Early formation (l., nationalist) and
Salah Jadid (regionalist) together in 1963 The ideological regionalists were able to form a unified command by the end of 1961 and first appeared in public at the Fifth Congress of the Ba'ath Party in May 1962 (at that time the party did not yet rule the country). The dissolution of the Syrian-
Egyptian unification, known as the
United Arab Republic, in 1961 led to the revelation of political struggle within the party, and regionalists actively participated in it, now openly promoting the ideas of "Syria First". They were opposed by a faction known as the Qawmiyyun (or Qawmiyuri), which supported pan-Arabism and, by extension, union with Egypt. The fall of the UAR had a generally positive effect on regionalist ideologies across the
Arab world, and this was most evident in Syria.
Early Ba'ath Party rule Party leaders
Michel Aflaq and
Salah al-Din al-Bitar, despite the disastrous experience of the past, supported the revival of the union with Egypt, and therefore tried to suppress the regionalists (as well as other hostile groups in the party) through purges and dismissals, but this did not work out well. After the 1963 coup, the party's membership increased fivefold, and it consisted mainly of poor people, military personnel, workers, and students - the future core of the regionalists; however, the regionalist faction was largely dominated by military officers only. The party's civilian wing, as well as the
National Guard, soon also became filled with regionalists, with the assistance of one of the leaders of the military committee, General
Salah Jadid, who was also a regionalist. At the Eighth National Congress in December 1965, Michel Aflaq attempted a purge and dismissed a number of influential regionalists from the party, but this had no real impact on their influence, and within a few months they had seized all power in the country. Two days before the 1966 coup, Aflaq, in a speech, condemned the regionalists for their perversion of the party.
Hafez al-Assad's reign In 1970, the regime of Salah Jadid was overthrown by the
Corrective Revolution orchestrated by
Hafez al-Assad. Although Assad abandoned his initial radicalism and even participated in new pan-Arab unification projects (such as the
Federation of Arab Republics), he ultimately slid back toward
Syrian nationalism, and Syria itself, as under Jadid, once again found itself in regional isolation. == Beliefs ==