The feeling is growing stronger by the day that Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s regime is approaching a tipping point. Kofi Annan, the UN and Arab League special envoy, has abandoned as hopeless his efforts to implement an internationally agreed six-point plan to end the violence. Now the international community must think seriously about how to minimise the dangers inherent in Syria’s domestic turmoil.

Lack of agreement within the UN Security Council has prolonged the conflict and contributed to changing its nature. What began as a popular uprising inspired by the demands of the Arab Spring has taken on increasingly sectarian and radical tones. This reflects loss of hope in international support while making it more difficult to achieve a negotiated solution.

In particular, there is a growing danger of Sunni retaliation against the Alawite minority, which comprises 12 per cent of the population, but controls the government, the economy, and the army. The Alawites, who overcame second-class citizenship only when Al Assad’s Baath party came to power in 1963, now believe that their very survival is linked to that of the regime.

If the Syrian opposition does not take the Alawites’ concerns seriously, the country could be wracked by years of civil war, worse than the conflict that devastated Lebanon from 1975 to 1990. The regional consequences are already being felt. Fighting between the rebels and government forces is spreading, and the resulting refugee flows into neighbouring Turkey, Jordan, and Lebanon threaten to bring these countries directly into the conflict.

Turkey is also worried about the conflict’s possible repercussions for its Kurdish population, among whom aspirations for independence are resurfacing, and for its relations with the Kurdish populations of Iraq and Syria, which are woven into a complex balance. Jordan, for its part, considers the growing numbers of Syrian rebels entering its territory a threat to national security, while the arrival of thousands of refugees in Lebanon has revived old sectarian disputes in Tripoli between Alawites, most of whom support Al Assad, and Sunnis, who overwhelmingly sympathise with the opposition.

Chaos and confrontation could easily reach Iraq, too, where the possible fall of the Syrian regime seems to be revitalising Sunni resistance to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki’s predominantly Shiite government.

The outcome of the Syrian conflict will also have a direct impact on the Middle East’s alignment of power. A Sunni takeover after Al Assad’s fall would mean a change of strategy with respect to Iran and its Lebanese Shiite ally, Hezbollah, whose viability might be in danger, as a Sunni government in Syria would most likely cut off the conduit for arms flowing from Iran to Lebanon.

The disturbances in Syria have already weakened some of Iran’s traditional alliances in the region. For example, Hamas has taken a position in favour of the Syrian opposition by emphasising its ties with the Muslim Brotherhood, and gave its support last year to Egypt’s transitional government after it permanently opened the frontier with Gaza.

Although the complex situation in Egypt suggests that its leaders will be preoccupied with domestic politics for some time, the new government will also try to redefine its relations with neighbouring countries. Significantly, Egypt’s recently elected President Mohammad Mursi, the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood’s political party, chose Saudi Arabia for his first official foreign visit, a decision laden with religious as well as political symbolism.

For Saudi Arabia, which, along with Qatar, is arming the Syrian opposition, the post-Al Assad period is a strategic opportunity to break the alliance between Syria and Iran, and, at the same time, deliver a severe blow to Hezbollah.

The weakening of the Iran-Syria-Hezbollah axis would directly benefit Israel, which has stepped up its not-so-veiled threats to launch a unilateral military strike against Iran’s nuclear installations. Likewise, Israel accuses Hezbollah — together with Iran — of recent efforts to attack Israeli objectives, including the bombing of a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Bulgaria.

This new scenario will doubtless affect Iran’s position in the ongoing international talks on its nuclear programme, which are fundamental to achieving a diplomatic solution. But, as long as the Syrian conflict continues, it will be difficult to make any progress with an Iran fearful of the impact that a new government in Syria might have on its regional influence.

In the same way, achieving an agreement — or not — with Russia (and thus with China) to contain the Syrian crisis will also determine how much room for manoeuvre the US and the European Union will have with these two countries to address Iran’s nuclear programme.

The Security Council’s members agree on how to address Iran’s nuclear programme, but not on steps to resolve the Syria conflict, owing to fundamental disagreements between Russia (and China) and the rest. But these are, in effect, parallel negotiations, closely dependent on each other for progress.

In order to reach an agreement, it is essential that Turkey, the Gulf states, and the Arab League forge a common position. Only in this way could they win the backing of the various sectors of Syrian opposition — suspicious of the intentions behind unilateral support — and bring their positions closer to those of Syria’s minorities, which cannot be left out of this process. This would create more pressure for backing by the Security Council and set in motion a process leading to a transition policy in Syria.

Reaching an agreement on a post-Al Assad scenario will not be easy, but no alternative is more promising for Syria and the region.

— Project Syndicate, 2012

Javier Solana, former secretary-general of Nato and EU High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, is Distinguished Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution and President of the ESADE Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics.