You should use assertions when the only case in which they are violated is an error in the program logic. You use normal if-then-else conditionals for things that may indeed happen because of input or external possible conditions (i.e. a file is missing).
When you know for sure that the program logic is faulty there is not really much sense in trying to continue execution... your program is working differently from what you think (because otherwise the assertion wouldn't have been triggered) and therefore the best option is just to yell what the problem is and die immediately.
Often assertion are removed when the code is compiled in "release" mode even if however it may make sense to keep them in place if the program logic is very complex and if continuing execution generating bad output is going to create bigger problems than stopping execution.
Note that a "trap" that sometimes novice programmers fall into with assertion is that when the assertion code is removed for release mode the expression inside the assert is not evaluated any more, and therefore if you program depends on side effects of that expression then you're going to be in trouble... for example:
...
assert(insert_record(db, data) == DB_OK); // <== this is bad
...
when assertion are defined away the insertion will not happen at all, leaving you with a program that doesn't work in release mode and that works instead when you try to debug the problem.