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Asad: The Struggle for the Middle East PDF

571 Pages·1989·7.183 MB·English
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ASAD OF SYRIA THE STRUGGLE FOR THE IDOLE EAST By the same author The Struggle for Syria (1965; revised edition 1986) French Revolution, 1968 (1968; with Maureen McConville) The Hilton Assignment (1973; with Maureen McConville) Philby, The Long Road to Moscow (1973; with Maureen McConville) The Shaping of an Arab Statesman: ‘Abd al-Hamid Sharaf and the Modern Arab World (ed.) (1983) OF SYRIA THE STRUGGLE FOR THE MIDDLE EAST Patrick Seale with the assistance of MAUREEN McCONVILLE University of California Press Berkeley Los Angeles University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles First published 1988 by I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd., London First University of California Press edition published 1989 First Paperback Printing 1990 Copyright ©1988 by Patrick Seale All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or any part thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher. ISBN 0-520-06667-7 ISBN 0-520-06976-5 (paperback) Printed in the United States of America 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984. @ To Rana Kabbani Contents Preface PART ONE: THE REVOLUTIONARY 1 Coming Down the Mountain 3 2 The French Legacy 14 3 Party School and Army College 24 4 The Peasants’ Revolt 41 5 The Cairo Conspiracy 49 6 Capturing the State 72 7 Capturing the Party 86 8 Blindly to the Brink 104 9 The Six Day Walkover 117 10 The Fight to the Top 142 11 The Black September Fiasco 154 PART TWO: THE LEADER 12 Asad’s State 169 13 Sadat, the Unsound Ally 185 14 The October Illusion 202 15 Duel with Henry Kissinger 226 16 The Year Things Fell Apart 250 17 The Lebanese Trap 267 18 Jimmy Carter’s False Dawn 290 19 The Enemy Within 314 20 Standing Alone 337 21 Ally of the Ayatollah 349 22 Battle with Menachem Begin 364 23 The Defeat of George Shultz 392 24 The Brothers’ War 419 25 Forging a Nation 439 26 Dirty Tricks 459 27 Conclusions: the Balance Sheet 491 Notes 496 Select Bibliography 521 Index 541 Palmyra» SYRIA X ' ' \ JORDAN ^ SYRIAN D E S E» R ' m a I SYRIA ® CAPITAL CITIES • Major Cities • Lesser Cities ■ Ancient Sites W > Mou"’*'"s Damascua-Beirut highway (. i. I a I___I____I___I____I____I 20 10 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 km ______________1:2500000________________ Preface This book is an attempt to explain what the world looks like from the seat of power in Damascus. It is not an official biography of President Asad, but it could not have been written had he not agreed to talk to me, and for this direct access to him over several years I am grateful. I also valued the conversations I had with his two eldest children, Bushra and Basil. My thanks are due to General Mustafa Tlas, the defence minister; Dr ‘Abd al-Ra’uf al-Kasm, the former premier; Mr Faruq al-Shara‘, the foreign minister; the late Ahmad Iskandar Ahmad and his successor as minister of information, Mr Muhammad Salman; and Dr Najah al- ‘Attar, the minister of culture. First-hand information generously given by men and women who participated in events or were able to observe them at close hand was an important source for this work. Some of my informants are mentioned in footnotes, others are not. To all I am deeply grateful. A number of Syrian officials assisted me, whether by arranging interviews or helping to locate documents in the archives, or making arrangements for me to travel about the country. I would particularly like to thank the staff at the presidential palace, especially Mr Jubran Kuriyeh, Mr As‘ad Kamil Elyas and Mr ‘Adnan Barniyeh, and Dr Saber Falhut, head of the Syrian Arab News Agency, and his colleague Mr Zuhayr Jannan. Among the many Syrians who made me personally welcome I must thank Dr Sabah Kabbani, Mr ‘Adnan ‘Umran, Dr Badi‘ al-Kasm, Dr Osman al ‘A’idi, Dr George Huraniyeh, Dr Ghassan Maleh, Dr Nabil Sukkar, Dr Rateb Shallah, Mr Ghalib Kayyali, Mr George Antaki, Mr Naji Shawi, Dr Nagib Mura, Mr Wajih Mustafa, Mr Antoine Tourna and Dr Nicolas Chahine. Mr Albert Hourani, the most inspiring of teachers, guided my studies in modern Arab history over many years. The Hon. David

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