ASSESSMENTS
Three Flashpoints in the Syrian Civil War
Feb 23, 2018 | 19:33 GMT

Turkish-backed Syrian opposition fighters walk on the Roman bridge in the archaeological site of Cyrrhus, northeast of the Syrian city of Afrin, in February 2018.
(NAZEER AL-KHATIB/AFP/Getty Images)
Highlights
- The Syrian civil war is heading in a new direction.
- As various operations in Afrin, Idlib and Damascus play out, the front lines of the Syrian civil war will become more static.
- Despite a decrease in major offensives, the presence of so many foreign powers with intersecting interests heightens the risk of violence.
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