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d-33831House OversightOther

Background overview of Bashar al‑Assad’s rise to power and early reforms in Syria

The passage provides a general historical narrative about Bashar al‑Assad’s early life, reforms, and consolidation of power. It contains no specific new allegations, financial transactions, dates of w Bashar al‑Assad studied ophthalmology in London before entering politics after his brother’s death i Early reforms (2000‑2009) included mobile phones, internet, private schools, banks, and a stock ex

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #024965
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a general historical narrative about Bashar al‑Assad’s early life, reforms, and consolidation of power. It contains no specific new allegations, financial transactions, dates of w Bashar al‑Assad studied ophthalmology in London before entering politics after his brother’s death i Early reforms (2000‑2009) included mobile phones, internet, private schools, banks, and a stock ex

Tags

syriaeconomic-reformsturkishsyrian-relationsrami-makhloufbashar-alassadhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
questioning and often perplexed, has none of the certainties of a man born to power. He was a young doctor studying ophthalmology in London when the accidental death in 1994 of his elder brother, Basil, an altogether tougher character who was being groomed for the succession, propelled him somewhat reluctantly onto the political scene. The country he came to rule in 2000 seemed backward in an increasingly globalised and technologically advanced world. His first reforms were therefore financial and commercial. Mobile phones and the internet were introduced. Private schools and universities proliferated. In 2004 private banks and insurance companies were allowed to operate for the first time, and a stock exchange was opened in March 2009. A political and economic alliance was forged with Turkey (and visas abolished), which allowed trade to grow along that border, benefiting Aleppo. The Old City of Damascus was revitalised, ancient courtyard houses restored and hotels and restaurants opened to cater for the growing number of tourists. Before the crisis erupted, Syria was negotiating to join the World Trade Organisation and conclude an association agreement with the European Union. But Bashar’s years in power seem to have hardened him. He developed a taste for control -- control over the media, over the university, over the economy (through cronies such as his exorbitantly rich cousin Rami Makhlouf), control over society at large. Free expression is not allowed. Political decision-making is restricted to a tight circle around the president and security services. Like his father, Bashar clearly does not like to be pushed around or to seem to yield to pressure. Even so, many Syrians still support him in the belief that, as an educated, modern and secular ruler, he is better placed than most to bring about necessary change.

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