7
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7
Documents
355
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Organization referenced in documents
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icers in the Syrian army. The rise of Alawites in Syrian society throughout the 1960s was assisted by political infighting among the Sunnis and the Baath Party coup of 1963, which united working-class Alawites and Sunnis under one banner. Although Sunnis initially tolerated the growing clout of the Alawite
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reasonable bargain: they could have safety and be left alone so long as they led apolitical lives. He once gave away the crux of his worldview to a Baath Party functionary. People have "primarily economic demands," Assad said—they aspire to a plot of land, a car, a house. Those demands could be satisfied "
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eelection bid, Maliki's Electoral Commission disqualified more than 500, mostly Sunni, candidates on charges that they had ties to Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. For the Obama administration, however, tangling with Maliki meant investing time and energy in Iraq, a country it desperately wanted to pivot awa
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e case in Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen. Syria is a paradox in this Arab season of revolt. It has an authoritarian regime dominated by a corrupt Baath Party - a relic of the age of dictators that is being swept away in so many other countries. But President Assad, relatively young at 45 and wrapped in t
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the Turks. Yet decades earlier, Bashar al-Assad's father, Hafez -- a man of supreme cunning and political skill -- had ridden the military and the Baath Party to absolute power, creating a regime in which power rested with the country's Alawite minority. The marriage of despotism and sectarianism begat th
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ddam. Our view, based on detailed intelligence analyses, was that the likely result would have been a fairly rapid takeover by a few top security and Baath Party figures and that, while the new Iraqi leadership might try to retaliate 246 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011717 with terror attacks, a major military response w
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ddam. Our view, based on detailed intelligence analyses, was that the likely result would have been a fairly rapid takeover by a few top security and Baath Party figures and that, while the new Iraqi leadership might try to retaliate 246 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_028094 with terror attacks, a major military response wa

Bashar al-Assad
PersonPresident of Syria from 2000 to 2024

Hosni Mubarak
PersonPresident of Egypt from 1981 to 2011

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Tunisia
LocationCountry in North Africa

Lebanon
LocationCountry in West Asia

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

Hafez al-Assad
PersonPresident of Syria from 1971 to 2000

Yemen
LocationCountry in West Asia

Saddam Hussein
PersonIraqi president, army officer and Baathist politician (1937–2006)

Henry Kissinger
PersonAmerican politician and diplomat (1923–2023)

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

Damascus
LocationCapital and largest city of Syria

Cairo
LocationCapital city of Egypt

Kuwait
LocationSovereign state in Western Asia
the Suez Canal
LocationLocation referenced in documents

Benjamin Netanyahu
PersonPrime Minister of Israel (1996–1999; 2009–2021; since 2022)

Vietnam
LocationCountry in Southeast Asia

Baghdad
LocationCapital city of Iraq

Ronald Reagan
PersonPresident of the United States from 1981 to 1989 and actor (1911–2004)

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)