territories it controls in Iraq and Syria and demands allegiance from Muslims worldwide. It declares al-Baghdadi the leader of the new caliphate. The militants rename themselves the Islamic State group.
July 5, 2014
A man purporting to be al-Baghdadi makes his first public appearance, delivering a sermon at a mosque in Mosul.
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June 29, 2014
The group declares the establishment of an Islamic state, or caliphate, in territories it controls in Iraq and Syria and demands allegiance from Muslims worldwide. It declares al-Baghdadi the
... more Photo: Uncredited, Associated Press
June 10, 2014
Al-Baghdadi's fighters take over Iraq's second-largest city of Mosul, followed by Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit and smaller communities in the Sunni heartland as government forces melt away.
June 10, 2014
Al-Baghdadi's fighters take over Iraq's second-largest city of Mosul, followed by Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit and smaller communities in the Sunni heartland as government forces melt away.
Photo: Uncredited, AP
Early February 2014
Al-Qaida breaks with al-Baghdadi's group, now known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Al-Baghdadi ignores al-Qaida as his group now has control of wide regions of Syria, including the city of Raqqa, which becomes the group's de facto capital.
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Early February 2014
Al-Qaida breaks with al-Baghdadi's group, now known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Al-Baghdadi ignores al-Qaida as his group now has control of wide regions of Syria, including
... more Photo: Uncredited, AP
January 2014
Al-Baghdadi's forces sweep into Ramadi and Fallujah in Iraq's Anbar province, which Iraqi security forces had abandoned weeks earlier. That came after security forces killed demonstrators during a Sunni protest, effectively turning the unrest into an uprising.
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January 2014
Al-Baghdadi's forces sweep into Ramadi and Fallujah in Iraq's Anbar province, which Iraqi security forces had abandoned weeks earlier. That came after security forces killed demonstrators during a
... more Photo: Uncredited, AP
July 2013
A military-style assault by al-Baghdadi's fighters on two Baghdad-area prisons free more than 500 inmates.
July 2013
A military-style assault by al-Baghdadi's fighters on two Baghdad-area prisons free more than 500 inmates.
Photo: Karim Kadim, AP
April 2013
Al-Baghdadi announces his group has taken over the Nusra Front, the al-Qaida affiliate in Syria. Nusra denies the takeover, sparking anger and infighting that continues to this day.
April 2013
Al-Baghdadi announces his group has taken over the Nusra Front, the al-Qaida affiliate in Syria. Nusra denies the takeover, sparking anger and infighting that continues to this day.
Photo: Anonymous, HOPD
Oct. 4, 2011
The U.S. puts a $10 million bounty on al-Baghdadi's head over a series of attacks he orchestrated.
July 21, 2012
In his first purported online message, al-Baghdadi promises to regain lost ground in Iraq and calls on militants to "chase and liquidate the judges, the investigators and the guards." Within days, his group begins a campaign of attacks, car bombings and other assaults killing hundreds. He also mentions Syria, in the grips of a civil war pitting largely Sunni rebels against embattled President Bashar Assad. By this time, al-Baghdadi already has begun to send fighters there.
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Oct. 4, 2011
The U.S. puts a $10 million bounty on al-Baghdadi's head over a series of attacks he orchestrated.
July 21, 2012
In his first purported online message, al-Baghdadi promises to regain lost ground in
... more Photo: U.S. State Department
Oct. 31, 2010
Al-Baghdadi's al-Qaida militants attack Our Lady of Salvation Catholic church in Baghdad during Sunday night mass, killing 58 people in the deadliest assault targeting Christians since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion there. The militants reportedly demand the release of Muslim women they claim were held by Egypt's Coptic Christian church.
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Oct. 31, 2010
Al-Baghdadi's al-Qaida militants attack Our Lady of Salvation Catholic church in Baghdad during Sunday night mass, killing 58 people in the deadliest assault targeting Christians since the 2003
... more Photo: Khalid Mohammed, Associated Press
U.S. and Iraqi forces kill two top al-Qaida in Iraq leaders, allowing al-Baghdadi to become the leader of a terror group weakened by a concerted campaign aimed at ending a Sunni insurgency in the country.
Click through the rest of the photos to see a timeline of the Islamic State Group
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U.S. and Iraqi forces kill two top al-Qaida in Iraq leaders, allowing al-Baghdadi to become the leader of a terror group weakened by a concerted campaign aimed at ending a Sunni insurgency in the
... more Photo: Uncredited, HOEP
Bashar al-Assad's Texas-sized victory against ISIS
Imagine a war raging in central Texas, stretching eastward. San Antonio lies in the southwest of our fictional battlefield, Austin is 80 miles to the north, and Dallas sits 200 miles farther along the same highway, near the northwestern border. Houston does not exist as part of the conflict, lying just outside the southeastern border, and the northeastern edge of this war-torn country peeks into Louisiana and Mississippi.
During this devastating conflict, many areas have fallen outside the government's control. Rebel groups have seized huge swaths of territory starting a few miles east of Dallas and progressing all the way to our country's eastern border. The rebels hold sway over dozens of towns, from Greenville, Texas (population: 25,557), all the way to their de facto capital in Shreveport, Louisiana (population: 200,327). With insurgents also seizing many villages to the west and south of Dallas, the government has lost control of roughly 75 percent of the country's territory.
READ MORE: Gary Johnson just has one simple question: 'And what is Aleppo?'
Most Americans would understand intuitively how to win this war. The key is to capture the cities spread across the country's western spine: The metropolitan areas of San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas are home to over 10 million people, dwarfing the villages in east Texas and the scrub brush hinterlands of the Deep South. Control those three cities, and you can muster the resources to beat back a rural insurgency - or hold enough leverage to negotiate an end to the conflict on your terms.
President Bashar al-Assad has grasped this strategy and is using it to thwart those who seek to topple him. Our fictional battlefield is, of course, a map of Syria grafted onto an American landscape: San Antonio lies roughly where Damascus would be, Austin stands in for Homs, and Dallas is Aleppo - the three largest, most prosperous Syrian cities before the war. The war has particularly devastated Homs and Aleppo, with many of the cities' residents fleeing abroad or to government-held areas around the capital or the coastal districts. But these urban centers still remain vital to Syria - and Assad has made significant progress in securing them, as his opponents squabble among themselves on the country's fringes.
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International attention on Syria - along with Western coalition airstrikes - is now focused on the struggle for a string of small cities northeast of Aleppo. Assad's enemies in the region - the Islamic State, the pro-Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), and Turkey-backed rebels - are fighting one another on a battlefield extending from the town of al-Bab to the Euphrates River.
Major news outlets have taken to describing the SDF-held town of Manbij as "strategic" during this new wave of fighting. Manbij - which boasted a prewar population of 75,000, similar to Longview, Texas - had never before been described as strategic in the five-year course of the Syrian war, according to a Nexis search. Perhaps journalists have awoken to the town's importance, or perhaps they have manufactured its "strategic" nature to convince readers of their article's significance.
READ MORE: US officials say IS losses on battlefield won't end threat
If you happen to be a resident of Manbij or a neighboring village, of course, the town is indeed strategic. The area is also significant to the Islamic State due to the border with Turkey, and to the Kurds as a pathway to unite the areas under their control. In terms of determining who wins the larger struggle for control of Syria, however, its importance is marginal. In our American battlefield, it corresponds roughly to the area between the Texas towns of Farmersville and Cooper - a 45-mile stretch of land that traverses a few small villages, much like its Syrian counterpart.
Assad long ago relinquished control over many of the Syrian equivalents of Farmersville and Cooper. Instead, he has poured his resources into shoring up his position in Damascus, Homs, and Aleppo. The stretch of land connecting these three cities, and running through the predominantly Alawite coastal areas that constitute Assad's strongest base of support, forms what some analysts have termed "useful Syria."
READ MORE: Syrian government forces capture more areas in Aleppo
It's not only Syria's population center, it's the country's economic engine. Fabrice Balanche, a visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, estimates that 10 million of the 16 million Syrians still in the country reside in government-controlled areas centered on this stretch of land. Most of the power stations that supply the country with electricity are between Damascus and Aleppo, as Chatham House analyst David Butter helpfully points out, while the refineries that supply fuel to government-controlled areas are around Homs. Good province-level data on the Syrian economy is hard to come by, but the Syrian Bureau of Statistics does have prewar statistics that suggest the majority of the country's private industrial facilities also existed in this area.
Assad's strategy is beginning to bear fruit. The loyalists' most notable success has been in Damascus, where pro-government forces have combined a massive barrel-bombing campaign with starvation sieges to beat rebel groups in the capital's suburbs into submission. Two weeks ago, the rebel-held suburb of Daraya surrendered to the government after a punishing four-year siege. In May, loyalist fighters capitalized on rebel infighting to capture key agricultural land in East Ghouta - potentially paving the way for even worse starvation when winter comes. The government also appears to have successfully contained any threat from Yarmouk Camp, a settlement for Palestinian refugees near the capital, which has been racked by the Islamic State's infiltration and a stifling government siege.
The trends in Syria's other main cities are also moving in the loyalists' direction. Pro-government forces, which long ago forced the rebels' surrender in Homs, this week resumed their bombing of the city's besieged suburb of al-Waer. The opposition fighters there are negotiating a deal that would see them withdraw from the area. The coastal governorates of Tartous and Latakia remain firmly in the government's hands, and the rebel offensive in the south has faltered badly. The news from Aleppo is also bad for the anti-Assad fighters: On Sunday, loyalist forces re-imposed a siege on rebel-held areas of the northern city.
None of this is to suggest that Assad should rest easy. These gains have been possible only with massive Russian and Iranian intervention, and there is every reason to believe Assad could fall if Moscow or Tehran were to dial back their support. Assad also risks Russia and Iran taking steps in Syria that are beneficial to their own strategic interests but harmful to his authority - as arguably just occurred when President Vladimir Putin neglected to use his air defenses in Syria to thwart Turkey's incursion in the north.
Assad should also be concerned about his faltering grip over the Syrian forces fighting on his side. Tobias Schneider, in a persuasive article for War on the Rocks, details how the long war has eaten away at Syria's state institutions. The armed forces have crumbled, he argues, replaced by local militias that engage in criminal enterprises, smuggling, and destructive infighting on a scale that the government is too weak to control. It is these armed thugs, Schneider argues, who truly hold sway in "government-held" Syria - not Assad himself.
Assad faces increasing threats to his authority from his domestic and international allies, even as the constellation of "pro-Assad" forces makes progress in beating back the armed insurgency. Translated to our imaginary Texas battlefield, he has increasingly succeeded in securing San Antonio, Austin, and Dallas and transforming the conflict into a struggle for ancillary towns like Greenville or Longview. It is possible that Kurdish or Turkey-backed forces will hold on to these outlying towns and villages, even as their ability to threaten Assad's grip over the rest of the country grows increasingly illusory. The Syrian president could well lose this war, but he is making it very difficult for rebel forces to win.
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