Introduction
Thirteen years have passed since mass protests broke out against the Syrian regime in March 2011. The regime responded with ferocious violence and plunging the country into an armed conflict it subsequently dragged in multiple foreign powers. Iran intervened in 2012, which gave Israel justification to launch a campaign of air strikes the following year that has continued for more than a decade. Russia entered the conflict in 2015 to prevent the armed opposition from bringing about the collapse of the regime. The persistence of the conflict and the failure to reach a political solution gave rise to several terrorist organizations, most prominently ISIS, which prompted the U.S. to intervene in Syria in 2014, on the grounds of combating terrorism. However, American cooperation with the Syrian branch of the terrorist organization Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) compelled Türkiye to send in forces in 2016 to prevent the emergence of a separatist entity on its Southern border that could threaten its own national security.