By chief foreign correspondent Philip Williams.
It happened overnight.
One day Bashir al-Assad was part of the solution. An odious but necessary partner in the battle against Islamic State.
Then the gas attack in Khan Sheikhoun.
US President Donald Trump had changed his mind. A deal with the devil was no longer possible. Lines had been crossed, the regime was now going to pay.
The from a distance. Specific parts of one military airfield were destroyed.
This was a very direct act of controlled aggression with a clear note attached. Chemical weapons are out.
Use them again and expect a visit from a Tomahawk missile on your headquarters, palace, anywhere you value.
But does it in itself remove the man blamed for the , President Bashar al-Assad?
If this is to be the "game-changer", the beginning of the end for the Syrian leader, it will take a lot more than a few missiles to dislodge him.
As long as the Russians support their Syrian proxy, he will remain.
That is unless Mr Trump decides to take on not just the Syrian President, but Vladimir Putin too. That is unlikely but not impossible.
Or that the Russians could decide it's all too hard and dangerous and strike a deal with the Americans.
How that could be achieved and save face on both sides is hard to see.
In effect, the Americans have declared war on the Syrian state, or what remains of it.
What happens if the Syrians try and shoot down US, or even Australian aircraft on their bombing runs against Islamic State over Syrian skies?
While the Russians and Americans have carefully avoided any potential "accident" in Syria via a hotline, that choreography could come crashing down with all the risks of escalation attached to it.
And if the Syrian President was removed or persuaded to go, what then? There is no alternative government structure to take over.
In areas not under government control, the power vacuum has been filled by a myriad of groups from Islamic extremists to civilians turned fighters who dared to dream of a democratic and free society way back in 2011.
It would require a massive peacekeeping force, the likes of which the world has never seen, to impose a sustainable new order.
The experience in Iraq ensures there is not much appetite for that.
So if President Trump's intention is to deter future chemical weapons attacks, then the Government of Bashar al-Assad would have to be mad to ignore it.
But if regime change is the new goal, then we have an infinitely more complex and dangerous mess ahead that could spiral out of control.
It has taken the horrendous pictures of babies, mothers and fathers, dead and dying, to force change.
At this early stage, it's impossible to tell if this is the beginning to an end to the hell of Syria. Or just another violent twist in a tortured story of missed opportunities and outright malevolence.
If the chemical attacks are stopped, that would be an achievement.
But every day, civilians die, blown to pieces, dismembered, families shattered, with so-called "conventional" weapons.
These are the "acceptable" means of killing the innocents. And until the miracle of a lasting Syrian peace is found, more will die.
It is the power of pictures that have altered this deadly equation ... babies gasping, a father embracing his twins, dead in his arms.
This post originally appeared on ABC News.
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