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Book Cover for: Syria: Civil War to Holy War?, Charles Glass

Syria: Civil War to Holy War?

Charles Glass

A widely recognized expert on the unfolding crisis in Syria here melds reportage, analysis, and history in an accessible overview of events leading up to the toppling of the Assad regime and the fragile prospects for peace in its wake.


How did the Syrian regime fall? Gradually, then all at once.


In December 2024, the long and bloody stalemate in Syria broke down. In a transformation breathtaking for its suddenness and speed, President Bashar al-Assad, the beating heart of Arab authoritarianism, fled to Russia, his dungeons emptying as rebels overcame the Syrian army with scarcely a fight.


Euphoria at the collapse of a government people never voted for was tempered by fear for the future. The victorious insurgents were supported by outside powers and had a track record of brutality comparable to Assad's in addition to religious fanaticism. Syrians-whose fragile, cosmopolitan mosaic has been repeatedly shattered by foreign-backed sectarians--faced rule by an avowedly Islamist regime that pledged to break with its past and show tolerance to all religious communities.


In this illuminating and concise survey, Charles Glass shows how Assad's misrule, Sunni fundamentalism, and Western deceit combined to create and prolong the Syrian disaster, which since 2011 has claimed more than two hundred thousand lives and driven more than eight million people from their homes.


Glass has reported extensively from the Middle East and travelled frequently in Syria for more than fifty years. Here he melds reportage, analysis, and history to provide an accessible overview of the origins and permutations defining the conflict, situating it clearly in the broader crises of the region.


In this new and thoroughly revised edition of his earlier Syria Burning, Glass brings the story to the present, showing how we got here and what a post-Assad settlement might bring.

Book Details

  • Publisher: OR Books
  • Publish Date: Apr 22nd, 2025
  • Pages: 294
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.90in - 5.40in - 0.90in - 0.75lb
  • EAN: 9781682196069
  • Categories: World - Middle EasternMiddle East - SyriaWars & Conflicts - General

About the Author

Charles Glass was ABC News Chief Middle East Correspondent from 1983 to 1993. Since 1973, he has covered wars in the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He is the author of Syria Burning, Tribes with Flags, The Tribes Triumphant, Money for Old Rope, The Northern Front, Americans in Paris, The Deserters, They Fought Alone, and Soldiers Don't Go Mad: A Story of Brotherhood, Poetry, and Mental Illness During the First World War.

Praise for this book

"More than ever in the era of 24-hour sound-bite news, events demand the long view if they are to be explicable. With his deep experience of the Levant, that is exactly what Charlie Glass offers the student of the Middle East in this timely, elegant and penetrating study of turmoil that has reshaped the region."
--Alan Cowell, former Middle East Bureau Chief, The New York Times

"Charles Glass has written a cautionary lament for the last gasp of what once was the Levant, his 'Syria, ' chronicling not just the facts of that unhappy country's current civil war but the mindless destruction of its great monuments. Read Syria Burning to understand why the Assad regime was uniquely prepared and determined to resist the winds of change, even if the war doubtless marks the end of a century of post-Ottoman history."
--Jonathan Randal, former Washington Post Middle East Correspondent and author of The Tragedy of Lebanon

"If news moves fast, assessments have not, which is one reason why we should all read Syria Burning ...[But] there is another, better reason to read this book. Glass has been travelling in and writing about the Middle East since the 1980s when he was Middle East correspondent for ABC News. He made the headlines himself in 1987, when he was held hostage in Beirut for almost nine weeks. His view on how the conflict has escalated and why it has not taken the turns many others anticipated make for enlightening reading."
--The Observer (London)