How did Tigrat Parashar expand outward step by step to prosperity?

In 743 BC, Tigray Parashar mobilized all the main forces of the Assyrian army and declared war on the powerful enemy Uratu. He pushed the army into northern Syria. King Salduri II of urartu led a large army to northern Syria, and also contacted the military forces in northern Syria with Abad as an ally. In the Kangmahan area, the two sides fought fiercely. Tigray Parashar won a great victory, and Salduri II left his army, got on a mare in a hurry, and fled in a hurry. Tigrat Parashar then surrounded Abad. After three years of siege, Abad city was finally captured. In this way, Tigray Parashar basically controlled northern Syria.

In 735 BC, Assyrian troops attacked Uratu again. After being frustrated, Salduri II retreated to Tuxipa, the capital, which was a fortress that was easy to defend but difficult to attack. Tigrat Parashar failed to break through with all kinds of siege equipment, so he had to erect a stone monument outside Tushipa to commemorate his expedition. Nevertheless, Urato eventually weakened and could not compete with Assyria.

After Tigray Parashar successfully conquered the east, south and north, Damascus Kingdom in the west became his main rival. At this time, Lecun, king of Damascus, allied with Gaby, the new king of Israel, and attacked the Jewish kingdom. The Jewish king turned to him for help. Tigray Parracha took the opportunity to lead a great army westward. He avoided the main force of Damascus army and crossed Damascus from the north to the Mediterranean coast. In 733 BC, there was a coup in Israel, and King Gaby was killed by Hosea. Hoshea seized the throne and soon joined Assyria. In this way, Damascus's allies were all wiped out in more than a year, and Assyria's power greatly surpassed Damascus. When two males compete, there is bound to be a battle. Seeing that the time had come, Tigray Palasha marched into Damascus. As a result, the two sides fought fiercely, with corpses lying everywhere and rivers of blood ... After a whole year of hard work, Assyrian soldiers finally broke into the city, and the two sides fought hand-to-hand for seven days and seven nights. Assyrian troops won the final victory. The king of Liecun in Damascus was seriously injured and became a prisoner of war. He was executed by Tigrat Parashar, and other Damascus generals were beheaded and their noses cut off. In the past, the bustling city of Damascus lay on its back, with its heads piled up in hills and ruins ... Tigray Parashar III's conquest of Damascus made many countries tremble with fear. In 729 BC, Assyria merged with Babylon. At this point, the territory of the Assyrian Empire expanded unprecedentedly, reaching the western plateau of Iran in the east, the Mediterranean Sea in the west, the Persian Gulf in the south and the upper reaches of the two river basins in the north. This huge empire lasted for a century. Tigray Parashar III died in 727 BC, and he ruled Assyria for eighteen years, which was the turning point of Assyria from decline to prosperity and from weak to strong.