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d-17199House OversightOther

Historical overview of Ba'ath Party formation and Alawite rise in Syrian politics

The passage provides a general historical narrative about Syrian political dynamics and the rise of Alawite influence within the Ba'ath Party. It contains no specific, actionable leads, new allegation Ba'ath Party founded by Michel Aflak and Salah al-Din Bitar. Alawite participation driven by security concerns, not a deliberate takeover. Minority groups (Christians, Druzes, Ismailis) joined Ba'ath

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #030091
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a general historical narrative about Syrian political dynamics and the rise of Alawite influence within the Ba'ath Party. It contains no specific, actionable leads, new allegation Ba'ath Party founded by Michel Aflak and Salah al-Din Bitar. Alawite participation driven by security concerns, not a deliberate takeover. Minority groups (Christians, Druzes, Ismailis) joined Ba'ath

Tags

minority-groupsalawite-politicsbaath-partymilitary-coupshouse-oversightsyrian-history

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
32 Baath (renaissance) party jointly founded by two intellectuals, Michel Aflag and Salah al-Din Bitar, with an agenda explicitly aimed at overcoming sectarian divisions. It would be wrong to suppose that the Alawis deliberately sought to subvert or take over the Baath or the armed forces. Their primary impulse was their own security. After independence the Syrian parliament abolished the separate representation for minorities instituted by the French, along with certain judicial rights. Nusayri sheikhs and notables encouraged young men to join the Baath because they believed its secular outlook would protect them from Sunni hegemony and persecution. Other minorities, including Christians, Druzes, and Ismailis, tended to join the Baath (or in some cases the Communist Party and Syrian Socialist National Party) for similar reasons. The eventual dominance achieved by the Alawis may be attributed to their highland military background and the default logic by which ‘asabiyya tends to assert itself in the absence of other, more durable structures. The first three military coups that followed Syrian independence were engineered by Sunni officers. This was followed by the disastrous union with Nasser’s Egypt in 1958 when Baath party leaders, following their pan-Arabist nationalist logic, merged their country’s identity into that of their more powerful Sunni neighbor. After Syria formally united with Egypt, Nusayri officers who had joined the Baath party became increasingly alarmed that Arab nationalism, for all its secular rhetoric, was really a veil concealing Arab Sunni supremacy. They formed a clandestine military committee led by Salah Jadid, an Alawi, which took power in a military coup in 1963. Hafez al-Assad, trained as a fighter pilot, became air force commander. Some seven hundred officers were purged, and most of their positions were filled with Nusayris. A further coup against the Baathist old guard brought Assad into the cabinet as defense minister

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