The Modern History of Syria: A Brief Look

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The Modern History of Syria: A Brief Look

Syria fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1516 and remained a part of their Ottoman Empire for four centuries. During this period, Syria witnessed great deterioration in economic, social, and political fields. In 1916, the Arabs took the opportunity of World War I to revolt against the Turkish rule. Arabs received British military help and promises that after the War ends, Arab countries will be granted full independence. On 6 May 1916, the Ottoman authorities hanged tens of Syrian national leaders in Damascus and Beirut. This day is still celebrated in Syria and Lebanon as the Martyrs' Day. The Arab armies under leadership of Sharif Hussein of Mecca soon achieved victory over the Turks, and in early 1918, Arab and British armies entered Damascus, although by that time, the people of Damascus had already thrown the Ottoman forces out of the City, ending 400 years of Ottoman occupation.

Later in 1918, Syria was declared an independent kingdom under King Faisal I, son of Sharif Hussein. However, France and Britain had their own plans in mind. In an agreement known as the Sykes-Picot Accord, they decided to divide the Middle East into French and British 'spheres of influence'. Syria was to be put under French Mandate. In early 1920, French troops landed on the Syrian coast, and headed towards Damascus. The fledgling Syrian Army under the command of General Yousef Al-Azmeh, the Minister of War, made a desperate attempt to repel the invasion in the Battle of Maysaloon, on 24th July 1920. However, the hopelessly outnumbered and poorly equipped Syrian army was defeated, and its Commander, General Al-Azmeh, was killed in battle. The French Army entered Damascus on 25th July 1920, and after several battles with poorly equipped Syrian rebels, they managed to get the Country under their control. In 1923, the League of Nation officially recognized French mandate over Syria.

Syrians continued to resist the new invaders. In 1925, they revolted against the mandate, in what is known as the Great Syrian Revolt, in a rebellion that would last for nearly two years. Several battles took place in Jabal al-Arab region and in Damascus. The Capital was severely damaged during French air raids in retaliation for the City's support for rebels. It was not until 1936 that France finally accepted to give Syria partial independence according to the Franco-Syrian treaty signed in Paris, but French troops remained on the Syrian soil and continued to influence the Syrian policies. During World War II, Syria witnessed military confrontations between French troops loyal to the Vichy government, allied with Nazi Germany, and Free French troops allied with the British. In 1941, the British Army, along with its French allies, occupied the Country, and promised full independence after the end of the war.

Again, the French did not live up to their promises. Syrians protested again, and in 29 May 1945, French troops attacked the Syrian Parliament building in Damascus, sparking more anger and demonstrations. The matter was discussed in the United Nations Security Council, which came up with a resolution demanding France's withdrawal from Syria. The French had to comply; their last soldier left Syria on 17 April 1946, which was chosen to be Syria's National Day.

The early years of independence were marked by political instability. In 1948, the Syrian army was sent to Palestine to fight along with other Arab armies against the newly created State of Israel. The Arabs lost the war, and Israel occupied 78 percent of the area of historical Palestine. In July 1949, Syria was the last Arab country to sign an armistice agreement with Israel. However, it was only the beginning of the Arab-Israeli conflict.


In 1949, Syria's national government was overthrown by a military coup d'etat led by Hussni al-Zaim. Later that year Zaim was overthrown by his colleague Sami al-Hinnawi. A few months later, Hinnawi was overthrown by Colonel Adib al-Sheeshakli. The latter continued to rule the country until 1954, when growing public opposition forced him to resign and leave the country. The national government was restored, but the Country continued to face instability, the threat this time coming from abroad. In the mid 1950s, Syria's relation with the West witnessed some tension with the improving Syrian-Soviet relations. In 1957, Turkey, a close ally of the US and a member of the NATO, massed its troops on the Syrian borders threatening to invade the country.

The Western threat was also one of the reasons that helped achieve Syria's union with Egypt under the United Arab Republic (UAR) in February 1958, with Gamal Abdel Nasser as President. Nasser's condition to accept union with Syria was dissolving all Syrian political parties. This was one of many reasons that eventually led to the collapse in of the UAR on September 28, 1961, with a bloodless military coup in Damascus.
In 8 March 1963, the Baath Arab Socialist Party came to power in a coup known in Syria as the March Revolution. Parliament was dissolved, and a one-party regime was introduced. The Country continued to be destabilized by conflicts within the Baath itself. In February 1966, the right wing of Baath assumed leadership of the party, establishing the radical Salah Jadid as the strongman of the Country.

In the spring of 1967, severe clashes erupted on the borders between Syria and Israel. In April, Israeli officials publicly threatened to invade Syria. Those threats were among other major events that led to the Six-Day War between Israel and its neighbouring Arab countries. On 5 June 1967, Israel started its war against neighbouring Arab Countries, first by invading the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula and the West Bank of Jordan and then on June 10, the Syrian Golan Heights. Within two days of fighting, Syria had lost the strategic region including its main city of Quneitra. On June 11, the warring parties accepted the UN call for a cease-fire. Later in 1967, the UN Security Council issued its famous Resolution 242 calling for complete Israeli withdrawal from the territories occupied in the Six-Day War, in exchange for peace talks and Arab recognition of Israel's right to exist.

On November 16, 1970, Hafez Assad, then the Defence Minister, led a bloodless coup, known as the Correction Movement. That finally brought Syria some long-lasting stability after years of political disturbance and uncertainty. Assad, elected in as President in 1971, started to get the Nation ready to fight for its occupied land. He mobilized the major political powers in Syria under the National Progressive Front, and got the People's Council (Parliament) back to work.

Syria did not wait too long. On October, 6th 1973, Syria and Egypt launched a surprise attack against the Israeli forces in the occupied Sinai and Golan Heights. Within few days, Syrian troops had almost liberated all the land occupied in 1967, but Israeli forces managed to recover after a massive US airlift. Syria soon found itself fighting US and Israel together; and with the fighting on the Egyptian front ceased, the Syrians were forced to accept the UN call for a cease-fire. The UN Security Council issued another resolution, Resolution 338, calling for Israeli withdrawal from Arab territories and for peace talks to achieve a just and lasting peace in the Middle East.
Obviously, Syria did not want the war to end this way. In early 1974, Syria pursued a war of attrition against the Israeli forces in the Golan. The continuous fighting and the Arab moral victory, pushed the US into mediating a settlement between Syria and Israel. The US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger succeeded in mediating an agreement to disengage Syrian and Israeli troops in the Golan. According to the agreement, Syria regained control over a strip of territory in the Golan including the major city of Quneitra. President Assad raised the Syrian flag over the liberated land on June 26, 1974, but the Syrians were surprised to find that Quneitra and many other towns and villages in the Golan were deliberately and systematically destroyed by the Israelis. The City was never rebuilt. UN troops were deployed in the liberated area to prevent any violations of the cease-fire.

In 1975, Civil War broke out in Lebanon. In 1976, Syrian troops were deployed in Lebanon upon request from the Lebanese Government. Later on, the Arab League give a clear mandate to the Syrian Forces, which formed the backbone of the Arab Deterent Forces in Lebanon. The Syrian troops in Lebanon fought against the invading Israeli army in 1982, and full-scale land and air battles took place between the two sides. In 1990, Syria and its allies in Lebanon succeeded in putting an end to the 15-year-old civil war, and Syrian troops remained in Lebanon to maintain security and stability, until their withdrawal in April 2005.

In 1978, Egyptian President Anwar al-Sadat signed a separate peace agreement with Israel, which was a serious blow to Arab solidarity. Syria was among other Arab nations that opposed Sadat's move. If Israelis really wanted peace, Syria proposed, they should simply withdraw from all the territories occupied in 1967.

In 1980, Iraq launched a war against Iran. Earlier in 1979, the Islamic Revolution in Iran had ended its alliance with the west and declared its support for the Palestinian cause. Syria thought this was a wrong war, at a wrong time and against the wrong enemy. Very few Arab countries supported the Syrian position. Only two years after his war against Iran ended with nothing but heavy losses and causalities, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein invaded the small Arabian Gulf state of Kuwait in August 1990, sparking wide spread international condemnation. Syria, along with other Arab countries, participated in the US-led international coalition that was formed to defend Saudi Arabia and liberate Kuwait. The Gulf War that followed resulted in the destruction of the Iraqi and imposing harsh international sanctions on Iraq. Another major Arab power was now practically out of the conflict with Israel.

After the Gulf War, Syria accepted the US invitation for an international peace conference on the Middle East. The conference, held in Madrid in November 1991, marked the launch of bilateral Arab-Israeli peace talks that were supposedly based on the UN resolutions calling for Israeli withdrawal from territories occupied in 1967, and on the so-called 'land for peace' principle. However, they were stalled for years because of Israel's continuous refusal to give back any Arab territory.

The Arab position was more weakened when the Palestinians and the Jordanians signed separate peace agreements with Israel in 1993 and 1994. Syria and Lebanon, however, vowed to sign a peace treaty together, or not sign at all. Syria continued to support the Lebanese resistance fighters led by Hizbollah against the Israeli occupation forces in South Lebanon. In May 2000, Hizbollah succeeded in driving Israel out of Southern Lebanon after 22 years of occupation.

Syrian-Israeli peace talks had reached a dead end in 1996 with Israel refusing to discuss the complete withdrawal from the Golan Heights. But in late 1999, Israel signalled its will to accept such move, and talks were resumed in the US, this time at a high level between Foreign Minister Farouq al-Sahara'a and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak. The talks were again stalled in early 2000 when Barak tried to exclude the north-eastern shore of the Lake Tiberias from the proposed Israeli withdrawal plan. Syria made it clear that not a single inch of the Syrian soil will be given away.

On June 10th 2000, President Assad died of a heart attack. His son, Bashar Assad was elected President on July 10th.
Since February 2003, Syria stood firmly against the American-led invasion of Iraq. Consequently, Syria was repeatedly accused of supporting the rebels and supplying them with arms and funds, a claim vehemently denied by the Syrian authorities. Nonetheless, Syria has consistently expressed its opposition to the occupation of Iraq, which, along with other fiercely anti-American positions, led to continuing wide-ranging sanctions against Syria and its economic activities.

In the past couple of years, Syria gradually regained its prominence as a major player in the Region, with the major players in Europe gradually re-opening channels of communications with Damascus. The end of the Bush era in the US is hoped to bring about further improvement in Syria's relations with the West, and particularly the US.

 


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