PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Syrian Arab Republic
Geography
Area: 185,170 sq. km. (71,504 sq. mi.),
including 1,295 sq. km. of Israeli-occupied
territory; about the size of North Dakota.
Cities: Capital--Damascus (pop. 5
million). Other cities--Aleppo (4.5
million), Homs (1.8 million), Hama (1.6
million), Lattakia (1 million), Idleb (1.2
million), al-Hasakeh (1.3 million).
Terrain: Narrow coastal plain with a double
mountain belt in the west; large, semiarid and
desert plateau to the east.
Climate: Mostly desert; hot, dry, sunny summers
(June to August) and mild, rainy winters
(December to February) along coast.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Syrian(s).
Population (July 2003 est.): 18.2 million.
Growth rate (2004 est.): 2.58%.
Major ethnic groups: Arabs (90%), Kurds (9%),
Armenians, Circassians, Turkomans.
Religions: Sunni Muslims (74%), Alawis (12%),
Christians (10%), Druze (3%), and small numbers
of other Muslim sects, Jews, and Yazidis.
Languages: Arabic (official), English and French
(widely understood), Kurdish, Armenian, Aramaic,
Circassian.
Education: Years compulsory--primary, 6
yrs. Attendance--98.7%. Literacy--89.7%
male, 64% female.
Health (2002 est.): Infant mortality rate--23/1,000.
Life expectancy--68.47 yrs. male, 71.02
yrs. female.
Work force (5.5 million, 2002 est.): Services
(including government)--39.7%;
agriculture--30.3%; industry and commerce--30%.
Government
Type: Republic, under Arab Socialist Ba'ath
Party regimes since March 1963.
Independence: April 17, 1946.
Constitution: March 13, 1973.
Branches: Executive--president, two vice
presidents, prime minister, Council of Ministers
(cabinet). Legislative--unicameral
People's Council. Judicial--Supreme
Constitutional Court, High Judicial Council,
Court of Cassation, State Security Courts.
Administrative subdivisions: 13 provinces and
city of Damascus (administered as a separate
unit).
Political parties: Arab Socialist Resurrection (Ba'ath)
Party, Syrian Arab Socialist Party, Arab
Socialist Union, Syrian Communist Party, Arab
Socialist Unionist Movement, Democratic
Socialist Union Party.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy (2004 est.)
GDP: $22.2 billion (at current prices).
Real growth rate: 1.7%.
Per capita GDP: $1,155.
Natural resources: Crude oil and natural
gas, phosphates, asphalt, rock salt, marble,
gypsum, iron ore, chrome and manganese ores
Agriculture: Products--cotton, wheat,
barley, sugar beets, fruits and vegetables.
Arable land--32%.
Industry: Types--mining, manufacturing
(textiles, food processing), construction,
petroleum.
Trade: Exports--$4.980 billion:
petroleum, textiles, phosphates, antiquities,
fruits and vegetables, cotton. Major markets--EU,
Arab countries, U.S., New Independent States,
Eastern Europe. Imports--$6.550 billion:
foodstuffs, metal and metal products, machinery,
textiles, petroleum. Major suppliers--Germany,
Turkey, Italy, France, U.S., Japan.
PEOPLE
Ethnic Syrians are of Semitic stock. Syria's
population is 90% Muslim--74% Sunni, and 16%
other Muslim groups, including the Alawi, Shi'a,
and Druze--and 10% Christian. There also is a
tiny Syrian Jewish community.
Arabic is the official, and most widely
spoken, language. Arabs, including some 400,000
Palestinian refugees, make up 90% of the
population. Many educated Syrians also speak
English or French, but English is the more
widely understood. The Kurds, many of whom speak
Kurdish, make up 9% of the population and live
mostly in the northeast corner of Syria, though
sizable Kurdish communities live in most major
Syrian cities as well. Armenian and Turkic are
spoken among the small Armenian and Turkoman
populations.
Most people live in the Euphrates River
valley and along the coastal plain, a fertile
strip between the coastal mountains and the
desert. Overall population density is about 140
per sq. mi. Education is free and compulsory
from ages 6 to 11. Schooling consists of 6 years
of primary education followed by a 3-year
general or vocational training period and a
3-year academic or vocational program. The
second 3-year period of academic training is
required for university admission. Total
enrollment at post-secondary schools is over
150,000. The literacy rate of Syrians aged 15
and older is 78% for males and 51% for females.
Ancient Syria's cultural and artistic
achievements and contributions are many.
Archaeologists have discovered extensive
writings and evidence of a brilliant culture
rivaling those of Mesopotamia and Egypt in and
around the ancient city of Ebla. Later Syrian
scholars and artists contributed to Hellenistic
and Roman thought and culture. Zeno of Sidon
founded the Epicurean school; Cicero was a pupil
of Antiochus of Ascalon at Athens; and the
writings of Posidonius of Apamea influenced Livy
and Plutarch. Syrians have contributed to Arabic
literature and music and have a proud tradition
of oral and written poetry. Although declining,
the world-famous handicraft industry still
employs thousands.
HISTORY
Archaeologists have demonstrated that Syria was
the center of one of the most ancient
civilizations on earth. Around the excavated
city of Ebla in northern Syria, discovered in
1975, a great Semitic empire spread from the Red
Sea north to Turkey and east to Mesopotamia from
2500 to 2400 B.C. The city of Ebla alone during
that time had a population estimated at 260,000.
Scholars believe the language of Ebla to be the
oldest Semitic language.
Syria was occupied successively by
Canaanites, Phoenicians, Hebrews, Arameans,
Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks,
Romans, Nabataeans, Byzantines, and, in part,
Crusaders before finally coming under the
control of the Ottoman Turks. Syria is
significant in the history of Christianity; Paul
was converted on the road to Damascus and
established the first organized Christian Church
at Antioch in ancient Syria, from which he left
on many of his missionary journeys.
Damascus, settled about 2500 B.C., is one of
the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the
world. It came under Muslim rule in A.D. 636.
Immediately thereafter, the city's power and
prestige reached its peak, and it became the
capital of the Omayyad Empire, which extended
from Spain to India from A.D. 661 to A.D. 750,
when the Abbasid caliphate was established at
Baghdad, Iraq.
Damascus became a provincial capital of the
Mameluke Empire around 1260. It was largely
destroyed in 1400 by Tamerlane, the Mongol
conqueror, who removed many of its craftsmen to
Samarkand. Rebuilt, it continued to serve as a
capital until 1516. In 1517, it fell under
Ottoman rule. The Ottomans remained for the next
400 years, except for a brief occupation by
Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt from 1832 to 1840.
French Occupation
In 1920, an independent Arab Kingdom of Syria
was established under King Faysal of the
Hashemite family, who later became King of Iraq.
However, his rule over Syria ended after only a
few months, following the clash between his
Syrian Arab forces and regular French forces at
the battle of Maysalun. French troops occupied
Syria later that year after the League of
Nations put Syria under French mandate. With the
fall of France in 1940, Syria came under the
control of the Vichy Government until the
British and Free French occupied the country in
July 1941. Continuing pressure from Syrian
nationalist groups forced the French to evacuate
their troops in April 1946, leaving the country
in the hands of a republican government that had
been formed during the mandate.
Independence to 1970
Although rapid economic development followed the
declaration of independence of April 17, 1946,
Syrian politics from independence through the
late 1960s were marked by upheaval. A series of
military coups, begun in 1949, undermined
civilian rule and led to army colonel Adib
Shishakli's seizure of power in 1951. After the
overthrow of President Shishakli in a 1954 coup,
continued political maneuvering supported by
competing factions in the military eventually
brought Arab nationalist and socialist elements
to power.
Syria's political instability during the
years after the 1954 coup, the parallelism of
Syrian and Egyptian policies, and the appeal of
Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser's
leadership in the wake of the 1956 Suez crisis
created support in Syria for union with Egypt.
On February 1, 1958, the two countries merged to
create the United Arab Republic, and all Syrian
political parties ceased overt activities.
The union was not a success, however.
Following a military coup on September 28, 1961,
Syria seceded, reestablishing itself as the
Syrian Arab Republic. Instability characterized
the next 18 months, with various coups
culminating on March 8, 1963, in the
installation by leftist Syrian Army officers of
the National Council of the Revolutionary
Command (NCRC), a group of military and civilian
officials who assumed control of all executive
and legislative authority. The takeover was
engineered by members of the Arab Socialist
Resurrection Party (Ba'ath Party), which had
been active in Syria and other Arab countries
since the late 1940s. The new cabinet was
dominated by Ba'ath members.
The Ba'ath takeover in Syria followed a
Ba'ath coup in Iraq the previous month. The new
Syrian Government explored the possibility of
federation with Egypt and Ba'ath--controlled
Iraq. An agreement was concluded in Cairo on
April 17, 1963, for a referendum on unity to be
held in September 1963. However, serious
disagreements among the parties soon developed,
and the tripartite federation failed to
materialize. Thereafter, the Ba'ath regimes in
Syria and Iraq began to work for bilateral
unity. These plans foundered in November 1963,
when the Ba'ath regime in Iraq was overthrown.
In May 1964, President Amin Hafiz of the NCRC
promulgated a provisional constitution providing
for a National Council of the Revolution (NCR),
an appointed legislature composed of
representatives of mass organizations--labor,
peasant, and professional unions--a presidential
council, in which executive power was vested,
and a cabinet. On February 23, 1966, a group of
army officers carried out a successful,
intra-party coup, imprisoned President Hafiz,
dissolved the cabinet and the NCR, abrogated the
provisional constitution, and designated a
regionalist, civilian Ba'ath government. The
coup leaders described it as a "rectification"
of Ba'ath Party principles. The defeat of the
Syrians and Egyptians in the June 1967 war with
Israel weakened the radical socialist regime
established by the 1966 coup. Conflict developed
between a moderate military wing and a more
extremist civilian wing of the Ba'ath Party. The
1970 retreat of Syrian forces sent to aid the
PLO during the "Black September" hostilities
with Jordan reflected this political
disagreement within the ruling Ba'ath
leadership. On November 13, 1970, Minister of
Defense Hafiz al-Asad affected a bloodless
military coup, ousting the civilian party
leadership and assuming the role of prime
minister.
1970 to 2000
Upon assuming power, Hafiz al-Asad moved quickly
to create an organizational infrastructure for
his government and to consolidate control. The
Provisional Regional Command of Asad's Arab
Ba'ath Socialist Party nominated a 173-member
legislature, the People's Council, in which the
Ba'ath Party took 87 seats. The remaining seats
were divided among "popular organizations" and
other minor parties. In March 1971, the party
held its regional congress and elected a new
21-member Regional Command headed by Asad. In
the same month, a national referendum was held
to confirm Asad as President for a 7-year term.
In March 1972, to broaden the base of his
government, Asad formed the National Progressive
Front, a coalition of parties led by the Ba'ath
Party, and elections were held to establish
local councils in each of Syria's 14
governorates. In March 1973, a new Syrian
constitution went into effect followed shortly
thereafter by parliamentary elections for the
People's Council, the first such elections since
1962.
The authoritarian regime was not without its
critics, though most were quickly dealt with. A
serious challenge arose in the late 1970s,
however, from fundamentalist Sunni Muslims, who
reject the basic values of the secular Ba'ath
program and object to rule by the Alawis, whom
they consider heretical. From 1976 until its
suppression in 1982, the archconservative Muslim
Brotherhood led an armed insurgency against the
regime. In response to an attempted uprising by
the brotherhood in February 1982, the government
crushed the fundamentalist opposition centered
in the city of Hama, leveling parts of the city
with artillery fire and causing many thousands
of dead and wounded. Since then, public
manifestations of anti-regime activity have been
very limited.
Syria's 1990 participation in the U.S.-led
multinational coalition aligned against Saddam
Hussein marked a dramatic watershed in Syria's
relations both with other Arab states and with
the West. Syria participated in the multilateral
Middle East Peace Conference in Madrid in
October 1991, and during the 1990s engaged in
direct, face-to-face negotiations with Israel.
These negotiations failed, and there have been
no further Syrian-Israeli talks since President
Hafiz Al-Asad's meeting with then President Bill
Clinton in Geneva in March 2000.
Hafiz Al-Asad died on June 10, 2000, after 30
years in power. Immediately following Al-Asad's
death, the Parliament amended the constitution,
reducing the mandatory minimum age of the
President from 40 to 34 years old, which allowed
his son, Bashar Al-Asad legally to be eligible
for nomination by the ruling Ba'ath party. On
July 10, 2000, Bashar Al-Asad was elected
President by referendum in which he ran
unopposed, garnering 97.29% of the vote,
according to Syrian Government statistics.
2000 to 2005
In the aftermath of September 11, 2001 the
Syrian Government began limited cooperation with
U.S. in the global war against terrorism.
However, Syria opposed the Iraq war in March
2003, and bilateral relations with the U.S.
swiftly deteriorated. In December 2003,
President Bush signed into law the Syria
Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty
Restoration Act of 2003, which provided for the
imposition of a series of sanctions against
Syria if Syria did not end its support for
Palestinian terrorist groups, end its military
and security presence in Lebanon, cease its
pursuit of weapons of mass destruction, and meet
its obligations under United Nations Security
Council resolutions regarding the stabilization
and reconstruction of Iraq. In May 2004, the
President determined that Syria had not met
these conditions and implemented sanctions that
prohibit the export to Syria of items on the
U.S. Munitions List and Commerce Control List,
the export to Syria of U.S. products except for
food and medicine, and the taking off from or
landing in the United States of Syrian
Government-owned aircraft. At the same time, the
U.S. Department of the Treasury announced its
intention to order U.S. financial institutions
to sever correspondent accounts with the
Commercial Bank of Syria based on
money-laundering concerns, pursuant to Section
311 of the USA PATRIOT Act. Acting under the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA),
the President also authorized the Secretary of
the Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary
of State, to freeze assets belonging to certain
Syrian individuals and government entities.
Tensions between Syria and the U.S.
intensified in late 2004 and 2005, primarily
over issues relating to Iraq and Lebanon. The
U.S. Government recalled its Ambassador in
February 2005, after the assassination of
Lebanese Prime Minister Hariri and she had not
returned as of October. Sensing its
international isolation, the Syrians shored up
their relations with Iran and radical
Palestinians groups based in Damascus, and
cracked down on any signs of internal dissent.
There has been little sign of movement on
economic or political reform. The SARG provided
minimal cooperation to the UN Independent
International Investigation Commission, headed
by Detlev Mehlis, which investigated the killing
of Hariri.
GOVERNMENT
The Syrian constitution vests the Arab Ba'ath
Socialist Party with leadership functions in the
state and society and provides broad powers to
the president. The president, approved by
referendum for a 7-year term, also is Secretary
General of the Ba'ath Party and leader of the
National Progressive Front. The president has
the right to appoint ministers, to declare war
and states of emergency, to issue laws (which,
except in the case of emergency, require
ratification by the People's Council), to
declare amnesty, to amend the constitution, and
to appoint civil servants and military
personnel. The Emergency Law, which effectively
suspends most constitutional protections for
Syrians, has been in effect since 1963,
The National Progressive Front also acts as a
forum in which economic policies are debated and
the country's political orientation is
determined. However, because of Ba'ath Party
dominance, the National Progressive Front has
traditionally exercised little independent
power.
The Syrian constitution of 1973 requires that
the president be Muslim but does not make Islam
the state religion. Islamic jurisprudence,
however, is required to be a main source of
legislation. The judicial system in Syria is an
amalgam of Ottoman, French, and Islamic laws,
with three levels of courts: courts of first
instance, courts of appeals, and the
constitutional court, the highest tribunal. In
addition, religious courts handle questions of
personal and family law.
The Ba'ath Party emphasizes socialism and
secular Arabism. Although Ba'ath Party doctrine
seeks to build pan-Arab rather than ethnic
identity, ethnic, religious, and regional
allegiances remain important in Syria.
Members of President Asad's own minority
sect, the Alawis, hold most of the important
military and security positions, while Sunnis in
2005 control ten of 14 positions on the powerful
Ba’ath Party Regional Command. In recent years
there has been a gradual decline in the party's
preeminence. The party also is heavily
influenced by the security services and the
military, the latter of which consumes a large
share of Syria's economic resources.
Syria is divided administratively into 14
provinces, one of which is Damascus. A governor
for each province is appointed by the President.
The governor is assisted by an elected
provincial council.
Principal Government Officials
President--Bashar Al-Asad
Vice President--vacant
Vice President--Muhammad Zuhayr Mashariqa
Prime Minister--Muhammad Naji Utri
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Farouk Al-Shara'
Ambassador to the United States--Ambassador Imad
Moustapha
Ambassador to the United Nations--Ambassador
Faisal Miqdad
Syria maintains an
embassy
in the United States at 2215 Wyoming Avenue, NW,
Washington, DC 20008 (tel. 202-232-6313; fax:
202-234-9548). Consular section hours are 10:00
a.m.-2:00 p.m., Monday-Friday. Syria also has an
honorary consul at 5433 Westheimer Rd., Suite
1020, Houston, TX 77056 (tel. 713-622-8860; fax.
713-965-9632).
POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Officially, Syria is a republic. In reality,
however, it is an authoritarian regime that
exhibits only the forms of a democratic system.
Although citizens ostensibly vote for the
President and members of Parliament, they do not
have the right to change their government. The
late President Hafiz Al-Asad was confirmed by
unopposed referenda five times. His son, Bashar
Al-Asad, also was confirmed by an unopposed
referendum in July 2000. The President and his
senior aides, particularly those in the military
and security services, ultimately make most
basic decisions in political and economic life,
with a very limited degree of public
accountability. Political opposition to the
President is not tolerated. Syria has been under
a state of emergency since 1963. Syrian
governments have justified martial law by the
state of war, which continues to exist with
Israel and by continuing threats posed by
terrorist groups.
The Asad regime (little has changed since
Bashar Al-Asad succeeded his father) has held
power longer than any other Syrian government
since independence; its survival is due partly
to a strong desire for stability and the
regime's success in giving groups such as
religious minorities and peasant farmers a stake
in society. The expansion of the government
bureaucracy has also created a large class loyal
to the regime. The President's continuing
strength is due also to the army's continued
loyalty and the effectiveness of Syria's large
internal security apparatus. The leadership of
both is comprised largely of members of Asad's
own Alawi sect. The several main branches of the
security services operate independently of each
other and outside of the legal system. Each
continues to be responsible for human rights
violations.
All three branches of government are guided
by the views of the Ba'ath Party, whose primacy
in state institutions is assured by the
constitution. The Ba'ath platform is proclaimed
succinctly in the party's slogan: "Unity,
freedom, and socialism." The party has
traditionally been considered both socialist,
advocating state ownership of the means of
industrial production and the redistribution of
agricultural land, and revolutionary, dedicated
to carrying a socialist revolution to every part
of the Arab world. Founded by Michel 'Aflaq, a
Syrian Christian and Salah al-Din Al-Bitar, a
Syrian Sunni, the Ba'ath Party embraces
secularism and has attracted supporters of all
faiths in many Arab countries, especially Iraq,
Jordan, and Lebanon. Since August 1990, however,
the party has tended to de-emphasize socialism
and to stress both pan-Arab unity and the need
for gradual economic reform of the Syrian
economy.
Nine smaller political parties are permitted
to exist and, along with the Ba'ath Party, make
up the National Progressive Front (NPF), a
grouping of parties that represents the sole
framework of legal political party participation
for citizens. While created ostensibly to give
the appearance of a multi-party system, the NPF
is dominated by the Ba'ath Party and does not
change the essentially one-party character of
the political system. Non-Ba'ath parties
included in the NPF represent small political
groupings of a few hundred members each and
conform strictly to Ba'ath Party and government
policies. There were reports in 2005, in the
wake of the June Ba’ath Party Congress, that the
government was considering legislation to permit
the formation of new political parties and the
legalization of parties that previously banned.
These changes have not taken place. In addition,
some 15 small independent parties outside the
NPF operate without government sanction.
The Ba'ath Party dominates the Parliament,
which is known as the People's Council. With
members elected every 4 years, the Council has
no independent authority. Although
parliamentarians may criticize policies and
modify draft laws, they cannot initiate laws,
and the executive branch retains ultimate
control over the legislative process. During
2001, two independent members of Parliament,
Ma’mun al-Humsy and Riad Seif, who had advocated
political reforms, were stripped of their
parliamentary immunity and tried and convicted
of charges of "attempting to illegally change
the constitution." They remained in prison as of
2005. The government has allowed independent
non-NPF candidates to run for a limited
allotment of seats in the 250-member People's
Council. The current allotment of non-NPF
deputies is 83, ensuring a permanent absolute
majority for the Ba'ath Party-dominated NPF.
Elections for the 250 seats in the People's
Council last took place in 2003.
There was a surge of interest in political
reform after Bashar al-Asad assumed power in
2000. Human rights activists and other civil
society advocates, as well as some
Parliamentarians, became more outspoken during a
period referred to as "Damascus Spring" (July
2000-February 2001). Asad also made a series of
appointments of reform-minded advisors to formal
and less formal positions, and included a number
of similarly oriented individuals in his
Cabinet. The 2001 arrest and long-term detention
of the two reformist Parliamentarians and the
apparent marginalizing of some of the reformist
advisors in the past four years, indicate that
the pace of any political reform in Syria is
likely to be much slower than the short-lived
Damascus Spring promised. A crackdown on civil
society in 2005, in the wake of Syria’s
withdrawal from Lebanon, reinforced the
perception that any steps towards political form
were likely to be halting and piecemeal at best.
ECONOMY
Syria is a middle-income, developing country
with an economy based primarily on agriculture
and energy. However, Syria's economy faces
serious challenges and impediments to growth,
including: a large and poorly performing public
sector; declining rates of oil production;
emerging trade deficit; wide scale corruption;
weak financial and capital markets; and high
rates of unemployment tied to a high population
growth rate. In addition, Syria currently is the
subject of U.S. economic sanctions under the
Syria Accountability Act, which prohibits the
export and re-export of most U.S. products to
Syria.
As a result of internal economic policies and
external pressure, Syria has low rates of
investment, and low levels of industrial and
agricultural productivity. Consequently, its GDP
growth rate was approximately 1.7% in 2004,
according to official government statistics. The
two main pillars of the Syrian economy have been
agriculture and oil. Agriculture, for instance,
accounts for 25% of GDP and employs 17% of the
total labor force. The government hopes to
attract new investment in the tourism, gas,
banking, and insurance sectors to diversify its
economy and reduce its dependence on oil and
agriculture. The government has begun to
institute economic reforms aimed at liberalizing
most markets, but reform thus far has been slow
and ad hoc. For ideological reasons,
privatization of government enterprises is
explicitly rejected. Therefore major sectors of
the economy including petroleum, ports
operation, air transportation, power generation,
and water distribution, remain firmly controlled
by the government.
The Bashar al-Asad government started its
reform efforts by changing the regulatory
environment in the financial sector. In 2001,
Syria legalized private banking and in 2004,
three private banks began operations. A fourth
will open its doors in October 2005. Two more
private banks are expected to begin operation by
the end of 2006. Controls on foreign exchange
continue to be one of the biggest impediments to
the growth of the banking sector, although Syria
has taken gradual steps to loosen those
controls. In 2003, the government canceled a law
that criminalized private sector use of foreign
currencies, and in 2005 it issued legislation
that allows licensed private banks to sell
foreign currencies to Syrian citizens and to the
private sector to finance imports. Syria’s
exchange rate is fixed, and the government
maintains two official rates- one rate on which
the budget and the value of imports, customs,
and other official transactions are based, and a
second set by the Central Bank on a daily basis
that covers all other financial transactions.
There is, however, still an active black market
for foreign currency.
Given the policies adopted from the 1960s
through the late 1980s, which included
nationalization of companies and private assets,
Syria failed to join an increasingly
interconnected global economy. Syria withdrew
from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
(GATT) in 1951 because of Israel's accession. It
is not a member of the WTO, although it
submitted a request to begin the accession
process in 2001. Syria is developing regional
free trade agreements. As of January 1, 2005,
the Greater Arab Free Trade Agreement (GAFTA)
came into effect and customs duties were
eliminated between Syria and all other members
of GAFTA. In addition, Syria has signed a free
trade agreement with Turkey and initialed an
Association Agreement with the EU. Until 2003,
Syria’s balance of trade was in surplus.
However, 2004 trade statistics indicate that
total exports amounted to $4.98 billion against
imports of $6.55 billion, and many experts
believe that the deficit will grow as Syria
opens its markets to foreign goods and its rate
of oil production continues to decline. Syria’s
main exports include crude oil, refined
products, raw cotton, clothing, fruits, and
grains. The bulk of Syrian imports are raw
materials essential for industry, vehicles,
agricultural equipment, and heavy machinery.
Earnings from oil exports as well as remittances
from Syrian workers are the government's most
important sources of foreign exchange.
Syria has produced heavy-grade oil from
fields located in the northeast since the late
1960s. In the early 1980s, light-grade,
low-sulphur oil was discovered near Dayr az Zawr
in eastern Syria. Syria’s rate of oil production
has been decreasing steadily, from a peak close
to 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 1995 down to
approximately 450,000 bpd in 2004. Experts
generally agree that Syria will become a net
importer of petroleum not later than 2012. Syria
exported roughly 195,000 bpd in 2004, and oil
still accounts for a majority of the country's
export income. Syria also produces 245 billion
cubic feet per day of natural gas, with
estimated reserves around 8.5 trillion cubic
feet. While the government has begun to work
with international energy companies in the hopes
of eventually becoming a gas exporter, all gas
currently produced is consumed domestically.
Some basic commodities, such as diesel,
continue to be heavily subsidized, and social
services are provided for nominal charges. The
subsidies are becoming harder to sustain as the
population continues to grow faster than GDP.
Syria has a population of approximately 18
million people, and official figures place the
population growth rate at 2.58%, with 75% of the
population under the age of 35 and more than 40%
under the age of 15. Approximately 250,000
people enter the labor market every year.
According to official statistics, the
unemployment rate is 10.8%. However, more
accurate independent sources place it over 20%.
Government and public sector employees
constitute over one quarter of the total labor
force and are paid very low salaries and wages.
Government officials acknowledge that the
economy is not growing at a pace sufficient to
create enough new jobs annually to match
population growth. The UNDP announced in 2005
that 30% of the Syrian population lives in
poverty and 11.4% live below the subsistence
level.
Syria has made progress in easing its heavy
foreign debt burden through bilateral
rescheduling deals with the majority of its key
creditors in Europe, most importantly Germany
and France. Syria has also settled its debt with
Iran and the World Bank. In December 2004, Syria
and Poland reached an agreement by which Syria
would pay $27 million only out of the total
$261.7 million debt In January 2005, Russia
forgave 80% of Syria’s $13 billion
long-outstanding debt, and later that year Syria
reached an agreement with Slovakia, and the
Czech Republic to settle debt estimated at $1.6
billion. Again Syria was forgiven the bulk of
its debt, in exchange for a one time payment of
$150 million. Currently, Syria’s foreign debt is
estimated at about $3 billion owed, Bulgaria and
Romania being the largest debt holders,
requiring a debt service of about $650 million
per year.
NATIONAL SECURITY
President Bashar Al-Asad is commander in chief
of the Syrian armed forces, comprising some
400,000 troops upon mobilization. The military
is a conscripted force; males serve 24 months in
the military upon reaching the age of 18. Some
17,000 Syrian soldiers formerly deployed in
Lebanon have been withdrawn to Syria in response
to UNSCR 1559, which was passed in the fall of
2004. Demands that Syria comply with 1559
intensified after the February 2005
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafiq Hariri.
Syria’s military remains one of the largest
in the region, although the breakup of the
Soviet Union--long the principal source of
training, material, and credit for the Syrian
forces--slowed Syria's ability to acquire modern
military equipment. Syria received significant
financial aid from Gulf Arab states in the 1990s
as a result of its participation in the first
Gulf War, with a sizable portion of these funds
earmarked for military spending. Besides
sustaining its conventional forces, Syria seeks
to develop its weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
capability.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Ensuring national security, increasing influence
among its Arab neighbors, and achieving a
comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace settlement,
which includes the return of the Golan Heights,
are the primary goals of President Asad's
foreign policy.
Relations With Other Arab Countries
Syria reestablished full diplomatic relations
with Egypt in 1989. In the 1990-91 Gulf War,
Syria joined other Arab states in the U.S.-led
multinational coalition against Iraq. In 1998,
Syria began a slow rapprochement with Iraq,
driven primarily by economic needs. Syria
continues to play an active pan-Arab role,
although in the wake of the Hariri
assassination, Syria became more isolated
diplomatically, both in the region and beyond.
Though it voted in favor of UNSCR 1441 in
2002, Syria was against coalition military
action in Iraq in 2003. However, the Syrian
Government accepted UNSCR 1483 (after being
absent for the actual vote), which lifted
sanctions on Iraq and established a framework to
assist the Iraqi people in determining their
political future and rebuilding their economy.
Syria also voted for UNSCR 1511, which
called for greater international involvement in
Iraq and addressed the transfer of sovereignty
from the U.S.-led coalition. Since the transfer
of sovereignty in Iraq on June 28, 2004, Syria
extended qualified support to the Interim Iraqi
Government and pledged to cooperate in the areas
of border security, repatriation of Iraqi
assets, and eventual restoration of formal
diplomatic relations. While Syria has taken some
steps to tighten controls along the Syria-Iraq
border, Syria remains one of the primary transit
points for foreign fighters entering Iraq.
Consequently, relations between Syria and the
Iraqi Transitional Government have been
strained; formal diplomatic relations have not
yet been re-established. Iraq continues to call
for more action on the part of Syria to control
its border and to prevent Iraqi and Arab
elements residing in--or transiting--Syria from
contributing financially, politically, or
militarily to the insurgency in Iraq.
Involvement in Lebanon
Syria has played an important role in Lebanon by
virtue of its history, size, power, and economy.
Lebanon was part of post-Ottoman Syria until
1926. The presence of Syrian troops in Lebanon
dated to 1976, when President Hafiz al-Asad
intervened in the Lebanese civil war on behalf
of Maronite Christians. Following the 1982
Israeli invasion of Lebanon, Syrian and Israeli
forces clashed in eastern Lebanon. However,
Syrian opposition blocked implementation of the
May 17, 1983, Lebanese-Israeli accord on the
withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon.
In 1989, Syria endorsed the Charter of
National Reconciliation, or "Taif Accord," a
comprehensive plan for ending the Lebanese
conflict negotiated under the auspices of Saudi
Arabia, Algeria, and Morocco. In May 1991,
Lebanon and Syria signed the treaty of
brotherhood, cooperation, and coordination
called for in the Taif Accord.
According to the U.S. interpretation of the
Taif Accord, Syria and Lebanon were to have
decided on the redeployment of Syrian forces
from Beirut and other coastal areas of Lebanon
by September 1992. Israeli occupation of Lebanon
until May 2000, the breakdown of peace
negotiations between Syria and Israel that same
year, and intensifying Arab/Israeli tensions
since the start of the second Palestinian
uprising in September 2000 helped delay full
implementation of the Taif Accords. The United
Nations declared that Israel's withdrawal from
southern Lebanon fulfilled the requirements of
UN Security Council Resolution 425. However,
Syria and Lebanon claimed that UNSCR 425 had not
been fully implemented because Israel did not
withdraw from an area of the Golan Heights
called Sheba Farms, which had been occupied by
Israel in 1967, and which Syria now claimed was
part of Lebanon. The United Nations does not
recognize this claim. However, Lebanese
resistance groups such as Hizballah use it to
justify attacks against Israeli forces in that
region, creating a potentially dangerous
flashpoint along the Lebanon-Israeli border. The
UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) maintains
about 2,000 troops in southern Lebanon tasked
with ensuring peace and security along the
frontier and overseeing the eventual return of
effective Lebanese government and military
authority throughout the border region.
Until its withdrawal in April 2005, Syria
maintained approximately 17,000 troops in
Lebanon. A September 2004 vote by Lebanon’s
Chamber of Deputies to amend the constitution to
extend Lebanese President Lahoud's term in
office by 3 years amplified the question of
Lebanese sovereignty and the continuing Syrian
presence. The vote was clearly taken under
Syrian pressure, exercised in part through
Syria's military intelligence service, whose
chief in Lebanon had acted as a virtual
proconsul for many years. The UN Security
Council expressed its concern over the situation
by passing Resolution 1559, which called for the
withdrawal of all remaining foreign forces from
Lebanon, disbanding and disarmament of all
Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias, the
deployment of the Lebanese Armed Forces
throughout the country, and a free and fair
electoral process in the presidential election.
Former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri and 19
others were assassinated in Beirut by a car bomb
on February 14, 2005. The assassination spurred
massive protests in Beirut and international
pressure that led to the withdrawal of the
remaining Syrian military troops from Lebanon on
April 26. The UN International Independent
Investigative Commission (UNIIIC) headed by
Detlev Mehlis investigated Hariri’s
assassination and was expected to report its
findings to the Security Council in late October
2005.
The U.S. supports a sovereign, independent
Lebanon, free of all foreign forces, and
believes that the best interests of both Lebanon
and Syria are served by a positive and
constructive relationship based upon principles
of mutual respect and non-intervention between
two neighboring sovereign and independent
states. The U.S. calls for Syrian
non-interference in Lebanon, consistent with
UNSCR 1559.
Arab-Israeli Relations
Syria was an active belligerent in the 1967
Arab-Israeli War, which resulted in Israel's
occupation of the Golan Heights and the city of
Quneitra. Following the October 1973
Arab-Israeli War, which left Israel in
occupation of additional Syrian territory, Syria
accepted UN Security Council Resolution 338,
which signaled an implicit acceptance of
Resolution 242. Resolution 242, which became the
basis for the peace process negotiations begun
in Madrid, calls for a just and lasting Middle
East peace to include withdrawal of Israeli
armed forces from territories occupied in 1967;
termination of the state of belligerency; and
acknowledgment of the sovereignty, territorial
integrity, and political independence of all
regional states and of their right to live in
peace within secure and recognized boundaries.
As a result of the mediation efforts of then
U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, Syria
and Israel concluded a disengagement agreement
in May 1974, enabling Syria to recover territory
lost in the October war and part of the Golan
Heights occupied by Israel since 1967, including
Quneitra. The two sides have effectively
implemented the agreement, which is monitored by
UN forces.
In December 1981, the Israeli Knesset voted
to extend Israeli law to the part of the Golan
Heights over which Israel retained control. The
UN Security Council subsequently passed a
resolution calling on Israel to rescind this
measure. Syria participated in the Middle East
Peace Conference in Madrid in October 1991.
Negotiations were conducted intermittently
through the 1990s, and came very close to
succeeding. However, the parties were unable to
come to an agreement over Syria's nonnegotiable
demand that Israel withdraw to the positions it
held on June 4, 1967. The peace process
collapsed following the outbreak of the second
Palestinian (Intifada) uprising in September
2000, though Syria continues to call for a
comprehensive settlement based on UN Security
Council Resolutions 242 and 338, and the
land-for-peace formula adopted at the 1991
Madrid conference.
Tensions between Israel and Syria increased
as the second Intifada dragged on, primarily as
a result of Syria's unwillingness to stop giving
sanctuary to Palestinian terrorist groups
conducting operations against Israel. In October
2003, following a suicide bombing carried out by
a member of Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Haifa
that killed 20 Israeli citizens, Israeli Defense
Forces attacked a suspected Palestinian
terrorist training camp 15 kilometers north of
Damascus. This was the first such Israeli attack
deep inside Syrian territory since the 1973 war.
Membership in International Organizations
Syria is a member of the Arab Bank for
Economic Development in Africa, Arab Fund for
Economic and Social Development, Arab League,
Arab Monetary Fund, Council of Arab Economic
Unity, Customs Cooperation Council, Economic and
Social Commission for Western Asia, Food and
Agricultural Organization, Group of 24, Group of
77, International Atomic Energy Agency,
International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, International Civil Aviation
Organization, International Chamber of Commerce,
International Development Association, Islamic
Development Bank, International Fund for
Agricultural Development, International Finance
Corporation, International Labor Organization,
International Monetary Fund, International
Maritime Organization, INTERPOL, International
Olympic Committee, International Organization
for Standardization, International
Telecommunication Union, International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies, Non-Aligned Movement, Organization of
Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries, Organization
of the Islamic Conference, United Nations, UN
Conference on Trade and Development, UN
Industrial Development Organization, UN Relief
and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the
Near East, Universal Postal Union, World
Federation of Trade Unions, World Health
Organization, World Meteorological Organization,
and World Tourism Organization.
Syria's 2-year term as a nonpermanent member
of the UN Security Council ended in December
2003.
U.S.-SYRIAN RELATIONS
U.S.-Syrian relations, severed in 1967, were
resumed in June 1974, following the achievement
of the Syrian-Israeli disengagement agreement.
In 1990-91, Syria cooperated with the U.S. as a
member of the multinational coalition of forces
in the Gulf War. The U.S. and Syria also
consulted closely on the Taif Accord, ending the
civil war in Lebanon. In 1991, President Asad
made a historic decision to accept then
President Bush's invitation to attend a Middle
East peace conference and to engage in
subsequent bilateral negotiations with Israel.
Syria's efforts to secure the release of Western
hostages held in Lebanon and its lifting of
restrictions on travel by Syrian Jews helped
further to improve relations between Syria and
the United States. There were several
presidential summits; the last one occurred when
then-President Clinton met the late President
Hafiz al-Asad in Geneva in March 2000. In the
aftermath of September 11 the Syrian Government
began limited cooperation with U.S. in the war
against terror.
Syria has been on the U.S. list of state
sponsors of terrorism since the list's inception
in 1979. Because of its continuing support and
safe haven for terrorist organizations, Syria is
subject to legislatively mandated penalties,
including export sanctions and ineligibility to
receive most forms of U.S. aid or to purchase
U.S. military equipment. In 1986, the U.S.
withdrew its ambassador and imposed additional
administrative sanctions on Syria in response to
evidence of direct Syrian involvement in an
attempt to blow up an Israeli airplane. A U.S.
ambassador returned to Damascus in 1987,
partially in response to positive Syrian actions
against terrorism such as expelling the Abu
Nidal Organization from Syria and helping free
an American hostage earlier that year.
However, relations since the February 2005
assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister
Hariri have considerably deteriorated. Issues of
U.S. concern include the Syrian Government’s
failure to prevent Syria from becoming a major
transit point for foreign fighters entering
Iraq, its refusal to deport from Syria former
Saddam regime elements who are supporting the
insurgency in Iraq, its ongoing interference in
Lebanese affairs, its protection of the
leadership of Palestinian rejectionist groups in
Damascus, its deplorable human rights record,
and its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction.
In May 2004, the Bush administration, pursuant
to the provisions of the Syrian Accountability
and Lebanese Sovereignty Restoration Act,
imposed sanctions on Syria. In February 2005, in
the wake of the Hariri assassination, the U.S.
recalled its Ambassador to Washington for
consultations. (As of fall 2005, the Ambassador
has not returned to Damascus.)
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Margaret
Scobey (currently in Washington on
consultations)
Deputy Chief of Mission (Charge
d’Affaires)--Stephen Seche
Head of the Political Section--William Roebuck
Head of the Economic/Commercial Section--Todd
Holmstrom
Head of the Consular Section--Patricia Fietz
Management Counselor--Kathy Johnson-Casares
Public Affairs Officer--Chris Eccel
Defense Attaché--Col. Norman Larson
The
U.S. Embassy is located at Abu Roumaneh,
Al-Mansur St. No. 2; P.O. Box 29; Tel. (963)(11)
3331342, 3333232 (after hours); Public Affairs
Section Tel: 3331878, 3338413, 3311280; telex
411919 USDAMA SY; FAX (963)(11) 2247938. More
information about embassy hours of operation,
and consular and American citizen services can
be obtained at the embassy's website:
http://damascus.usembassy.gov/