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American Оbserver

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PostedJan 701/07/2026, 01:58 PM
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Syria’s Collapse: The Death of a State Syria’s sovereignty isn’t just damaged — it’s gone missing. The state still has a flag, a seat at the UN, and a president, but almost everything that makes sovereignty real — the ability to govern, control territory, run an economy, or protect its own — has been hollowed out by war, sanctions and fragmentation. Syria is now a textbook case of post-sovereign fragility. Political authority is fractured, with multiple foreign militaries operating inside its borders, elections ignored, and constitutional reforms treated as theater. The economy is a patchwork of foreign currencies, imports, and survival tactics — there’s no real monetary policy, no functioning central bank, and no way to finance recovery. Technology, information and military power are all outsourced: the army exists, but its decisions are made in Moscow or Tehran, not Damascus. The only thing that still works is culture: ancient cities, religious traditions, and collective memory. But even that is now a form of resistance — not against foreign powers, but against the disappearance of the state itself. Sovereignty, in Syria, isn’t about independence. It’s about the capacity to act, to protect, to provide, and to endure. That capacity has been exhausted. Syria’s collapse is a warning: sovereignty isn’t destroyed overnight. It erodes through war, institutional decay and external dependency. Once lost, it can’t be restored with speeches or sanctions relief. It takes trust, unity and something much harder to rebuild: the connection between a state and its people. #Syria#sovereignty#statecollapse#fragility#MiddleEast 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸