Syria (Arabic Suriyah), officially
Al Jumhuriyah al Arabiyah as Suriyah (Syrian Arab Republic),
republic in southwestern Asia, bounded on the north by Turkey,
on the east by Iraq, on the south by Jordan and Israel, and on
the west by Lebanon and the Mediterranean Sea. Syria has an area
of 185,180 sq km (71,498 sq mi). The capital and largest city is
Damascus, also spelled Dimashq.
II
LAND AND RESOURCES
Euphrates River, Syria
The rivers in Syria, southwest Asia, are essential
to the country’s agricultural communities. Here,
Syria’s longest river, the Euphrates, runs through
Karkemish. The river, because of its size, supplies
much of the water needed to irrigate the country’s
large land tracts.
Gianni Tortoli/Photo Researchers, Inc.
Syria has an extreme east-to-west
distance of about 830 km (about 515 mi) and an extreme
north-to-south distance of about 740 km (about 460 mi). Along
the Mediterranean coast, which is 193 km (120 mi) long, lies a
narrow plain extending inland as far as 32 km (20 mi). Parallel
to this plain is the Jabal an Nuşayrīyah, a narrow range of
mountains and hills, south of which, along the border of Syria
and Lebanon, are the Anti-Lebanon Mountains, the site of Mount
Hermon, the highest point in the country at 2,814 m (9,232 ft).
The Anti-Lebanon range tapers off into a hilly region called the
Golan Heights (captured by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War) in
the southwestern corner of Syria. Much of the rest of the
country consists of a plateau, which is bisected in the
northeast by the valley of the Euphrates (known in Syria as Al
Furāt) River. The plateau area north of the Euphrates is called
the plain of Al Jazīrah. The semicircular plateau area in the
southeastern is in the Syrian Desert.
The Euphrates, the longest river in
Syria, flows diagonally across the country from Turkey in the
north to Iraq on the east. The second longest river, the
Orontes, originates in the Lebanese portion of the Anti-Lebanon
Mountains and flows north through western Syria to Turkey.
A
Climate
West of the Jabal an Nuşayrīyah, Syria
has a Mediterranean climate, characterized by hot, dry summers
and mild, wet winters. Yearly rainfall ranges from about 510 to
1,020 mm (about 20 to 40 in) in the coastal area, from about 255
to 510 mm (about 10 to 20 in) between Halab (Aleppo), and
Damascus, and from 127 mm (5 in) to less than 25 mm (1 in) in
the desert area in the southeast. Regional variations in
temperature are comparatively slight. At Halab, in the
northwest, the average August temperature is 30°C (86°F) and the
average January temperature is 4°C (40°F). At Tudmur, in the
central region at the edge of the Syrian Desert, the
corresponding temperatures are 31°C (88°F) and 7°C (44°F).
B
Natural Resources
Petroleum, natural gas, phosphate
rock, asphalt, and salt are the main Syrian minerals found in
sufficiently large quantities for commercial exploitation. Small
deposits of coal, iron ore, copper, lead, and gold exist,
primarily in mountainous regions. Good farmland is located in
the coastal region and in parts of the valleys of the Orontes
and Euphrates rivers.
C
Plants and Animals
Syria has comparatively limited areas
of abundant natural vegetation. On the whole the non-arable
areas are too dry to support extensive plant life, and virtually
all of the arable areas have been stripped of natural cover.
Along the coast, however, are found some reed grasses, wild
flowers, trees, and shrubs, including buckthorn and tamarisk. In
the Anti-Lebanon Mountains are forests of Aleppo pine and Syrian
and valonia oak.
The mammalian wildlife of Syria
includes the antelope, deer, wildcat, porcupine, squirrel, and
hare. Birds native to the country include the flamingo, pelican,
bustard, ostrich, eagle, and falcon. Lizards and chameleons are
found in the desert.
D
Environmental Issues
Syria’s farmland suffers from
desertification and soil erosion, in part because of the
country’s rapid rate of deforestation. About 2.2 percent
(1990-1996) of the nation’s forests are felled each year to
clear land for farms and housing.
For many years, the fertility of
Syria’s farmland declined because many of the country’s farmers
did not practice crop rotation. Since the 1980s, the government
has been educating farmers about crop rotation and other
principles of land management. Irrigation projects are gradually
making more of the country agriculturally productive, but most
farmers continue to depend on rainfall to water their crops.
Oil production and refining are major
industries in Syria. Wastes generated during the refining
process have polluted the Euphrates, Orontes, and Barrada river
basins. Raw sewage flowing from urban centers is also degrading
Syria’s supply of fresh water.
Syria has ratified international
agreements to protect biodiversity, endangered species,
wetlands, and the ozone layer. The country has also signed
treaties that limit marine pollution and hazardous waste.
III
POPULATION
Syria is populated chiefly by Arabs,
who constitute about 90 percent of the population. The largest
non-Arab minorities are Kurds, most of whom are pastoral people
concentrated along the Turkish border, and Armenians, who dwell
chiefly in the larger cities. The Syrian Desert is the most
sparsely populated part of Syria. The most densely settled area
of the country is in the west.
A
Population Characteristics
The population of Syria (2002
estimate) is 17,155,814, giving the country an overall
population density of 93 persons per sq km (240 per sq mi).
Population growth in 2002 was estimated at 2.5 percent a year.
B
Political Divisions and Principal Cities
Castle of the Knights
The medieval citadel known as the Castle of the
Knights is near the Orontes River in Ḩimş, also
known as Homs, Syria.
Jon Hicks/Leo de Wys, Inc.
Damascus, Syria
Damascus is one of the world’s oldest continuously
inhabited cities. The city is believed to have been
the capital of an ancient Egyptian city-state and
has long been an important trading center. Today,
modern buildings such as the State Bank of Syria,
shown on the right, stand beside historic squares.
Paolo Koch/Photo Researchers, Inc.
Syria is divided into 13 governorates
and the municipality of Damascus. The capital and largest city
of the country is Damascus, with a population of 2,036,000 (1995
estimate). Major cities include Halab (1,582,930),Himş
(540,133), Al Lādhiqīyah (311,784), and Hamāh (264,348).
C
Religion
Click on the picture for Music
"Islamic Ritual
Darb Shish" from Syria: Islamic Ritual Zikr in
Aleppo (Cat.# Unesco D 8013) (p)1975-1989
Auvidis-Unesco. All rights reserved.
Sacred Sufi Music of Syria
Sufism in Syria
and other Islamic countries became established as a
result of a religious revivalist movement during the
second century. The movement was propagated by
groups of people gathered around a spiritual leader.
In this example, taken from the second part of a
Sufi ceremony called the darb shish, the
“director of conscience,” or shaykh, summons
the novice believers through a series of accelerated
chants to prepare to go into a trance and be pierced
by a sacred sword.
The overwhelming majority of the
Syrian population is Sunni Muslim. Other Muslims include
Ismailis, Shias (Shia Islam), and Alawites (a schism of the
Shiite branch). Of the non-Muslims in Syria, most are
Christians, primarily Greek and Armenian Orthodox. Religious
minorities include Druze, who follow a religion related to
Islam, and a community of approximately 1,000 Jews.
D
Education
Primary education is free and
compulsory for all children. Some 88 percent of the adult Syrian
population was estimated to be literate in 2001. Primary schools
enrolled 2.7 million pupils in the 1998-1999 school year, and 1
million students attended secondary schools and vocational
institutes.
Syria has universities in Damascus,
Halab, Himş, and Al Lādhiqīyah, with a total annual enrollment
in the mid-1990s of about 170,000 students. Also in Damascus is
the Arab Academy (1919), which is devoted to the study of Arabic
language, literature, history, and culture. Other institutes and
colleges specialize in social work, agriculture, industry,
technology, and music.
E
Libraries and Museums
The public libraries in Halab,
Damascus, Himş, and Al Lādhiqīyah house the principal
collections of the country. Other major repositories include the
Damascus University Library, with more than 150,000 volumes, and
the Assad National Library, also in Damascus. The most notable
museum is the National Museum, in Damascus, which has
collections that include Asian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine, and
Islamic art. The museums at the site of the ancient city of
Palmyra and in Halab are noted for their archaeological
holdings.
IV
ECONOMY
Syria’s economy depends heavily on
its agricultural production. The country has 4.7 million
hectares (11.6 million acres) of cultivated land, accounting for
26 percent of its total land area. About one-fifth of the tilled
acreage is irrigated, but extensive areas lie unused for lack of
water. Irrigation is necessary even in many regions that receive
substantial annual rainfall, because most of the rainfall occurs
during the winter rather than during the growing season. Much of
the acreage under cultivation suffers from soil exhaustion
because of insufficient use of fertilizers and failure to rotate
crops. The estimated national budget in 1998 included $16.1
billion in domestic revenue and $16.6 billion in expenditure.
Syria is heavily dependent on aid from the major Arab
oil-producing states.
A
Agriculture
Olive Groves
Rows of olive trees dot the Eghlab Valley in Syria.
Christine Osborne/Photo Researchers, Inc.
Despite climatic handicaps, Syria
produces a wide variety of crops, some in sufficient quantity
for export. The major crops are cereals, primarily wheat and
barley; cotton, which was raised in increasingly large
quantities beginning in the late 1950s and accounted for more
than half the national export revenues before the ascendancy of
oil in the mid-1970s; and tobacco, grapes, olives, citrus
fruits, and vegetables. In 2001 Syrian cereal production,
including wheat, barley and corn, totaled 5.4 million metric
tons. There were also large crops of vegetables (1.9 million
metric tons); fruits (1.9 million metric tons); and cotton
(900,000 metric tons). Syrian livestock in 2001 included 993,000
cattle, 30,000 horses, 198,000 asses, 13.8 million sheep, 1.1
million goats, and 22.4 million poultry.
B
Mining
Oil was first discovered in Syria in
the 1950s. Significant output began after the 1968 completion of
a pipeline linking the oil fields in the northeast to refineries
in the west. Government efforts to encourage exploration by
foreign oil companies further increased output, and by the
mid-1970s petroleum had become Syria’s leading export. Since
then, however, the sector has suffered from periodic declines in
world oil prices and from wider Syrian economic troubles.
Existing reserves are depleting rapidly and may be exhausted in
the early 21st century. The Syrian government is encouraging
foreign companies to explore for new oil fields near the Iraqi
and Turkish borders. Production of crude petroleum was 199
million barrels in 1999. Syria also produces smaller amounts of
natural gas.
C
Manufacturing
Syrian manufacturing industries began
to grow substantially in the 1960s. The government encouraged
industrialization by raising tariffs on imported consumer goods
and providing tax exemptions and credit for domestic industries.
During the period when Syria was federated with Egypt in the
United Arab Republic (February 1958 through September 1961),
governmental involvement in the economic sector was greatly
expanded, and in July 1961, shortly before Syria seceded from
the union, most industrial concerns were nationalized. After the
secession, except for a large textile concern and several flour
mills, Syrian industry was denationalized. The requirement that
companies distribute 25 percent of their profits to their
employees was retained, however. Many of the industries that
were returned to private management after the break with Egypt
were renationalized in 1965.
Textiles constitute the largest
single manufacturing industry in Syria. In 1994 cotton yarn
production was about 37,000 metric tons, while other cotton,
woolen, and mixed textiles totaled 16,700 metric tons. Syrian
artisans continue to be noted, as in centuries past, for the
fine quality of their silk brocades and rugs and for their
artistic metalwork in brass, copper, silver, iron, and steel.
Annual cement production was about 3.2 million tons in the early
1990s. The soap, glass, flour, tobacco, tanning, vegetable oil,
and food-processing industries were growing in the early 1990s.
D
Energy
Some 42 percent of Syria’s
electricity is generated in hydroelectric facilities, and 58
percent is produced in conventional thermal installations. The
output in 1999 was 17.9 billion kilowatt-hours.
E
Currency and Banking
The basic unit of currency is the
Syrian pound, divided into 100 piasters (11.22 pounds
equal U.S.$1; 2000 average). Syrian banking was formerly
controlled by foreign companies. After the achievement of full
independence in 1946, banking operations were conducted to an
increasing extent by Syrian-owned banks. Until 1956 currency was
issued by the largest commercial bank in Syria, the French-owned
Banque de Syrie et du Liban. In that year the Syrian government
established a new, state-owned bank, the Central Bank of Syria,
and authorized it to issue the national currency.
F
Foreign Trade
In the past, Syria imported
considerably more than it exported each year. However, Syria’s
closer alliance with Western nations and the Gulf States in the
aftermath of the Persian Gulf War (1991) stimulated high
economic growth in the private sector and increased export
earnings. In 2000 Syrian imports totaled $4.9 billion, and
exports totaled $4.6 billion. The principal imports were
manufactures of many types, including machinery, transportation
equipment, iron and steel, refined petroleum, textiles, and
chemical products. Syria also imported grain, livestock
products, and other agricultural goods. The principal exports
were petroleum, cotton and other textiles, preserved foods,
beverages, tobacco, phosphates, fruits, and vegetables. The
chief buyers of Syrian exports were Germany, Italy, France,
Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia. Imports were supplied chiefly by
Italy, Germany, France, South Korea, the United States, and
Japan. Much revenue was derived from fees charged to foreign
countries for piping oil through Syria. Considerable foreign
currency also came from the expenditures of the many tourists
who visit the country each year. In November 1995 Syria and
several other Middle Eastern and North African countries signed
an agreement with the European Union to create a Mediterranean
free trade zone by 2010.
G
Transportation and Communications
Transportation and communications
facilities in Syria are owned and operated by the state. Some
1,525 km (948 mi) of railroads connect the major cities of Syria
and extend to the national frontiers of all neighboring
countries except Israel. These include three relatively new
lines connecting Himş to Damascus, Damascus to Halab, and Tartus
to Al Lādhiqīyah. Syria has 43,381 km (26,956 mi) of roads, of
which 23 percent are paved. In 1998 there were 30 vehicles in
use for every 1,000 residents. Al Lādhiqīyah is the main
seaport; port facilities at Tartus were developed in the 1980s.
The national air carrier is Syrian Arab Airlines; the main
international airport serves Damascus.
Telephone mainlines in Syria numbered
103 for every 1,000 inhabitants in 2000. There were 278 radio
receivers per 1,000 people. Television service began in 1960,
and there were 70 sets for every 1,000 Syrians in 1997. The
country’s leading daily newspapers are al-Baath and
al-Thawrah, published in Damascus; al-Jamahir al-Arabia,
published in Halab; and al-Fida, published in Hamāh.
V
GOVERNMENT
An interim constitution issued in
1964 (suspended in 1966) declared Syria to be a democratic
socialist republic. In 1971 a provisional constitution was
decreed by the head of state, General Hafez al-Assad. In 1973 a
permanent constitution creating a People’s Council as the
national legislature was approved by referendum. The
constitution was amended in 2000.
A
Executive
The chief executive and head of state
of Syria is a president, who is popularly elected to a
seven-year term. The president appoints a council of ministers,
headed by a prime minister, and may appoint several vice
presidents.
B
Legislature
The legislature of Syria is the
People’s Council. It is made up of 250 members, popularly
elected to four-year terms.
C
Political Parties
The leading political organization in
Syria is the National Progressive Front (NPF), formed in 1972.
The NPF is a grouping of six political parties, its main
component being the Baath Arab Socialist Party, founded in 1947.
D
Judiciary
The highest tribunal in Syria is the
High Constitutional Court, which sits in Damascus. Other
judicial bodies include the Court of Cassation and lesser courts
of appeal in each of the country’s 13 governorates, summary
courts, and courts of first instance.
E
Defense
Military service is compulsory for
men in Syria, and normally lasts for a period of 30 months. The
country’s armed forces in 2001 included an army of 215,000
members, an air force of 100,000, and a navy of 6,000. Syria
also had a large air defense command.
VI
HISTORY
As early as about 1800
bc
King Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria is thought to have established
his capital, Shubat Enlil, at present-day Tell Leilan in the
extreme northeast of Syria. The kingdom was later conquered by
Hammurabi of Babylonia, and the region was long afterward
influenced principally by Egypt and Babylon. Parts of the region
were conquered successively by the Egyptians and the Hittites,
and, in the 8th century
bc,
by Assyria. In the 6th century
bc
the region passed first to the Chaldeans and then to the
Persians (538
bc). Alexander the
Great made it a part of his empire in 333 and 332
bc,
and at the close of the 4th century
bc
it was appropriated by Seleucus I, one of Alexander’s generals,
who founded Antioch as the capital. During the 3rd century
bc
the Ptolemies of Egypt and the Seleucids contended for the
possession of lower Syria and Palestine. Both areas, and much of
western Asia, passed to the Seleucids, whose realm became known
as the kingdom of Syria. In 64
bc
Syria was made a Roman province.
After the far-flung Roman dominions
were divided into two parts in
ad
395, the Western Roman Empire with its capital at Rome and the
Eastern, or Byzantine, Empire with its capital at
Constantinople, Syria remained a Byzantine province for
approximately 240 years. It was conquered in 636 by the Arabs
and was quickly absorbed into their rapidly expanding Islamic
empire. In 661 Damascus became the seat of the powerful Umayyad
caliphs. At that time it was one of the most important and
splendid cities of the Muslim world. Later it was supplanted by
Baghdād in present-day Iraq.
In 1099 the Crusaders incorporated
part of the region into the Christian kingdom of Jerusalem and
part into the principality of Antioch. In a subsequent campaign
(1174-1187), Saladin, sultan of Egypt, took Syria and overthrew
the kingdom of Jerusalem. The many wars centering on Syria
impoverished the land and its people; its ruin was completed by
a Mongol invasion in 1260.
A
Ottoman Rule
The Ottomans incorporated the region
into their empire in 1516, and it remained in their possession
for the next four centuries. The commercial importance of the
territory as the site of overland routes to eastern Asia was
greatly reduced with the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869.
Strong nationalist movements had
taken hold in many parts of the Ottoman Empire during the early
years of the 20th century. When World War I (1914-1918) broke
out and Turkey took the side of the Central Powers, the Allies,
in order to enlist support against Turkey, held out to the Arabs
the hope of postwar independence. In January 1916, by the terms
of letters between the British government and Husein ibn Ali,
grand sharif of Mecca, the latter promised Arab participation in
the war on the Allied side in return for a British guarantee of
independence for all Arab lands south of a line roughly
corresponding to the northern frontiers of present-day Syria and
Iraq. In May of the same year, however, the United Kingdom and
France secretly concluded a separate accord, known as the
Sykes-Picot agreement, by which most of the Arab lands under
Turkish rule were to be divided into British and French spheres
of influence. The areas now comprising Syria and Lebanon were
assigned to France; those comprising Israel and Jordan were
assigned to the United Kingdom.
B
The French Mandate
The Arabs, in alliance with the
British and French, fought the Turks for the rest of the war and
participated in the capture of Damascus in 1918. In 1919 British
forces withdrew from the area assigned to France, leaving French
troops in control. The following year France, with the
understanding that Syria and Lebanon were to become independent
within a reasonably short time, was granted a mandate over them
by the League of Nations.
Anti-Turkish sentiment in Syria soon
developed into anti-French sentiment and more determined
nationalism. The French quelled one armed rebellion in 1920 and
a second and better organized uprising from 1925 to 1927. In
1938, soon after French and Syrian leaders had reached agreement
on a treaty providing for substantial Syrian independence, the
French government refused to ratify the treaty, partly because
France regarded control of the area as vital to its military
position. The following year France ceded to Turkey the former
Turkish administrative district (sanjak) of Alexandretta
(present-day İskendarun), in which the ancient Syrian capital of
Antioch is located.
These events raised Syrian hostility
toward France to a high pitch. Many prominent political figures
in Syria nevertheless declared their loyalty to France and the
Allies when World War II broke out in 1939. After the surrender
of France to Germany in 1940, Syria came under the control of
the Vichy government. British and Free French forces, however,
invaded and subdued Syria in 1941. Later in the same year, the
Free French government formally recognized the independence of
Syria but continued to occupy the country. With the elections in
1943, a new government was formed under the presidency of the
Syrian nationalist Shukri al-Kuwatli, one of the leaders of the
1925 to 1927 uprising against the French. After the end of World
War II in 1945, France persisted in trying to exercise influence
over Syria. Resultant anti-French uprisings subsided only after
the British military intervention on the side of the French and
the withdrawal of all French troops and administrative
personnel. In 1946 the British troops left Syria. Syria became a
charter member of the United Nations (UN) in 1945.
C
The Republic
The postwar period was marked by
serious political instability. In 1944 a “Greater Syria”
movement had been initiated to found a Syrian Arab state that
would include Lebanon, Syria, and present-day Jordan and Israel.
Many Syrian opponents of the movement feared the absorption of
Syria into a larger Arab state and the consequent loss of Syrian
national identity. The movement nevertheless gave impetus to
Syrian adherence to the Arab League, which was formed primarily
to prevent the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine. Syrian
forces participated in the 1948 war between Arab forces and the
newly established state of Israel. An armistice was concluded in
July of the same year. On March 30, 1949, a military junta led
by General Husni al-Zaim, a member of the Kurdish minority,
seized power. Essentially a dictatorship and highly unpopular,
the new regime was overthrown in August by another military
junta, and Zaim was executed. General elections were held in
November for a constituent assembly. A third coup d’état, led by
Colonel Adib al-Shishakli, a former chief of police and head of
security, occurred in December. The constituent assembly
promulgated a new constitution in September 1950 and, assuming
responsibility as the chamber of deputies, elected the
provisional chief of state Hashim al-Atasi, an elderly and
respected politician, to the presidency.
Syrian and Israeli frontier forces
clashed on numerous occasions in the spring of 1951. The
hostilities, which stemmed from Syrian opposition to an Israeli
drainage project in the demilitarized zone between the two
countries, ceased on May 15, after intercession by the United
Nations Security Council. Successive governmental crises during
1951 culminated, on November 29, in another coup d’état
engineered by Shishakli. President Atasi resigned shortly
thereafter, and Shishakli and his associates formed a
government. Shishakli promulgated a new constitution in 1953. He
severely restricted civil liberties and ruled the country as a
military dictator until March 1954, when he was ousted by
another military group. Shishakli’s successors reinstated Atasi
as president, reconvened the 1949 chamber of deputies, and
restored the constitution of 1950.
After 1954 Syria appeared
increasingly anti-Western and pro-Soviet. The government
protested vigorously in 1955 against the creation of the Baghdād
Pact, a defensive alliance formed in that year by Turkey, Iraq,
Iran, Pakistan, and the United Kingdom.
In July 1956 the Syrian chamber of
deputies formally established a committee to negotiate the terms
of a possible federation with Egypt. The attacks on Egypt in
October and November 1956 by Israel, the United Kingdom, and
France intensified the growing Syrian resentment toward the
West.
Syria denounced the Eisenhower
Doctrine, promulgated in January 1957 to combat potential
Communist aggression in the Middle East. In September, Syria
accused Turkey of massing troops on the Syrian-Turkish border
with the intent of executing a U.S.-backed attack on Syria. The
USSR supported the Syrian charge, and the matter was brought
before the UN General Assembly in October. The Syrian complaint
was withdrawn, however, by consent of all the parties concerned,
before any UN action was taken. Throughout 1957 Syria accepted
increasing aid from the USSR. In October, the USSR agreed to
provide aid to Syria, over a period of 12 years, for the
construction of many large-scale development projects.
D
Union with Egypt
On February 21, 1958, a plebiscite
held in Syria and Egypt gave nearly unanimous approval to the
federation of the two countries as the United Arab Republic
(UAR), with Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt as president. The
following month Nasser dissolved all Syrian political parties,
including the Communist Party, and dismissed pro-Soviet army
officers.
Under a system of land reform
introduced in September, individual holdings were limited to 80
hectares (200 acres) of irrigated and 300 hectares (750 acres)
of un-irrigated land. Separate ministries for Syria and Egypt
were abolished on October 7 in favor of central ministries in
Cairo. The first distributions of confiscated land occurred in
Syria on February 23, 1959. Elections for local councils, held
on July 8, resulted in a setback for socialists in Syria. On
March 18, 1960, Nasser appointed several Syrians to his cabinet
in a move to strengthen his hold on the country. The National
Union, the single legal party of the UAR, held its first
congress in Cairo during July. A further step toward
unification, taken on August 16, 1961, was the establishment of
a single UAR cabinet. Meanwhile, a vigorous policy of
nationalization, including steamship lines and banking and
insurance firms, intensified conservative opposition to the UAR.
Army units seized Damascus on September 28 and the following day
proclaimed the renewed independence of Syria. Nasser decided not
to resist the new regime.
E
Baath Party Rule
Hafez al-Assad
Syrian leader Hafez al-Assad, left, seized
control of his country’s government as prime
minister in 1970 and became president in 1971. The
leader of a repressive government that sent
thousands of troops to crush a political uprising in
1982, Assad survived several coup attempts in the
1980s. Openly hostile to Israel, Assad supported
Egypt’s 1973 war against Israel and financed the
Palestine Liberation Organization in its efforts to
establish a Palestinian state. After failing to ally
with Iraq in 1979, Assad supported Iran in its
1980-1988 war with Iraq and sent troops to fight
against Iraq during the Persian Gulf War (1991).
Barry Iverson/Woodfin Camp and Associates, Inc.
A provisional constitution was
approved in a referendum early in December 1961, and a new
national government was established. On March 8, 1963, this
government was overthrown in a bloodless military coup, and a
national council of a revolutionary command assumed control.
Major General Amin el-Hafez, a former military attaché in
Argentina, became chairman of the national council.
In May 1964 the national council was
replaced by a presidency council of three civilian and two
military members vested with full executive powers. Tensions
within the ruling Baath Party, especially the long-standing
hostility between its older civilian members and the extreme
leftists among the young military officers, mounted steadily in
1964 and throughout 1965. In February 1966 the radicals seized
power, placed several longtime Baathist leaders under arrest,
and installed Nur ad-Din al-Atasi, a former deputy prime
minister, as head of state.
In July and September 1966 two
abortive attempts to overthrow the regime were followed by
extensive purges in the army and the government. On November 4,
1966, Syria and Egypt entered into a defense agreement directed
against Israel. This move was in part a response to increasing
tension on the Syrian-Israeli border. During 1966 and early 1967
the border was repeatedly violated by Syrian-based guerrilla
attacks and Israeli reprisals. Border incidents were an
important catalyst in the chain of events leading to the
outbreak of the Six-Day War between Israel and the Arab nations
in 1967. During the conflict Israeli forces overran the Syrian
positions on the Golan Heights, advanced rapidly, and occupied
Al Qunayţirah, only 65 km (40 mi) from Damascus. On June 10 the
United Nations cease-fire proposal was accepted, and observers
were placed between Israeli and Syrian forces. Charging the
United Kingdom and the United States with active support of
Israel, Syria broke relations with both countries on June 6.
In November 1970 General Hafez
al-Assad seized power. Assad became president in March 1971; he
formed a new cabinet in December 1972, giving the Baathists more
than half the posts and dividing the rest among the other
parties. Like Assad, many of the new members of the government
belonged to the Alawite sect of Islam, which comprises about 11
percent of Syria’s population.
Refugee Camp Near Damascus
During the Six-Day War of 1967, Israel captured
territory from surrounding Arab nations, including
the Golan Heights region in southwestern Syria. The
war caused thousands of Palestinian Arabs and others
residing in the Golan Heights to flee to refugee
camps administered by the United Nations, like this
one near the Syrian capital of Damascus.
Authenticated News International/Archive Photos
During the Arab-Israeli War of 1973,
Syrian troops attacked Israel on the Golan Heights, while Egypt
struck along the Suez Canal. After early Syrian gains, Israel
drove the Syrian forces off the Golan Heights and advanced to
within 32 km (20 mi) of Damascus. Syria belatedly agreed to a
UN-sponsored cease-fire accepted by the other warring nations,
but it refused to discuss prisoner exchanges. After mediation by
United States Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, Syria and
Israel signed a disengagement agreement in May 1974; the accord
provided for a neutral zone, patrolled by UN forces, and for the
repatriation of prisoners of war. In June, Syria and the United
States resumed diplomatic relations, severed in 1967.
As it became clear in 1975 that Egypt
would pursue a bilateral agreement with Israel, Syria forged
closer ties with Jordan. The following year, Syria intervened in
the Lebanese civil war and subsequently became mired in the
continuing conflict. In 1980 Syria signed a 20-year treaty of
friendship and cooperation with the USSR. Israel effectively
annexed the Golan Heights in 1981 when it claimed legal and
political authority in the region. Syrian and Israeli forces
clashed the following year when Israel invaded Lebanon.
Domestically, Assad’s regime was
shaken by growing civil disturbances. An extremist group called
the Muslim Brotherhood was accused of several assassinations. In
1982 government troops suppressed a full-scale rebellion by the
brotherhood in and around Hamāh, reducing much of the city to
rubble. In 1986 the United Kingdom broke diplomatic relations
with Syria and the United States imposed sanctions, both
accusing Syria of sponsoring international terrorism.
Syria has been considered an
occupying force within Lebanon since the mid-1970s, when it sent
thousands of troops there. In February 1987 Syria ordered a
force of 7,000 into the Muslim sector of Beirut (Bayrūt) in an
attempt to restore order between warring factions. In October
1990 a Syrian-led assault crushed resistance in East Beirut,
reuniting the Lebanese capital. Although most of the fighting in
Lebanon ended in 1990, and Syrian and Lebanese forces signed a
friendship treaty in May 1991 calling for mutual cooperation,
Syrian forces remained in the country. As of mid-1996 Syria
still had an estimated 35,000 or more troops stationed in
Lebanon and continued to exercise significant control over
Lebanese politics.
Syria also has had a long and
troubled history with neighboring Iraq. Syria was one of the few
Arab nations to support Iran during the Iran-Iraq War
(1980-1988). After Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990, Syria
sent troops to Saudi Arabia and later joined the anti-Iraq
coalition in the Persian Gulf War. Syria’s participation in the
multinational coalition helped improve its relations with both
the United States and the United Kingdom.
In October 1991 Syria and several
other Arab nations entered into U.S.-sponsored peace
negotiations with Israel. Syria’s chief concern was ownership of
the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, but little progress was
made, in part because Israel was involved in more immediate
negotiations with its longtime enemy the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO). In September 1993 Israel and the PLO signed
a landmark peace accord. Assad expressed serious reservations
about the agreement and regarded the secret negotiations that
had produced it as having weakened the united Arab position. In
January 1994 Assad met with U.S. president Bill Clinton in
Geneva, Switzerland, regarding peace negotiations with Israel.
This was his first such meeting with a U.S. leader since 1977.
Foreign relations remained strained
in the late 1990s. The 1996 election of a conservative Israeli
prime minister who was less inclined to make territorial
concessions froze negotiations involving the Golan Heights.
Although the United States removed Syria from its list of major
drug-producing and drug-trafficking countries in 1997, it did
not lift restrictions on economic aid and exports to Syria,
because it still considered it a nation that encouraged
terrorism. In October 1998 Turkey threatened to invade unless
Syria stopped supporting the Kurdistân Worker’s Party (PKK), a
guerrilla force fighting for a Kurdish homeland in southeastern
Turkey, and expelled the group’s leader, Abdullah Öcalan. The
Turkish government has long considered the PKK a terrorist
organization responsible for tens of thousands of deaths in
Turkey. Syria complied with Turkey’s demands, expelling Öcalan
and signing an agreement banning PKK activity in Syria.
The election of a more liberal
Israeli prime minister in 1999 opened the way for the resumption
of peace talks with Israel. In December 1999 Israeli and Syrian
leaders met in Washington, D.C., and agreed to begin another
round of talks in January 2000. The new talks quickly broke
down, and even a summit meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, between
President Assad and U.S. president Bill Clinton in March 2000
failed to revive them.
In June 2000 Assad died from
complications of heart disease. The Syrian legislature amended
the nation’s constitution to allow Assad’s son Bashar al-Assad
to succeed him as president. In July Bashar al-Assad was
confirmed in office by a national referendum.
Bashar al-Assad
Bashar al-Assad (right) was named president
of Syria upon the death of his father, President
Hafez al-Assad, in June 2000. He was confirmed in
office by a national referendum the following month.
AFP/Corbis
Further reading:
Syria
Ball, Warwick. Syria: A Historical and
Architectural Guide. Interlink, 1997. A
picturesque guide to Syria's archaeology and
architecture.
Burns, Ross. Monuments of Syria. Zed,
1999. A pictorial guide to Syria's most
celebrated sites.
Cheneviere, Alan. Syria: Cradle of
Civilizations. Stacey, 1997. Syrian
history and modern-day culture conveyed
through photographs and informative text.
Commins, David. Historical Dictionary of
Syria. Scarecrow, 1996. Contains a
detailed synopsis of Syrian history, a
chronology, and substantial dictionary
entries.
Deonna, Laurence. Syrians: A Travelogue
1992-1994. Passeggiata, 1996. Explores
Syrian society through photographs and
insightful text.
Kalter, Johannes. Art and Crafts of
Syria. Thames & Hudson, 1993. Syrian
handicrafts, including ceramics, woven mats,
cloth, and metalwork; explanatory text and
more than 600 illustrations.
Quilliam, Neil. Syria and the New World
Order. Ithaca, 1999. A succinct analysis
of Syria's foreign policy and influence in
the Middle East.
Seale, Patrick. Assad of Syria: The
Struggle for the Middle East. University
of California Press, 1990. Background study
of the Syrian leader and the nation's
policies.
For younger readers
Beaton, Margaret. Syria. Children's
Press, 1988. For readers in grades 5 to 8.
South, Coleman. Syria. Marshall
Cavendish, 1995. For middle school readers.
Multi Media Publishing Co. P.O. Box 4615
Crestline, California 92325
(909) 338-4736
Should you have any questions or comments, please feel free to contact
us at:
support@multimedia-publishing.com