Joulani, a Syrian national, continued the fight against the Assad regime as part of non-jihadi rebel forces. He quit AQ-linked Jabhat in 2016 and renamed his group Jabhat Fatah al-Sham now known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) in 2017. The HTS, a moderate jihadi group, became a prominent rebel force and established its stronghold in Idlib, north-west Syria, where millions of displaced Syrians took refuge. He began to unite the fragmented opposition groups, while simultaneously working for the local Syrian population in crisis, providing them with aid, medicine and food. Under Joulani’s leadership, HTS captured parts of Syria controlled by Assad’s government. By the first week of December, HTS and rebel forces surrounded the Syrian capital of Damascus, forcing President Bashar al-Assad to flee the country. Joulani and other opposition figures announced their victory over a Syrian state television broadcast ending the 50-year-long reign of the Assad family. It remains to be seen whether Syrians will succeed in achieving the dream of democracy, or head for another jihadi doomsday.