Following their defeat, the respite the Romans were granted is typically ascribed to the Arab fleet retreating after its victory and conflict over the authority of
Uthman among the crew, the first stirrings of a
civil war among the Muslims. No further naval attacks on this expedition are recorded in traditional Arabic sources. However, the
Armenian historian
Sebeos records that the Arab fleet continued on beyond the battle at Phoenix to attempt a
siege of Constantinople. The siege was unsuccessful, however, due to a fierce storm that sank the ships with war machines aboard, an event the Romans attributed to divine intervention. The land force led by Mu'awiya in
Chalcedon, having lost their artillery and siege engines, returned to
Syria thereafter. Similarly,
Ibn Kathir mentions that Mu'awiya advanced up to
Chrysopolis around that same year. Muslim sources do not usually mention this event, but it corresponds to notices in other Christian histories of the eastern Mediterranean, such as the chronicle of Theophanes. It suggests the early 650s invasions of Rhodes,
Cyprus, and
Asia Minor were preparatory to a full-scale assault on the walls of Constantinople. Also it provides a strategic explanation for the Arab fleet's retreat following the victory in the Battle of the Masts, since the
First Fitna would not break out until a year later, perhaps influenced by setbacks against the Byzantines and in the Caucasus. ==Aftermath==