In Damascus, a general feeling that the war is winding down
DAMASCUS, Syria — In Syria’s capital these days, people are breathing a little easier. Across Damascus, new shops are sprouting up, business is brisk, and some people who fled the civil war years ago are contemplating a return.
The Syrian war is likely to drag on for years, sustained largely by the intervention and rivalries of foreign powers. But in President Bashar Assad’s seat of government, there is a general feeling the six-year conflict is winding down.
“I haven’t slept so well in weeks,” said Alya, a 27-year-old kindergarten teacher who, in her spare time, volunteers with an organization that helps displaced people around Damascus.
She recalls how only two months ago, she was cowering in the bathroom with her mother and sister when fierce clashes broke out after insurgents and suicide bombers infiltrated the city through tunnels from the rebel-held neighbourhood of Qaboun and nearby areas. The attack — a surprise breach of Damascus’ security perimeter — lasted several days, disrupting businesses and terrifying residents who have been relatively insulated from the catastrophic destruction that has been inflicted on opposition-held parts of the country.


