On March 8, 1963, a coup by supporters of reunification with Egypt, essentially
Baathists,
Nasserists and the
Arab Nationalist Movement put an end to the separatist government, although in the event reunification never took place. From then until the 1970s, the Communist Party would be repressed to one degree or another by the
Ba'athist regime. In 1966, the Syrian Ba'ath's secret military committee took power, and implemented a far-left line. Bakdash was allowed to return from Moscow, but forbidden from engaging in public political activity. After
Hafez al-Assad took power in Syria in 1970, he announced his intention of reintroducing political pluralism in the context of
popular democracy. This took the form of the
National Progressive Front, a coalition of parties that supported the
Arab nationalist and
socialist orientation of the government and accepted the leadership of the Ba'ath Party. Faced with the choice between joining the front and an illegal operation, Bakdash opted to join;
Riyad al-Turk would later lead a small radical faction of the party into opposition. In 1986, a difference of opinion between Bakdash and Deputy General Secretary
Yusuf Faisal led to a split in the party. Faisal was supportive of the new policies of
perestroika and
glasnost being pursued by Soviet party secretary
Mikhail Gorbachev; Bakdash was opposed. Many of the intellectuals in the party left with Faisal, while Bakdash retained the support of the party's considerable Kurdish base. Khalid Bakdash died in Damascus in 1995 at the age of 83. His widow,
Wisal Farha Bakdash, succeeded him as party secretary. ==References==