Syrian rebels battled government forces for control of the key city of Homs on Saturday and advanced toward the capital as front lines collapsed across the country, throwing President Bashar Assad's 24-year rule into the balance.
Since the rebels' sweep into Aleppo a week ago, government defenses have crumbled at dizzying speed as insurgents seized a string of major cities and rose up in places where the rebellion had long seemed over.
The twin threats to strategically vital Homs and the capital, Damascus, now pose an existential threat to Assad's decades of rule in Syria and the continued influence there of his main regional backer Iran.
A Homs resident and army and rebel sources said the insurgents had breached government defenses from the north and east of the city. A rebel commander said they had taken control of an army camp and villages outside the city.
State television reported that the insurgents had not penetrated Homs, although it said they were on the city outskirts, where it said the military was striking them with artillery and drones.
Insurgents have seized almost the entire southwest within 24 hours, and they have advanced to within 30 kilometers of Damascus as government forces fell back, rebels said.
Underscoring the possibility of an uprising in the capital, protesters took to the streets in several Damascus suburbs, ripping up Assad posters and tearing down a statue of his father, former President Hafez al-Assad, uncontested by army or police. Some were joined by soldiers who had changed into civilian clothes and deserted, residents said.
However, the state news agency reported that Assad remains in Damascus, and the military said it was reinforcing around the capital and south.
The pace of events has stunned Arab capitals and raised fears of a new wave of regional instability.
Syria's civil war, which erupted in 2011 as an uprising against Assad's rule, dragged in big outside powers, created space for jihadist militants to plot attacks around the world and sent millions of refugees into neighboring states.
Assad had long relied on allies to subdue the rebels, with bombing by Russian warplanes while Iran sent allied forces, including Lebanon's Hezbollah and Iraqi militia, to bolster the Syrian military and storm insurgent strongholds.
But Russia has been focused on the war in Ukraine since 2022, and Hezbollah has suffered big losses in its own grueling war with Israel, significantly limiting its ability or that of Iran to bolster Assad.
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump said the U.S. should not be involved in the conflict and should "let it play out."
Russia, Iran, Turkey
The foreign ministers of Russia, Iran and the main rebels' backer, Turkey, met on Saturday and agreed on the importance of Syria's territorial integrity and on restarting a political process, they said.
But there was no indication they agreed on any concrete steps, with the situation inside Syria changing by the hour.
Russia has a naval base and airbase in Syria that have not only been important for its support of Assad, but also for its ability to project influence in the Mediterranean and Africa.
Moscow has been supporting government forces with intense airstrikes, but it was not clear if it could easily step up this campaign.
Iran has said it would consider sending forces to Syria, but any immediate extra assistance would likely depend on Hezbollah and Iraqi militias.
The Lebanese group sent some "supervising forces" to Homs on Friday, but any significant deployment would risk exposure to Israeli airstrikes, Western officials said.
Iran-backed Iraqi militias are on high alert, with thousands of heavily armed fighters ready to deploy to Syria, many of them amassed near the border. Iraq does not seek military intervention in Syria, a government spokesperson said on Friday.
Britain warned Assad that any use of chemical weapons was a red line and would be met with "appropriate action."
Battle for Homs
The Homs resident said he had seen the rebels advance past a Syrian Air Force base in the north of the city that was considered a major defensive area. The resident later said fighting was audible in the city outskirts.
An opposition figure in touch with rebel command and a Syrian army source also said the insurgents were inside the city.
Seizing Homs, an important crossroads between the capital and the Mediterranean, would cut off Damascus from the coastal stronghold of Assad's minority Alawite sect and from Russia's air and naval base.
In the south, the rapid collapse of government control could allow a concerted assault on the capital, the seat of Assad's power.
The Syrian military pulled back as far as Saasa, 30 kilometers from Damascus, to regroup, a Syrian army officer said.
Jarmana, where protesters pulled down a statue of Hafez al-Assad, is in the city's southern suburbs. Soldiers were deserting the former rebel stronghold of Daraya and in Mezzeh, near a major airbase, residents said.
The main rebel group, the Islamist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, said it had a duty to protect governmental, international and U.N. offices in Syria.
In a sign of government forces' collapse in the east, around 2,000 Syrian soldiers crossed the border into Iraq to seek sanctuary, the mayor of Iraqi border town al-Qaem said.
Syrian Kurdish fighters had captured eastern Deir el-Zour on Friday, jeopardizing Assad's land connection to allies in Iraq.