Asad's Legacy: Syria in Transition

Front Cover
NYU Press, 2001 - Biography & Autobiography - 218 pages

For more than thirty years Hafez al-Asad has ruled Syria with an iron fist. Six U.S. presidents and eight Israeli prime ministers have come and gone, but Asad remains, one of the last of the old generation of Arab leaders. But in the post-Cold War Middle East Asad and his country are faced with an array of bewildering choices. Will they allow greater civil liberties and economic liberalization, or assert strong, centralized one-party control of the state? Will they make peace with Israel, and at what price? Will they cement their growing relationship with the United States or return to the hostilities of the past?
Eyal Zisser tackles these questions and gets inside the mind of the man President Clinton called "the smartest leader in the Middle East." He also examines the peculiar dynamics of the Asad family with its Byzantine power plays and competing factions. He tells the fascinating story of how Asad struggles to appease his relatives and his clan while his son waits in the wings to assume power and his brother plots from abroad to gain control of the nation he regards as rightfully his.
Asad's Legacy is the most up-to-date, thorough treatment of Asad's role in the history and politics of the contemporary Middle East. Zisser sheds new light on the story of Asad's rule over his nation and points the way to the future of Syria and the entire region.

 

Contents

Recovery 198385
10
Part I
17
The System of Government in Asads Syria
25
Part II
37
Start of the New Path Syria during the Gulf Crisis
52
SYRIAN FOREIGN POLICY IN THE 1990s
62
Syrian foreign policyprinciples and goals
69
Toward an old order
82
Syria and Israel On the Road to Peace
99
Syria in Lebanon
129
3 Syria in Lebanon on the road of return
135
Part IV
153
State Society and Economy in the 1990s
179
Asads Legacy Syria in Tradition
207
Index
215
Copyright

Syria and the Palestinian Authority
88

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About the author (2001)

Eyal Zisser is Professor of Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University.