Syria: A History of the Last Hundred Years
By John McHugo
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About this ebook
The fall of Syria into civil war over the past two years has spawned a regional crisis with reverberations growing louder in each passing month. In this timely account, John McHugo seeks to contextualize the headlines, providing broad historical perspective and a richly layered analysis of a country few in the United States know or understand.
McHugo charts the history of Syria from World War I to the tumultuous present, examining the country’s thwarted attempts at independence, the French policies that sowed the seeds of internal strife, and the fragility of its foundations as a nation. He then turns to more recent events: religious and sectarian tensions that have divided Syria, the pressures of the Cold War and the Arab-Israeli conflict, and two generations of rule by the Assads.
The result is a fresh and rigorous narrative that explains both the creation and unraveling of the current regime and the roots of the broader Middle East conflict. As the Syrian civil war threatens to draw the US military once again into the Middle East, here is a rare and authoritative guide to a complex nation that demands our attention.
“Scholarly but accessible and of much interest to those with an eye on geopolitical matters.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Useful as a concise overview of independent Syria’s most important movements and personalities, McHugo’s book gives readers the basic background necessary to understand the country.” —Publishers Weekly
John McHugo
John McHugo is a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Syrian Studies at St Andrews University. A board member of the Council for Arab British Understanding, he is also a he is also an advisor on peace in the Middle East. McHugo's writing has featured in History Today, The World Today, Jewish Quarterly and on the BBC News website.
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Syria - John McHugo
SYRIA
ALSO BY JOHN McHUGO
A Concise History of the Arabs
© 2014, 2015 by John McHugo
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher.
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Permissions Department, The New Press,
120 Wall Street, 31st floor, New York, NY 10005.
First published in Great Britain in 2014 by Saqi Books
This edition published in the United States by The New Press, New York, 2015
Distributed by Two Rivers Distribution
ISBN 978-1-62097-050-8 (e-book)
CIP data is available
The New Press publishes books that promote and enrich public discussion and understanding of the issues vital to our democracy and to a more equitable world. These books are made possible by the enthusiasm of our readers; the support of a committed group of donors, large and small; the collaboration of our many partners in the independent media and the not-for-profit sector; booksellers, who often hand-sell New Press books; librarians; and above all by our authors.
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24681097531
To Benedict
You know and we know, as practical men, that the question of justice arises only between parties equal in strength and that the strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must.
Thucydides, The History of the Peloponnesian War
Contents
List of Maps
Chronology
Glossary
Preface
1The Land that Once was Known as Shaam
2French Rule, 1920–1946
3From Independence to Hafez al-Assad, 1946–1970
4Hafez al-Assad, 1970–2000: Foreign Policy Challenges
5Inside the Syria of Hafez al-Assad, 1970–2000
6Bashar al-Assad, 2000–: From Succession to Civil War
7Drawing the Threads Together
Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Index
List of Maps
The Middle East showing modern political boundaries
Greater Syria showing the provinces of Syria and Aleppo and late Ottoman administrative boundaries
Greater Syria showing the partition by Britain and France after the Great War
The Mandate of Syria showing internal boundaries created by France
The independent state of Syria showing major towns
Chronology
Glossary
Alawi: a member of a secretive Muslim sect which dates from the eleventh century and predominates in the mountains east of Lattakia. The Alawis are also represented in parts of the countryside of the Orontes valley. There are also Alawis in Turkey.
Ba’th: an Arab nationalist party originally formed in Damascus in the early 1940s by Michel Aflaq and Salah al-Din Bitar. Its ideals are Arab unity, freedom from foreign domination, and socialism.
Druze: another secretive sect which is an offshoot of Islam. The Druze are predominant on the Hawran Plateau around Suwayda, south-east of Damascus, and in parts of Mount Lebanon. There are also Druze communities elsewhere in Syria and in the Galilee.
Hashemite: the name of an Arab dynasty descended directly from the Prophet Muhammad which provided the guardians of the Holy Cities of Mecca and Medina until they were forced out by Ibn Saud (the founder of Saudi Arabia) in 1924–5. The Hashemites led an Arab nationalist revolt against the Ottoman Turks during the Great War and briefly established a kingdom of Greater Syria centred on Damascus. More enduring Hashemite kingdoms closely tied to Great Britain were established in Iraq (overthrown in 1958) and Jordan. The Hashemite brand of Arab nationalism was secular but closely tied to British influence.
ISIS: The self-styled Islamic State of Iraq and Shaam
is also known as ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
), IS (Islamic State
) and Da’ish
(its Arabic acronym). It gained traction among Sunni Arabs in Iraq as a reaction to the sectarianism of the government of Nouri al-Maliki. It expanded into eastern Syria as the forces of Bashar al-Assad withdrew from many areas and established itself in the provincial capital of Raqqa in the spring of 2013. Following its seizure of Mosul in June 2014, its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, proclaimed himself Caliph. It uses extreme violence to instill fear and bolster its control.
Mandate: a novel concept in international law established by Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations in 1919. A Mandate was granted to an advanced nation
to provide tutelage
to peoples formerly ruled by Turkey or Germany but who were not deemed to be ready to stand by themselves under the strenuous conditions of the modern world
. The intention was that the Mandatory (that is, the power which was granted the Mandate) would prepare the people under its tutelage for full independence. The principle of the well-being and development
of a people placed under a Mandate was considered to be a sacred trust of civilisation
. Syria and Lebanon were placed under French Mandate, while Britain was granted Mandates over Palestine and Iraq.
Maronite: a member of a Christian sect predominant in parts of Lebanon but also with followers scattered throughout Greater Syria which has retained its own traditions and autonomous structure while being in communion with the Roman Catholic Church since the time of the Crusades.
Millet: a Christian community granted internal self-government by the Ottoman sultan, often (but not necessarily) through the leaders of the clerical structure of their church. The Ottoman Jews were also given the status of a millet.
Mukhabarat: an Arabic word for intelligence services – especially the much feared intelligence agencies of the Syrian government.
Notable: a term used to denote important and influential quasi-aristocratic families which provided the backbone of society in Greater Syria during the Ottoman era and later. Notable families provided many administrators and religious leaders. They were based in the principal cities but were often major landlords in the countryside. They were essentially intermediaries of power between the government and the peasantry.
Salafi: literally a follower of the forefathers
. The term is generally used for a Sunni Muslim who follows a rigid and literalist form of Islam and tries to base his life as closely as possible on that of the Prophet and his Companions in the seventh century. Hence, Salafism
. Rather confusingly, the term is also sometimes used for a follower of the reformist and open-minded school of modernist Islam established by the Egyptian reformer Muhammad Abduh at the dawn of the twentieth century, and which he called the Salafiyah. This is very different indeed from Salafism.
Sanjak: a Turkish word for a province.
Syriac: an ancient Semitic language still spoken by a few small pockets of Christians in Syria, Iraq and south-eastern Turkey who are followers of the Syrian Orthodox Church. Once it was the lingua franca of the Fertile Crescent and it has a rich literary heritage. Aramaic, the language spoken by Christ, is a variant of Syriac.
Takfir: declaring another Muslim to be an apostate and therefore worthy of death. Hence takfiri
– someone who does this.
Tanzimat: a series of nineteenth-century Ottoman reforms.
Taqiyya: a doctrine followed by Shi’is and Alawis under which it is permitted, when need arises, to dissemble about one’s true religious beliefs in order to avoid persecution by the Sunni Muslim majority.
Uniate: a term to denote a Christian who belongs to an autonomous church with its own traditions which is in communion with the Roman Catholic Church.
Wahhabi: a strict, puritanical Muslim sect founded by Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab in Central Arabia in the mid-eighteenth century. It is the prevailing ideology of Saudi Arabia. Today, it overlaps with Salafism which Saudi Arabian Wahhabis seek to export to Muslim communities across the world.
Yishuv: a Hebrew word used to denote the Jewish community in Palestine before the establishment of the state of Israel.
THE MIDDLE EAST SHOWING MODERN POLITICAL BOUNDARIESTHE MIDDLE EAST SHOWING MODERN POLITICAL BOUNDARIES
Preface
I
The sufferings of the Syrian people since their country descended into civil war in 2011–12 need no recapitulation. The statistics, even if provisional, are terrible. Nobody knows for certain the numbers of dead or injured. Accurate statistics are hard to come by in a war zone, and the numbers are bound to rise. As of October 2014, out of a population of almost 22.5 million, it is reasonable to assume 200,000 fatalities.¹ Over 3.2 million refugees have fled Syria,² while 6.45 million are internally displaced and 4.6 million in need of humanitarian assistance in besieged/hard to access areas.
³
To the English-speaking world, Syria is a far-off country which relatively few people have made a serious effort to understand. The Arab Spring
aroused great interest and excitement, but as the crackdown on protesters in Syria evolved into civil war and a man-made humanitarian crisis began, disaster fatigue seemed all too often to be the general reaction to what was happening. Despite energetic advertising campaigns by relief charities, at first only occasional incidents such as the death of the Sunday Times reporter Marie Colvin in Homs in February 2012 brought the unfolding catastrophe home.
For a couple of weeks, the use of chemical weapons in the Damascus suburbs of Ain Tarma and Zamalka which killed hundreds of people on 21 August 2013 shook the world, but it was not enough to persuade British Members of Parliament to give their government the discretion to use force for humanitarian intervention. It was the same with other major world players. As soon as agreement was reached with the Syrian government about the decommissioning and destruction of its chemical weapons, the issue largely faded from the headlines. The killing of Syrians by conventional weaponry and their deaths by starvation, disease and hypothermia did not capture our attention in the same way. Soon enough, public compassion had moved on to fresh humanitarian disasters in other parts of the world.
Following the failure of the talks in Geneva between the Syrian government and opposition politicians on 15 February 2014, the international mediator, Lakhdar Brahimi, stated that he had no alternative but to apologise to the Syrian people.⁴ The fighting does not yet seem to have run its course. When the conflict ends – and no one can say when that will be – the world will be presented with yet another traumatised Arab nation. In 1947–9, the majority of the indigenous Arabs of Palestine were forced to flee their homes. Many of them and their descendants are refugees to this day. Among many people in the West, their story remains a taboo topic. But the Palestine problem is just one cause of instability in the region. In the mid-1970s, Lebanon exploded into a civil war which lasted until 1990 and whose embers smoulder still. Then, following the US-led invasion in 2003, Iraq disintegrated along sectarian and ethnic lines. Each of these countries borders Syria, and their tragedies caused severe problems for the Syrian government of the day and Syrian society as a whole. Now it is the turn of Syria itself to look destruction in the face after decades of draconian rule by a government that overreacted to the smallest signs of dissent.
Is the sequential implosion of these closely connected Arab countries just a coincidence? Or is there a deeper, underlying cause that brought conflict to them? In either case, what lessons can be learned? This book provides pointers towards an answer to these questions by reviewing the history of Syria since the Great War of 1914–8, whose one hundredth anniversary the world commemorated in 2014. While the descent into civil war in 2011–2 was certainly the result of failings by the Syrian leadership, there is also an element of culpability and negligence which must be spread much more widely.
The effect of the actions of outside powers on Syria over the last century cannot be overlooked. The country’s borders were decided by France and Britain in the immediate aftermath of the Great War. Those two nations thus took upon themselves the momentous responsibility of deciding who was – and who was not – a Syrian. France had a vision of a permanent French presence in Syria, something that conflicted with its sacred trust of civilisation
⁵ to prepare the Syrian people for full, sovereign independence. Furthermore, although this book is not about the Arab-Israeli conflict, its enormous and deleterious effect on Syria cannot be avoided. That conflict was not created by Syrians but they, like their Arab neighbours, had no choice but to assimilate and digest its consequences – something that put both leaders and people under immense strain which has lasted to the present. The Cold War did not help, either. All too easily forgotten today, the global tussle for supremacy between the USA and the USSR turned Syria into a pawn. It was to be moved and, when expedient, sacrificed on the chess board of global politics. In fact, today’s Syrian civil war could be said to be the last proxy conflict of the Cold War. The alternative view, which is even more disturbing, is that it is the harbinger of the revival of the Cold War which has now begun in Ukraine. It is not an exaggeration to say that the actions of the great powers in the aftermath of the Great War and over the following decades deprived the people of Syria of any chance of a normal development to nationhood.
But the major international players were not the only ones who have played games in Syria. As will be seen, certain Arab states, particularly Iraq, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and latterly even Qatar, have treated Syria as a ball to be prised from their opponents. It has been the same with non-Arab Iran and Turkey. In each period covered by this book, the impact of wars and foreign affairs will be considered before turning to the developments which actually took place inside Syria. This may seem unusual for the history of a country, but in this case it is only logical. Events happening outside Syria circumscribed the freedom of action open to its rulers and foreclosed the options available to them. This does not excuse or justify some of the actions those rulers took, but their actions cannot be examined in isolation from what was going on between Syria and its neighbours.
One of the greatest tragedies in the history of Syrian politics is what happened to Ba’thism. Initially a nationalist movement which seemingly cared deeply about social justice and healing the rifts in society throughout the Arab world, it had the added advantage for Syrians of having been conceived and born in Damascus. The way in which Ba’thism morphed into the dictatorship of the Assads is an object lesson for other Arab countries at the present time. Another salutary example is the chaos of parliamentary life in Syria under the Mandate and the years after independence. The glimpses of that chaos which this book contains are a dire warning. It led to impatience with elected politicians and is part of the story of descent into dictatorship.
Religious politics in Arab countries didn’t use to be as important as many people now assume, but they gained in significance as a reaction to the failures of the Ba’thists and other Arab nationalists, and were also linked to the profound sense of alienation from the West which occurred for reasons which this book will make painfully clear. Islamism is not well understood in the West. It is ultimately a quest for authenticity and identity. Values such as honesty, justice and mercy are at the heart of Islam, with the result that the kind of indiscriminate violence practised by some Islamist groups is incompatible with the Muslim ideal of Jihad. Many Syrians may well want a form of democracy that acknowledges in some way the Islamic roots of the majority of the population. This would not necessarily be the beginning of a slippery slope that might lead part of the way down the path of ISIS which kills, ethnically cleanses and enslaves non-Muslims, while executing Muslims who reject it.
Hafez al-Assad never envisaged the establishment of a democracy in Syria which might threaten his position. If his son ever did so, he left it as a can to be kicked down the road until it was too late. For both father and son, democracy and Islamist militancy were twin threats. To tar the advocates of the former with the brush of the latter was highly expedient. The increasing prominence of militant groups among those fighting the Assad regime today is just part of the price Syrian society has paid for this cynicism.
II
I first went to Syria in November 1974 when I was twenty-three years old and studying Islamic history at postgraduate level at the American University in Cairo. I had planned a week walking in the mountains which run parallel to the coast. Armed with a sleeping bag and ground sheet, I got off the bus at the crossroads below the famous Crusader castle of Krak des Chevaliers. The dark, green hills rising before me had more in common with the Brecon Beacons in Wales than what I had been expecting: the stark rocks of the Arabian desert which I had seen in the film Lawrence of Arabia. Rain threatened, and I was only too happy to accept a lift from a taxi driver taking the local vet to visit a sick cow. Ibrahim, the farmer who had summoned the vet, insisted I stay the night as soon as he had greeted us. He was a stocky man in his sixties who wore a white cloth wrapped round his head and the sherwal, the traditional black pants of a farmer, tight round the ankles but baggy from the knees upwards.
Western visitors were rare in the mountains then, although that was not so in the years before 2011 – and plenty of hotels have been built since my visit. We communicated that night in a mixture of Arabic, French and English, for Ibrahim had served in the army during the French Mandate and was proud of his French, whilst Karim, his eldest son, was studying English at Aleppo University and was painstakingly ploughing through Thomas Hardy’s The Mayor of Casterbridge with the same difficulties I was experiencing with classical Arabic works. Towards the end of the evening, when we had got to know each other as well as two people can in such a short time, Ibrahim asked me, In the West, are there still people who live like us?
I told him there were hill farmers in Wales and in remote parts of England and Scotland, but I wondered how long they could survive in a modern economy. We could detect a sadness in each other’s eyes which betrayed our shared regret for the passing of old ways and disquiet at the uncertainties and brutalities of the modern world.
Much earlier, when questioned about myself, I had said I was doing a Master’s degree in medieval Islamic studies, which I hoped would lead to a career as a university lecturer. This met with approval, but when I mentioned I was working on a book by the eleventh-century Muslim thinker Abu Hamid al-Ghazali, my hosts did not seem interested and had hardly heard of him. The oval nostrils on Ibrahim’s Semitic nose flared ever so slightly and he interjected, Yes, they have built a mosque here. There has to be one, of course
.
A silence followed. Eventually, Ibrahim broke it himself. "It goes back to Nasser. When he ruled Syria as well as Egypt,⁶ he thought he would become the great leader of the Arabs. He wanted everyone to think of themselves as the same – as Arabs, not Christians or Muslims. Here you are in the Wadi al-Nasara, which means the Valley of the Christians. He wanted it to be called ‘Wadi al-Nadara’, ‘the valley of the beautiful view’. He could do this by adding just one dot above an Arabic letter in the name on the map. But it did not work. It is still known as Wadi al-Nasara."
Before I met Ibrahim I assumed everyone who wore clothes like his was a Muslim, but I could not have been more wrong. In the morning before I left, two other farmers dressed in the same way called by. They had heard that there was a