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Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey are getting serious about Syria — and that should worry Assad

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On the eve of a meeting between Arab leaders and President Obama to discuss Middle East security, developments in Syria could bolster the opposition's campaign to topple the regime there.

Driving the opposition push in Syria is a new working relationship between Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, the key backers of the rebels in northern Syria.

Those countries had been at loggerheads since the Syrian revolution began in 2011, and their internecine quarrels and proxy wars were debilitating for the opposition. Conversely, their new alliance has bolstered the opposition's chances — and led to major gains on the battlefield.

The partnership on Syria appears to have been brokered in part by Sheik Tamim Bin Hamad al-Thani, the emir of Qatar, the Persian Gulf leader who has the closest relations with Turkey.

The rapprochement also seems to reflect a change in policy by King Salman, the new Saudi monarch who has moved his country toward closer cooperation with Qatar and Turkey after years of enmity during the reign of his predecessor, King Abdullah.

middle east mapBy pumping weapons to Syrian rebels across the Turkish border, the three countries have forged a new opposition coalition known as the Army of Conquest, which has made significant gains over the past two months in Idlib province and other areas in the northwest.

The regime army, loyal to President Bashar al-Assad, appears to be exhausted after four years of fighting and no longer able to hold some contested ground.

Assad's difficulties are linked to the wider Middle East situation because of his dependence on Iran.

As the Obama administration has sought a nuclear deal with Iran, its Arab allies have moved to challenge Tehran and its proxies more openly, first by military intervention against the Iranian-backed Houthis in Yemen and now by the bolder policy in Syria. Iran and its Shiite allies are facing significant pressure from the emboldened Sunnis, arguably for the first time in decades.

A tricky problem is that the rebels have been fighting alongside a group called Jabhat al-Nusra, which is an affiliate of al-Qaeda. Sources said Tuesday that it's likely that in coming days a Jabhat al-Nusra faction will split publicly from al-Qaeda and join the Army of Conquest.

At that point, there could be a tipping point in the north, with a broad coalition allied against both the Assad regime and the Islamic State. Jordan and Israel have developed secret contacts with members of the Jabhat al-Nusra group along their borders.

assad syria grafittiAnother potential game-changer is a new U.S. willingness to support a no-fly zone along the Turkey-Syria border. This haven, backed by U.S. air power, would allow some refugees to return home while providing a staging area for an expected assault by a U.S.-trained new Syrian army, whose first units have just been formed, against the Islamic State's capital in Raqqa.

Russia's role will be important in the evolving Syrian drama. Secretary of State John F. Kerry visited Russia this week for talks with President Vladimir Putin that included a possible Russian role in a political transition away from the Assad regime. Putin has long resisted any deal that makes Assad's departure a precondition for peace talks, but that position may be weakening.

RTR3QI7PQatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have all been cooperating in trying to cultivate new leaders from Assad's Alawite minority who could lead the country during a transition. Those contacts have accelerated in recent days, despite the regime's attempts to crush any Alawite rivals.

Assad's position is weakening sharply. The latest sign of regime disarray is that Gen. Ali Mamluk , one of the intelligence chiefs in his inner circle, has been placed under house arrest in Damascus. This follows the recent death of Gen. Rustom Ghazali, another of Assad's intelligence satraps.

Qatar's role in encouraging a Saudi-Turkish rapprochement could also improve the situation in Libya. There, the Qataris and Turks have been supporting the Muslim Brotherhood affiliate known as "Libyan Dawn," while the Saudis, Egyptians and Emiratis have backed the Tobruk parliament and the allied forces of Gen. Khalifa Haftar.

But sources said Libyan Dawn has agreed to cooperate with Haftar in fighting Islamic State extremists. The Saudis, too, are said to be tentatively supporting a U.N. mediator's negotiations in Morocco to form a Libyan transitional government.

Against this turbulent and fast-changing regional background, Obama will hold talks with Gulf leaders, on Wednesday at the White House and the next day at Camp David. Because of the absence of King Salman and some other rulers, the senior leaders present will be the Qatari emir and his Kuwaiti counterpart.

After four years of a bloody stalemate in Syria, the leaders will at least be able to discuss the possibility of change.

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