The Islamist former insurgents now in charge need to build popular support and demonstrate rule of law. And they’re finding ...
A newly liberated people are embracing their diversity in comedy clubs and marketplaces, sending a message to their de facto ...
In the words of Axios ‘ news director, the Syrian Civil War “changed everything,” leading to the climax of the Global War on ...
Syria's first female football coach, Maha Janoud, reflects on her journey from war-torn Syria to coaching in Iceland. Despite ...
Syria's new Islamist leaders are undertaking a radical overhaul of the country's broken economy, including plans to fire a ...
Economic shock therapy: plans include privatizations and slashing public sector jobs Reforms designed to avoid chaos of ...
The beads were identified as amber, something that was not common in Syria during the Iron Age and originated from the Baltic ...
Daniel Immerwahr on whether we’re really losing focus. Plus: the early effects of Trump’s border policies; Big Tech’s ...
After the fall of Syria's despotic Assad regime, life is slowly returning to one Damascus neighborhood, where the violence and painful memories of the past are still literally being unearthed.
Crossing the border from Jordan on Dec. 29, one North Jersey man had tears in his eyes. “I hugged the first Syrian person I saw,” he said.
managed to slip out of his cell and was seen moving between houses in the streets of Damascus' upscale Mazzeh neighborhood. The New York Times first reported that brief escape and recapture.
indicating that after the liberation of Damascus, there is no presence of these militias. He noted that since the first moments of the Israeli advance, the new Syrian administration has been in ...