Iran’s fragile empire is crumbling – Syrian rebels’ blitz on Putin & Assad is next domino to fall, says ex-ambassador
SYRIA is the next domino to fall in Iran's crumbling empire after the rebels' lightning blitz, a former US ambassador said.
The Ayatollah's allies Vladimir Putin and Bashar al-Assad could be booted out of the country by quickly advancing militants Hayat Tahrir al-Sham.
It's the latest blunder from the Iranians after pals Hamas and Hezbollah were both hammered by Israel following the October 7 terror attack.
Ambassador Mark Wallace, CEO of United Against Nuclear Iran, said Iran is now fighting for its survival.
The former US representative to the UN said Ayatollah Ali Khamenei only has a "tenuous" hold on power.
Iran has used its proxy forces as a way to establish its dominance in the region by sowing conflict in countries and having militants seize land.
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Wallace told The Sun: "I think if you were advising the Ayatollah right now, you would say, 'our proxies are in danger, they're crumbling, we have to beat a hasty retreat'.
"I think they [Iran] are defending that same hegemony to prevent the fall of their fragile empire."
Iran has been weakened so much by corruption, its economy, and the conflict with Israel that it now can't protect its proxy pals.
He said the Syrian rebels had seen Assad's "house of cards" and Iran's weakness as a chance to strike.
As each of Iran's proxies become weaker, so does the the regime's ruling ideology and the Ayatollah's grasp on power, Wallace added.
Wallace said: "The fragility of the Ayatollah and his cronies will be revealed as each of its proxies crumbles.
"Their own people, who hate the oppression of the Ayatollah, will be emboldened to rise up against them."
But the ambassador also said that Assad being overthrown was not all good news as the "evil" man could be replaced by an "Islamic state".
Fighting threatens to topple monster Assad who gassed his own people with nerve agent sarin in 2013 as he desperately clung on to power during the civil war.
HTS was formed by ISIS and al-Qaeda fighters and has forced women into sexual slavery.
Wallace said: "They [HTS] still believe in the brutal repression of women and minorities and other religions, and I don't believe that there is room for a radical Islamic Caliphate in the region."
And while Syria could be forced out of Iran's sphere of influence, the rebels are supported by Turkey.
Wallace said Turkey's support for HTS, among its other foreign policy decisions, means it doesn't act like a "normal ally".
He said: "I've personally called for the expulsion of Turkey from Nato.
"I think Erdogan should be considered to be sanctioned, designated, much less be a legitimate standing member of Nato."
Wallace said the West needed Turkey on its side against Russia, but it shouldn't encourage "massive bloodshed" in the region.
He said the West should confront Iran directly while it is weakened and push it into a succession crisis.
He said: "There's only been two Ayatollahs in history.
"Soon there will have to be a third and if there isn't a third there will be no Iran as we know it, and the people of Iran will be free."
On Friday, Tehran announced it is set to send missiles and drones to Syria to support its ally as well as a number of military and intelligence advisers.
'No one saw it coming'
Ex-military intelligence officer Philip Ingram said nobody saw a flare up in the fighting after a ceasefire had been signed in 2020.
He said Putin's intelligence forces failed his ally Assad as they were focused on winning the war in Ukraine.
Ingram said: "The preparations for this [offensive] and everything else will have got potentially lost in the noise or not seen as being as significant."
The Kremlin will now be extremely worried about having its ally Assad deposed.
He said: "The response by Assad's forces, backed by the Russians and the Iranians, has been woeful to date."
But that doesn't mean Assad will fall, with the Russians providing air support against the advancing militants, Ingram added.
He said: "But they [Russia] haven't had to do anything since there was a ceasefire signed in 2020 and therefore some of their assets will have been stripped out to go and support Ukraine and it would be difficult for Putin to surge assets in to back up."
The geopolitical expert also said Putin would be stretched too thin to send troops as he is losing nearly 2,000 troops a day in Ukraine.
But Syria is very important for the Kremlin as it gave Russia a foothold in the Middle East for its direct interests.