Coordinates | 12°58′0″N77°34′0″N |
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Name | Hafez al-Assad حافظ الأسد |
Birth date | October 06, 1930 |
Birth place | Qardaha, French Mandate of Syria |
Death date | June 10, 2000 |
Death place | Damascus, Syria |
Office | President of Syria |
Term start | 22 February 1971 |
Term end | 10 June 2000 |
Primeminister | Abdul Rahman KleifawiMahmoud al-AyyubiMuhammad Ali al-HalabiAbdul Rauf al-KasmMahmoud ZuabiMuhammad Mustafa Mero |
Predecessor | Ahmad al-Khatib |
Successor | Halim Khaddam (Acting) |
Office2 | Prime Minister of Syria |
Term start2 | 21 November 1970 |
Term end2 | 3 April 1971 |
President2 | Ahmad al-Khatib |
Predecessor2 | Nureddin al-Atassi |
Successor2 | Abdul Rahman Kleifawi |
Office3 | Minister of Defense |
Term start3 | 1966 |
Term end3 | 1972 |
Predecessor3 | Muhammad Umran |
Successor3 | Mustafa Tlass |
Party | Ba'ath Party (NPF) |
Spouse | Aniseh (née Makhluf) |
Religion | Alawi |
Hafez al-Assad ( , 6 October 1930 – 10 June 2000) was the President of Syria for three decades. Assad's rule was praised for consolidating the power of the central government after decades of coups and counter-coups, such as Operation Wappen in 1957 conducted by the Eisenhower administration and preceding covert failures, and continued foreign meddling thereafter. His rule brought modern changes, including the 1973 constitution which guaranteed women's equal status in society. Assad attempted to industrialize the country, and it was opened up to foreign markets. He invested in infrastructure, education, medicine, and urban construction. Literacy was increased, oil was discovered, and the economy expanded.
He also drew criticism for repression of his own people, in particular for ordering the Hama massacre of 1982, which has been described as "the single deadliest act by any Arab government against its own people in the modern Middle East". Human Rights groups have detailed thousands of extrajudicial executions he committed against opponents of his regime.
He was succeeded by his son, current president Bashar al-Assad, in 2000.
The following year, 1964, Assad jumped several ranks to become a general and was appointed to the Ba'ath Party's regional command. The following year, he became Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force. This military power allowed Assad, operating in conjunction with Salah Jadid, to overthrow the government of Amin Hafiz in 1966.
In 1966, the Ba'ath launched a coup d'état within the government and cleared the other parties from the government. Assad became Minister of Defence and wielded considerable influence over government policy. However, there was tension between the dominant radical wing of the Ba'ath Party, which promoted an aggressive foreign policy and rapid social reform, and Assad's more pragmatic, military-based faction. After being discredited by the failure of the Syrian military in the Six-Day War in 1967, and enraged by the aborted Syrian intervention in the Jordanian-Palestinian Black September war, the government faced conflict within its ranks. By the time President Nureddin al-Atassi and the de facto leader, deputy secretary general of the Ba'ath Party Salah Jadid, realized the threat and ordered Assad and Tlass be stripped of all party and government power, it was too late. Assad swiftly launched a bloodless intra-party coup, the Corrective Revolution of 1970. The party was purged, Atassi and Jadid jailed, and Assad loyalists installed in key posts throughout the government.
The government of al-Assad initially achieved some popularity for bringing stability to the country, which had experienced dozens of attempted coups since 1948. He also implemented many social reforms and infrastructure projects, such as the Thawra (Revolution) dam on the Euphrates River. It was built with Soviet assistance, and still supplies much of Syria's electricity. Public schooling and other reforms were extended to larger segments of the population, and a rise in living standards occurred. The government's secularism meant that many members of religious minorities, such as the Alawites, Druze, and Christians, supported Assad, fearing a return to historic persecution under a Sunni Islamist successor government to Assad.
Assad continued previous Ba'ath policies by overseeing massive increases in Syria's military strength (again with Soviet support) and by maintaining a strong Arab nationalist position. School curricula and the state-controlled media gave much attention to the glorious past of Syria and the Arabs, and portrayed al-Assad's government as the lone uncorrupted champion of the Arab nation against Western imperialism and aggression. This propaganda aimed to legitimize the government, but also to unify the diverse and fractured Syrian society, and instill a sense of national pride among the populace. In 1979, a chain of assassinations took place in the artillery school in Aleppo. After almost a year, a member from the group believed to be behind the assassinations was injured and taken into custody by the Syrian intelligence system. He was identified as a member of the Muslim Brotherhood party. The party's goals were to eliminate all persons who had strong ties with the government or Ba'ath party, focusing on Ba'athists who were educated and had a good reputation within the government, or army high ranking members who were members of Assad's family or Alawites. It took Syrian intelligence a long time to penetrate the Muslim Brotherhood and diminish its power. In February 1982, Assad ordered the Syrian army to bombard the town of Hama in order to quell a revolt by the Muslim Brotherhood. In what became known as the Hama massacre, an estimated 17,000 to 40,000 people were killed, including about 1,000 soldiers.
In 1983, Assad suffered a heart attack and was confined to hospital. He named a six-man governing council to run the country in his absence, among them long-time Defense Minister Mustafa Tlass; Hafez-al Assad believed that they were less likely to try to seize power. Despite this, rumors spread that Assad was dead or nearly so, and indeed his condition was serious. In 1984, his brother Rifaat al-Assad attempted to use the security forces under his control to seize power. His Defence Company troops of some 50,000 men, complete with tanks and helicopters, began putting up roadblocks throughout Damascus, and tensions between Hafez loyalists and Rifaat supporters came close to all-out war. The stand-off was not ended until Hafez, still ill, rose from his bed to reassume power and speak to the nation. He transferred command of the Defence Company and, without formal accusations, shortly after Rifaat were exiled to France.
To a large extent, Al-Assad's foreign policy was shaped by Syria's attitude toward Israel. During his presidency, Syria played a major role in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war. The war is presented by the Syrian government as a victory, as Syria regained some territory that had been occupied in 1967 through peace negotiations headed by Henry Kissinger. The Syrian government refused to recognize the State of Israel and referred to it as the "Zionist Entity." Only in the mid-1990s did Hafez moderate his country's policy towards Israel, as he realized the loss of Soviet support meant a different balance of power in the Middle East. Pressed by the United States, he engaged in negotiations on the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, but these talks failed. Al-Assad believed that what constituted Israel, the West Bank, and Gaza, were an integral part of "Southern Syria."
Assad had originally groomed his son, Basil al-Assad as his successor, but Basil died in a car accident in 1994. Assad then put a second son, Bashar, in intensive military and political training, with Bashar becoming a staff colonel in the military of Syria. Despite some concerns of unrest within the government, the succession ultimately went smoothly, and Bashar holds office today. Hafez al-Assad died on June 10, 2000 of pulmonary fibrosis, though some suggest that he died of blood cancer. He was 69. Hafez al-Assad is buried together with Basil in a mausoleum in his hometown of Qardaha.
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Category:1930 births Category:2000 deaths Category:Air force generals Category:Syrian Air Force Category:People from Latakia Governorate Category:Syrian Alawites Category:Syrian ministers of defense Category:Ba'ath Party (Syria) politicians Category:Presidents of Syria Category:Prime Ministers of Syria Category:Arab nationalist heads of state Category:Leaders who took power by coup Category:Cold War leaders Category:Deaths from myocardial infarction Category:Assad family
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