Moscow, Somalia — A year after rebels toppled his regime and Russian allies spirited him to Moscow, Bashar al-Assad has reportedly returned to the classroom—studying Russian and revisiting the ophthalmology training that once defined his pre-politics life, a Guardian report said.
Assad, a London-trained eye doctor who inherited power from his father in 2000, fled Damascus in the early hours of Dec. 8, 2024, as insurgents closed in.
He was not originally groomed to rule. His path shifted after the death of his older brother, Basil, and he trained and worked as an ophthalmologist before politics consumed him.
After Russian forces evacuated him via the Hmeimim air base, the former strongman of the Middle East’s last Ba’athist regime is now reportedly “brushing up” on ophthalmology again.
It appears less a career comeback than a return to an abandoned identity, insulated by exile and money but constrained by strict Kremlin rules.
Gilded exile
According to The Guardian, Assad and his family have settled into a quiet, heavily managed life split between Moscow and the UAE, leaning on a narrow circle of contacts while avoiding the spotlight.
Two sources cited by the paper placed the family in Rublyovka, the gated belt of mansions west of Moscow associated with the Russian elite.
The address puts them among other political exiles who washed up in Russia after losing power, such as Ukraine’s Viktor Yanukovych.
Despite the luxury, isolation defines their new reality. Russian authorities have reportedly blocked Assad from political activity and even media appearances.
Russia’s ambassador to Iraq recently confirmed that the Kremlin “does not allow” the toppled leader to engage in politics. The ambassador said Assad “has no right to engage in any media or political activity,” in an interview published by Rudaw.
Assad’s current silence contrasts sharply with the chaotic final hours of his rule. Insurgent forces led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham swept through Syria in a rapid offensive that ended more than five decades of Assad-family rule.
The Guardian noted that Assad left without warning many allies and even relatives, fueling bitterness among former regime figures who believe he abandoned them to save himself.
His return to medical study holds a sharp symbolic edge in Syria. His rise once projected a “moderniser” narrative—a doctor-president with a Western education—before the state’s security machine crushed protests and plunged the country into war.
Russia’s role was decisive well before Assad’s fall. Moscow launched air strikes in 2015 in its largest Middle East intervention in decades, shoring up Assad at a moment when his forces were under heavy pressure.
A legacy of ruin
The Syrian uprising began in March 2011 after security forces arrested teenagers in Daraa for anti-government graffiti.
Authorities responded with lethal force, and what started as street protests metastasised into a multi-front conflict involving regional powers, transnational jihadists, and rival militias.
The crackdown also triggered a sanctions spiral. The European Union imposed restrictive measures in May 2011, citing violent repression, and Washington followed with sanctions authorities targeting Assad and senior officials.
Over the next 13 years, outside monitors produced competing death tolls, reflecting the war’s scale and the difficulty of counting.
The UN human rights office, using named, documented cases, estimated the conflict killed at least 306,887 civilians between March 2011 and March 2021, though it cautioned the figure was an undercount.
War monitors that track combatant and civilian deaths put overall fatalities higher. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported totals exceeding 600,000 since 2011.
Chemical weapons allegations became one of the war’s most internationally fraught fault lines.
The UN Security Council endorsed the dismantling of Syria’s chemical weapons programme in 2013, and an OPCW fact-finding mission later confirmed exposure to sarin in Khan Shaykhun in April 2017, according to an OPCW statement and report.
Syria after Assad
While Assad studies in Moscow, Syria’s new authorities struggle to consolidate a fragmented country.
Transition leaders declared Ahmed al-Sharaa—the de facto leader who spearheaded the offensive—president for a transitional period in late January 2025. The announcement suspended the constitution and promised a temporary legislative council.
Sharaa’s ascent has also redrawn Syria’s international file. The United States revoked the foreign terrorist designation for Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham in mid-2025, in a major policy shift after Assad’s overthrow.
But the post-Assad landscape remains volatile. In March, major clashes and revenge killings on the coast left more than 1,000 people dead in two days, according to war monitors—a reminder that old loyalties and sectarian fear still run close to the surface.
Reports detailed sectarian massacres on the coast in March 2025, describing killings, looting, and arson across multiple sites during several days of violence.
Humanitarian pressure has not lifted with regime change. A 2025 humanitarian overview produced under the UN’s coordination system estimated that more than 16.5 million people still need aid.
At the same time, a new pattern has emerged: returns. UNHCR tracking recorded more than 1.2 million Syrians returning from abroad and about 1.9 million displaced people returning to homes inside Syria over the first year of the transition.
The agency framed this as a rare “window” to stabilize the country, provided authorities can restore basic services.
The economic reality facing the new government is stark. In October, the World Bank estimated Syria’s post-conflict reconstruction bill at about $216 billion, based on damage and recovery needs assessed from 2011 to 2024.
Assad’s reported drift back toward ophthalmology—studying rather than practicing—underlines a central tension of the post-war moment: the architect of a brutal era lives comfortably abroad while Syrians face a long, uncertain rebuild.

