Communist party briefing four BACKGROUND TO EVENTS IN SYRIA
go to communistparty.org.uk January 2014
SYRIAN FACT SHEET POPULATION 22,530,746 ETHNIC GROUPS Arab 90%, Kurds 9%, Armenians and others1% RELIGIOUS GROUPS Sunni Muslim 74%, Alawites 12%, other Muslims, Shia Druze etc5%, Christian (various denominations) 9% POLITICAL FORCES PRO-GOVERNMENT National Progressive Front is dominated by the Ba’ath Party. Its subordinate allies are mostly Arab nationalist (such as Nasserist) or Arab socialist parties, ideologically close to the Ba’ath’s pan-Arab vision. It also includes the country’s two communist parties. Members: Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, Arab Socialist Movement, Arab Socialist Union, Syrian Communist Party, Syrian Communist Party (United), Social Democratic Unionists, Socialist Unionists, Democratic Socialist Unionist Party, Arabic Democratic Unionist Party, National Vow Movement. BA’ATHISM Ba’athist philosophy, namely that the Arabs belonged to a single nation and needed a single state in which to realise their “eternal mission”. It defined the Arab nation as stretching across all Arabic-speaking areas, including Africa. It supported full citizenship for women and promised to eradicate class distinctions arising from the unjust distribution of wealth. Citizenship could be extended to a non-Arab living on Arab soil provided he “detached himself from any racial grouping”. While Ba’athism used non-racist and non-religious criteria to define Arab citizenship and could thereby appeal to Sunni, Shia, Christian and others alike, the obvious weakness was its lack of appeal to the many minority non-Arab communities living within the Arab world, in particular the very substantial Kurdish population. , the Ba’athist version of socialism avoided concepts of class struggle focused on the idealist notion of a culturally based Arab spirit and so was opposed to “materialistic” communism.
SYRIAN COMMMUNISM The split in the Syrian Communist Party in 1986 had the backdrop of perestroika, with the Faisal wing essentially sympathetic and the Bagdash wing opposed. Differences also centred on inner party democracy (the last three general secretaries of the SCP in order have been Khaled Bagdash, his widow Wisal and now his son Ammar). Both parties have expressed criticisms of the ruling Ba’ath (within permitted limits) with the SCP focusing on economic changes and the SCP (U) on political and democratic reform. ANTI-GOVERNMENT National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces – formed in November 2012 with the Syrian National Council at its core. This was originally organised and funded by the US and its NATO allies, Qatar and Saudi Arabia and until Summer 2013 dominated by the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood. Free Syrian Army – an umbrella term used by various militias al-Nusra Front for the People of the Levant - an alQaida-inspired terrorist group, denounced by the West but embraced by the SNC and FSA Kurdish Democratic Union Party – Kurdish nationalist party, linked to Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK). Strongly opposed to foreign intervention, especially by Turkey. National Co-ordination Committee for Democratic Change – domestic opposition alliance mostly secular and leftist. Opposed to regime but generally against use of violence and outside intervention. ASSESSMENT DECEMBER 2013 The first phase of the war through 2012 and into early 2013 saw the main thrust of the military campaign carried forward by mercenary forces under the general leadership of the Free Syrian Army, largely
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