Once the walls and gates are torn down by force, the rest of the things seemed to be pretty easy for the commanders at the front judging from his own experience, the rest of the story should probably be that the Ottoman defenders are stripped of any futile thought of putting up a defence and shiver in their hidings, or come out in groups to surrender to his army just like what it has always been with the other Ottoman possessed towns in the past. An ironic fact is that the majority of the Ottoman conscripts here are actually the same kind of people as the majority of soldiers forming up Antonius' army, they believe in the same faith, speak the same language with little difference in dialects, and have the same culture and living habits.
Suddenly the commander does not know whether this is a positive thing or a tragic.