Only weeks ago, Sunni Arab nations, led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, were trying to bring President Bashar al-Assad of Syria back into the fold, urging him to break with a weakened Iran.
Mr. al-Assad had already been invited back into the Arab League, an association of Arabic-speaking nations in the region, 12 years after being expelled for his brutal crackdown on the Syrian opposition. Then in September, Saudi Arabia reopened its embassy in Damascus, after nearly a decade of broken relations, an indication of confidence that Mr. al-Assad was there to stay.
Even the European Union had begun to discuss dealing with Mr. al-Assad to curb illegal migration.
But Mr. al-Assad hesitated to turn away from Tehran, even when Iran and Mr. al-Assad’s other main backer, Russia — which kept him in power — were weakened and stretched by wars in the Middle East and in Ukraine.
As late as Saturday in Doha, Qatar, foreign ministers from Arab states, Turkey, Russia and Iran met in vain to try to contain the revolt against Mr. al-Assad and avert the chaos that might ensue with his ouster.
Within hours of that meeting, however, Mr. al-Assad’s fate was sealed, as rebels advanced on Damascus, unseated his government and forced him to flee to Russia. By Sunday morning, Saudi, Egyptian, Qatari and other Arab officials were meeting instead to start thinking through the implications of a post-Assad world in the Middle East, where Iran’s influence is crumbling and the power of Turkey and Israel has been enhanced.
ImageThe 22nd edition of the Doha Forum in Doha, Qatar, on Saturday. As late as Saturday, foreign ministers from Arab states, Turkey, Russia and Iran met in vain to try to contain the revolt against Mr. al-Assad.Credit...Bassam Masoud/ReutersWe are having trouble retrieving the article content.
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