. After the war, Gouraud served from 1919 to 1922 as representative of the French Government in the Middle East and commander of the French
Army of the Levant. As commander of French forces during the
Franco-Turkish War, he presided over the creation of the French Mandates in Syria and Lebanon. Following the implementation of the 1916
Sykes-Picot Agreement, which divided the occupied remnants of the
Ottoman Empire between France and Britain, Gouraud was commander of forces sent to enforce the French division of the Levant. Between 20 January and 10 February 1920, Gouraud's troops were moved north to support forces in the
Franco-Turkish War. Gouraud directed the suppression of a rising of
Turkish National Forces at the
Battle of Marash which led to the withdrawal of French troops back to Syria. There, Gouraud's ongoing attempt to control
King Faisal came to a head. Gouraud led French forces which crushed
King Faisal's short-lived monarchy at the
Battle of Maysalun on 23 July 1920, occupied
Damascus, defeated the forces of the
Syrian Revolution and established the
French Mandate of Syria. These territories were reorganised a number of times by Gouraud's decrees, the most famous being the creation of the
State of Greater Lebanon on 1 September 1920. Gouraud became the French High Commissioner in Syria and Lebanon, effective head of the colonial government there. He is remembered in the
Levant primarily for this role, and for an
apocryphal anecdote. Following the
Battle of Maysalun, Gouraud allegedly went to the
Tomb of Saladin, kicked it, and said: “
Awake, Saladin. We have returned. My presence here consecrates the victory of the Cross over the Crescent." The quote is sometimes attributed to
Mariano Goybet instead of Gouraud. of Gouraud in Syria by
Frédéric Gadmer, 1921 Gouraud's administration in Syria borrowed much from his time as a young man working under
Lyautey in Morocco, where colonial policy focused on control of the country through manipulation of tribes, Sufis, and the rural Berber populations. In Syria, this took the form of separate administrations for
Druze and
Alawite communities, with the aim of dividing their interests from those of urban nationalists. Particularly unpopular following the French taking of Damascus, the Syrian nationalist
Adham Khanjar of
Southern Lebanon staged a failed attempt on Gouraud's life on 23 June 1921. == Later years ==