Skip to main content
The Washington Institute for Near East Policy
Menu
Toggle Main Menu
Homepage
Main navigation
Analysis
Experts
About
Support
Maps & Multimedia
Trending:
Democracy & Reform
Terrorism
Syria
Israel
Lebanon
Palestinians
Toggle List of
All Regions & Issues
Regions & Countries
Egypt
Gulf States
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Jordan
Lebanon
Middle East
North Africa
Palestinians
Syria
Turkey
Issues
Arab & Islamic Politics
Arab-Israeli Relations
Democracy & Reform
Energy & Economics
Great Power Competition
Gulf & Energy Policy
Military & Security
Peace Process
Proliferation
Terrorism
U.S. Policy
Close List of All Regions and Issues
Close
Search Policy Analysis
TWI English
TWI Arabic:
اللغة العربية
TWI Persian:
فارسی
Fikra Forum
Close Menu
Close
Search Policy Analysis
Search
Breadcrumb
Policy Analysis
All Policy Analysis by Monzer Akbik
Filter by:
Keyword
Region
- Any -
Egypt
Gulf States
Iran
Iraq
Israel
Jordan
Lebanon
Middle East
North Africa
Palestinians
Syria
Turkey
Issue
- Any -
Arab & Islamic Politics
Arab-Israeli Relations
Democracy & Reform
Energy & Economics
Great Power Competition
Gulf & Energy Policy
Military & Security
Peace Process
Proliferation
Terrorism
U.S. Policy
Date Published
- Any -
Past 7 Days
Past 30 Days
Past Year
Custom range...
Start date
End date
Type
- Any -
Articles & Testimony
Brief Analysis
In-Depth Reports
Sort by
Oldest first
Newest first
Found
1
results
Video
In-Depth Reports
Syria and Its Repercussions
Before Hezbollah's massive intervention in 2013, Bashar al-Assad's forces were nearing exhaustion, Syrian Opposition Coalition chief of staff Monzer Akbik said during a panel discussion at The Washington Institute's 2014 Weinberg Founders Conference on May 8. Assad was facing a catastrophic human-resources and materiel crisis, Akbik said, which the dictator
May 8, 2014
◆
Monzer Akbik
Hanin Ghaddar