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Al-Assad family

The al-Assad family,[a] also known as the Assad dynasty,[1] is a Syrian political family that has ruled Syria since Hafiz al-Assad became president of Syria in 1971 under the Ba'ath Party. After his death, in June 2000, he was succeeded by his son Bashar al-Assad.[2][3][4][5]

Al-Assad Family
عَائِلَة الْأَسَد
ʿāʾilat al-ʾAsad
The Assad family, c. 1993. Front: Hafiz al-Assad and his wife, Anisa Makhlouf. Rear, left to right: Maher, Bashar, Bassel, Majid, and Bushra al-Assad
Current regionLatakia
Place of origin Syria
MembersHafez al-Assad
Bashar al-Assad
Maher al-Assad
Rifaat al-Assad
Connected familiesMakhlouf, Shalish

The al-Assads are originally from Qardaha, Latakia. They belong to the Kalbiyya tribe.[6] The family name Assad goes back to 1927, when Ali Sulayman changed his last name to al-Assad, Arabic for "the lion", possibly in connection with his social standing as a local mediator and his political activities. All members of the extended Assad family stem from Ali Sulayman and his second wife Naissa, who came from a village in the Syrian Coastal Mountains.[7]

During his early reign in the 1970s, Hafiz al-Assad created patronage networks of Ba'ath party elites figures loyal to his family. Members of Assad family established control over vast swathes of the Syrian economy and corruption became endemic in the public and private sectors.[8] After Hafiz al-Assad's death, family connections continued to be important in Syrian politics. Several close family members of Hafiz al-Assad also held vital positions in the government since his rise to power, an arrangement which exists to the present day.[9][10] Syrian bureaucracy and business-community are also dominated by members of the Assad dynasty and individuals affiliated with them.[11][12]

Hafiz Al-Assad built his regime as a bureaucracy that was marked by a distinct cult of personality, uncharacteristic in modern Syrian history. Images, portraits, quotes and praises of Assad are displayed everywhere from schools to public markets and government offices; and Hafiz al-Assad is referred as the "Immortal Leader" and the "al-Muqaddas (Sanctified One)" in official Assadist ideology. Hafiz re-organised the Syrian society in militaristic lines and persistently invoked conspiratorial rhetoric on the dangers of foreign-backed plots abetted by fifth columnists and promoted the armed forces as a central aspect of public life. Following the death of Hafiz, the personality cult was inherited by his son and successor Bashar al-Assad who is hailed by the party as the "Young Leader" and "Hope of the People". Highly influenced by the model of the North Korean Kim dynasty, official propaganda ascribes divine features to the Assad dynasty; and reveres the Assad patriarchs as the founding fathers of modern Syria.[13][14][15]

Origin edit

The Assad family originates from Ali Sulayman al-Wahsh, Hafiz al-Assad's father, who was born in 1875 and lived in the village of Qardaha in the coastal Syrian mountains. The locals reportedly nicknamed him "Wahsh", Arabic for "wild beast", because he was physically strong and a good fighter. Al-Wahsh remained the family name until the 1920s, when it was changed to al-Assad, Arabic for "lion".[16][17] Because of Sulayman's reported strength and marksmanship, he was respected in his village. At the outbreak of World War I, the Ottoman governor of the Aleppo Vilayet sent troops to the area to collect taxes and round up recruits. The troops were reportedly fought off by Sulayman and his friends who were only armed with sabres and old muskets.[18] Because Sulayman was respected, he was a local mediator between quarreling families. He was also one of the local chieftains who were the de facto rulers of the area. The chieftains from the powerful families would provide protection to their neighbours and in return they gained loyalty and respect.[19] He lived until 1963, long enough to see his son's rise to power. He married twice and over three decades had eleven children. His first wife Sa'ada was from the district of Haffeh. They had three sons and two daughters. His second wife was Na'isa, twenty years younger than him. She was the daughter of Uthman Abbud from the village of Al-Qutailibiyah, a dozen kilometres further up the mountain. They had a daughter and five sons. Hafiz was born on 6 October 1930 and was the fourth child.[20]

Al-Assad family is affiliated with the Alawite sect, a syncretic sect with links to early Shi'ism. Since coming to power in 1970, Assad family traditionally used sectarian loyalty from the Alawite sect as a vital component to legitimize their dynastic rule. Many Sunni loyalists have been assigned to crucial posts in the bureaucracy, security forces, military, judiciary, etc. in-order to consolidate Assad family's grip on power.[21]

Cult of personality edit

In no other country in recent memory ... not Mao’s China, nor Tito’s Yugoslavia, has the intensity of the personality cult reached such extremes. Asad’s image, speaking, smiling, listening, benevolent or stern, solemn or reflective, is everywhere. Sometimes there are half a dozen pictures of him in a row. His face envelops telephone poles and trucks, churches and mosques. His is the visage a Syrian sees when he opens his newspaper.

— Middle East Insight magazine[22][23]

 
A square in Aleppo displaying the statue and portrait of Hafiz al-Assad (2001)

During the 1950s, Syrian Alawites started becoming influential in the Syrian Armed Forces and Ba'ath party. Led by Alawite military officers like Salah Jadid. Ba'athist factions staged a series of coups during the 1960s and built up a one-party state. The party cemented its total control over the state and society by purging civilian elites, pursued an aggressive propaganda policy of "state-nationalist indoctrination" and established patronage networks based on sectarian lines to mobilise support.[24] Following the 1970 coup d'etat that ousted his rival Salah Jadid; Hafiz al-Assad developed a Stalinist-style personality cult around him; which depicted him as the father figure of Syrian nation. After Hafiz's death, the personality cult was extended towards his son, Bashar al-Assad. Monuments, pictures, statues, symbols and billboards of both the leaders extensively pervade the Syrian society; designed to consolidate the notion of "Assad's Syria". Observers view the state propaganda efforts as a strategy for securing the compliance of the masses and identifying the Syrian nationhood with the Assad dynasty.[25][26][27][28][29]

On the other hand, exaggerations of the propaganda and ever-deepening importance attached to upholding the personality cult around the Assad patriarchs have resulted in the simultaneous de-emphasis on the Syrian identity itself; due to the duplication of reality. In addition to criminalising any and all critiques of the regime; the modes of conveying messages between the state and civil society are restricted strictly within bounds of what is officially acceptable. The state further banned private political opinions critical of the regime and encourages citizens to report relatives and friends who exhibit undesirable attitudes. The policies of economic liberalization implemented during the 2000s worsened the corruption; since the chief grantees of the outcomes were businessmen and relatives close to the Assad family; such as Rami Makhlouf.[30][31][32]

Unlike other Arab dictatorships, this feature of the Baath regime and total centralisation of power in the hands of the Assad patriarchs had enabled it to instill apoliticism amongst its citizens; where the ritualisation of state slogans and symbolism had led to de facto compliance. As a result, there are far fewer avenues of free political activism for ordinary Syrians as compared to other Arab states. Until recently, political activism was shunned by many people; instead preferring the stability offered by the regime. The rise of internet and satellite channels and proliferation of civil society groups and independent political activists during the 2000s increasingly began to challenge state monopoly on information, which have led to rising political dissidence amongst the younger generations.[33][34][35][36] Describing the hardships to raise the political consciousness of Syrian citizens by contrasting their situation with other Arab protestors, Caroline, a Syrian Christian and civic activist imprisoned by regime during the 2011–12 Arab Spring protests, states:

"Before the revolution in Egypt, people were allowed to gather, had political parties; people were exposed to political life. In Syria, we were away from politics. We were raised in Syria and our parents used to tell us that we shouldn't talk with anyone about our religion or about politics”[37]

Since Hafiz al-Assad's seizure of power in 1970; state propaganda has promoted a new national discourse based on unifying Syrians under "a single imagined Ba’athist identity" and Assadism.[38] Fervently loyalist paramilitaries known as the Shabiha (tr. ghosts) deify the Assad dynasty through slogans such as "There is no God but Bashar!" and pursue psychological warfare against non-conformist populations.[39]

Hafiz's family edit

 
President Hafiz al-Assad with his family in the early 1970s. Left to right: Bashar, Maher, Anisa Makhlouf, Majid, Bushra, and Bassel

Hafiz al-Assad edit

    • Bashar al-Assad (born 1965), is the President of Syria since 2000. Before Bassel's death he was an ophthalmologist. He is married to Asma al-Assad (born 1975). She is the current First Lady of Syria and takes a prominent public role. Before being married she was an investment banker. They have three children.[10] The couple are also regarded as the "main economic players" in Syria and control large parts of Syrian business sectors, banking, telecommunications, real estate, and maritime industries.[44]
    • Majid al-Assad (1966–2009), was an electrical engineer with a reported history of severe mental problems.[citation needed] Died after a long, unspecified illness.[45][46][47] He was married to Ru’a Ayyoub (born 1976) and had no children.[48] Majid died in Damascus on 12 December 2009.[citation needed]
    • Maher al-Assad (born 1967), is the commander of the Republican Guard, which are also known as the Presidential Guard, and the army's elite Fourth Armored Division, which together with Syria's secret police form the core of the country's security forces.[49] He is also a member of the Ba'ath Party central command and is said to have an aggressive and uncontrollable personality. He is married and has two daughters.[45][50] He is reported to have been severely disabled in a 2012 bombing in Damascus during the Syrian Civil War.[51][52] He reportedly shot Assef Shawkat in the stomach in October 1999, during an argument. Maher is also known by many to be the most ruthless in the Al-Assad family.[53]

Hafiz's siblings edit

Jamil al-Assad edit

  • Jamil al-Assad (1932–2004), parliamentarian and commander of a minor militia. Politically marginalized years before his death.[10]
    Children:
    • Mundhir al-Assad (born 1961), was arrested in 2005 at the Beirut Airport while entering Lebanon.[10] He was reported to have been involved in arms smuggling to the Iraqi insurgents.[54] In 2011, the EU placed sanctions on him for being involved with the Shabbiha militia in the repression of protestors during the Syrian Civil War.[50][55]
    • Fawwaz al-Assad (1962–2015), was the first real Shabiha and gave the meaning known today to the word Shabiha and the concept of Tashbeeh that is to act like a thug.[56] He had sanctions placed on him in 2011 by the EU for being involved with the Shabbiha militia in the repression of protestors during the Syrian Civil War.[54][55]
    • One daughter is married to Yarob Kanaan, whose father is:
      Ghazi Kanaan (1942–2005) who in 2005 during his term as interior minister presumably killed himself. The Kanaans come from the Kalabiyya tribe.[57]

Rifaat al-Assad edit

 
Rifaat al-Assad and Hafiz in the early 1980s
  • Rifaat al-Assad (born 1937). Formerly a powerful security chief and commander of the Defense Companies, who was responsible for the 1982 Hama massacre. After attempting a coup d'état in 1987, he went into exile in France and now lives in London.[58] He is married with four wives:
    Amira 'Aziz al-Assad (died 2019), a cousin[57]
    Sana' Ismail Makhluf (died 2021), from the family of Hafiz's wife[57]
    Rajaa Bakrat, from a wealthy Sunni Damascene family[57]
    Lina al-Khayer, sister of Hessa bint Tarad al-Shaalan, wife of the late Saudi king Abdullah bin Abdulaziz[57]
    Rifaat has a number of children from these marriages, including:
    • Ribal al-Assad, has lived abroad since he was nine years old, currently he lives in the United States. In an interview in 2010, he denied that his father was involved in the massacre of Hama or that his family's branch was connected to Abdul Halim Khaddam or Ghazi Kanaan.[58]
    • Somar al-Assad, supports his father actively in his opposition to Bashar.[57]
    • Lamia, is married to 'Ala al-Fayad, the son of Shafiq Fayadh (former Syrian General).[54][57][59]
    • Mudar al-Assad, is married to May Haydar, daughter of the Syrian multimillionaire Muhammad Haydar.[60]
    • Tumadhir, is married to Mu'ein Nasif Kheirbek also from the Kalabiyya tribe and related to Mohammed Nasif Kheirbek, who is indirectly related by marriage and blood to Abd al-Halim Khaddam, Rafik Hariri and the influential Homs al-Atassi family.[57]
    • Firas al-Assad, accused his cousin, president Bashar, of killing more than 100,000 Alawites and more than half a million Syrians in order to stay in power.[61]

Shalish family edit

  • Sister of Hafiz al-Assad married into the Shalish family. The family through paternal cousin General Dhu al Himma al-Shalish maintains a significant level of influence in the Bashar al-Assad government. The Shalishes are mainly active in the automobile and construction sectors.
    • Gen. Dhu al-Himma Shalish (1956–2022), a cousin of Bashar al-Assad, was the head of presidential security and was part of the inner circle of leadership of the Bashar al-Assad government.[62][63] He had sanctions placed on him by the US government for supplying weapons to Saddam Hussein and his government.[62][64] On 24 June 2011, the EU sanctioned him for being involved in violence against demonstrators during the Syrian Civil War.[65]
      • Asef Isa Shalish, nephew of Dhu al-Himma, is the manager of SES, a company that was involved in the weapons trade with Iraq and Iran.[45][59][66]
    • Riyad Shalish, a cousin of Bashar Assad and the former director of the governmental construction organization the Military Housing Establishment, which during the 1990s he managed to transform into his own company. He made a fortune on construction and contracting deals in Syria involving large scale projects financed by other Arab states. On 24 June 2011, the EU sanctioned him for providing funding to the regime to repress protesters of the Syrian Civil War.[65][67]

Ahmed al-Assad edit

  • Ahmed al-Assad (1910–1975), was an older half-brother of Hafiz from Ali's first wife Sa'ada.[68]
    • Anwar al-Assad,
      • Hilal al-Assad, was the president of the Syrian Arabian Horse Association. Hilal was killed on 22 March 2014, in the battle for a border crossing with Turkey in the north of Latakia.
        • Suleiman al-Assad, Hilal's son, was arrested in August 2015 after allegedly murdering an off-duty colonel in a 'road rage' incident in Latakia.[69] He was sentenced to 20 years in prison but in late 2020 was released after four years.[70]
      • Hael al-Assad, is the head of the Military Police of the army's 4th Armoured Division, whose official commander is General Ali Ammar, but whose de facto commander is Maher al-Assad. He is also the director of the prison in which Maher al-Assad keeps his personal prisoners outside of state jurisdiction.[68]
      • Haroun al-Assad, is an elected municipal official of the village of Qardaha.[68]
      • Daad al-Assad, is married to General Zouheir al-Assad, who was born in 1958 and is a distant cousin. General Zouheir al-Assad commanded the 90th Regiment, a unit of some 10,000 men, charged with protecting the capital.[68]
        • Karam Al Assad, leads a group of Shabiha. He and his group of shabiha led an assault against the peaceful protests during the "night of destiny". The assault ended in two deaths and dozens injured.[68]

Isma'il al-Assad edit

  • Isma'il al-Assad (1913–?) was an older half-brother of Hafiz from Ali's first wife Sa'ada.
    • Tawfiq al-Assad,
      • Muhammad al-Assad, another leader of the "Struggle companies". He was killed in a dispute with a powerful person over control in the al-Qerdaha area of Latakia province, on 14 March 2015.[71]
        • Hussein al-Assad, son of Muhammad. He took over the criminal network of his father and reorganized it into a paramilitary unit, the Lions of Hussein.[72]

Ibrahim al-Assad edit

  • Ibrahim al-Assad, was an older half-brother of Hafiz al-Assad from Ali Sulayman's first wife Sa'ada. He was married to Umm Anwar who took over the smuggling business of her son Malek.[73]
    • Malek al-Assad was the first known smuggler in the Assad family.[73]

About Hafiz's siblings who died early: Bayat, Bahijat and an unknown sister almost nothing is known.[7]

Anisa's siblings edit

Makhlouf family edit

The Makhloufs belong to the Alawi Haddad tribe,[57][74] both Hafiz and Rifaat are related through marriage to the Makhloufs. The Makhlouf family rose from humble beginnings to become the financial advisor to Hafiz al-Assad after the former President married Makhlouf's sister. The family headed by Mohammad Makhlouf has established a vast financial empire in the telecommunication, retail, banking, power generation, and oil and gas sectors. The net worth of the family was estimated in 2010 to be at least five billion dollars.[45][75]

  • Mohammed Makhlouf (1932–2020),[76] made a fortune, both through management of state companies and in the private sector.[77]
    • Rami Makhlouf (born 1969), is a wealthy businessman and the main owner of SyriaTel.[45] According to the Financial Times he is thought to control as much as 60% of the economy through his web of business interests that include telecommunications, oil and gas, construction, banking, airlines and retail, and he is widely seen as the business arm of the Assad government.[50][78] He is regarded as Syria's wealthiest man – worth approximately 5 billion dollars.[79] In 2020, intense dispute arose between Makhlouf and Bashar al-Assad over the issue of backtaxes; which severely damaged Assad's reputation amongst Alawite loyalists.[80]
    • Col. Hafez Makhlouf (1971), was the deputy director of the General Security Directorate and intelligence chief of the Damascus branch.[81][50][78][82][83][62]
    • Iyad Makhlouf (born 1973), twin of Ihab Makhlouf, is a General Security Directorate officer. The EU, US,[84] and UK[85] sanctioned him for being involved in violence against the civilian population during the Syrian Civil War.[55]
    • Ihab Makhlouf (born 1973), twin of Iyad Makhlouf, is former Vice-Chairman of SyriaTel[86] and caretaker for Rami Makhlouf's US company. The EU sanctioned him for providing funding to the Assad government and allowing violence against demonstrators in the Syrian Civil War.[55] He is believed to be in charge of the sniper units that are being used to shoot at protestors in the uprising.[87]
  • Fatma Makhlouf, sister of Anisa Makhlouf.
  • General Adnan Makhlouf, first cousin of Anisa, former commander of the Republican Guard.[89]

Hafiz's cousins edit

Other relatives edit

  • Numeir al-Assad, second degree cousin of Hafiz's children, led the Shabiha in Latakia.[10]
  • Nizar al-Assad, is a cousin of Bashar Al-Assad. He was the head of the Nizar Oilfield Supplies company. He was sanctioned by the EU for being very close to key government officials and for financing Shabiha in the region of Latakia.[65]
  • Fawaz al-Assad, nephew of Hafiz, leader of Shabiha[94]
  • Mundhir al-Assad, nephew of Hafiz, leader of Shabiha[94]
  • Samer al-Assad, son of Kamal and grandson of Ismael who was a half-brother of Hafiz al-Assad, runs one of several Captagon factories in Al-Bassah.[95]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Arabic: عَائِلَة الْأَسَد, romanizedʿāʾilat al-ʾAsad

References edit

Citations
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External links edit

assad, family, assad, redirects, here, other, uses, assad, disambiguation, assad, family, also, known, assad, dynasty, syrian, political, family, that, ruled, syria, since, hafiz, assad, became, president, syria, 1971, under, party, after, death, june, 2000, s. Al Assad redirects here For other uses see al Assad disambiguation The al Assad family a also known as the Assad dynasty 1 is a Syrian political family that has ruled Syria since Hafiz al Assad became president of Syria in 1971 under the Ba ath Party After his death in June 2000 he was succeeded by his son Bashar al Assad 2 3 4 5 Al Assad Familyع ائ ل ة ال أ س دʿaʾilat al ʾAsadThe Assad family c 1993 Front Hafiz al Assad and his wife Anisa Makhlouf Rear left to right Maher Bashar Bassel Majid and Bushra al AssadCurrent regionLatakiaPlace of origin SyriaMembersHafez al Assad Bashar al Assad Maher al Assad Rifaat al AssadConnected familiesMakhlouf ShalishThe al Assads are originally from Qardaha Latakia They belong to the Kalbiyya tribe 6 The family name Assad goes back to 1927 when Ali Sulayman changed his last name to al Assad Arabic for the lion possibly in connection with his social standing as a local mediator and his political activities All members of the extended Assad family stem from Ali Sulayman and his second wife Naissa who came from a village in the Syrian Coastal Mountains 7 During his early reign in the 1970s Hafiz al Assad created patronage networks of Ba ath party elites figures loyal to his family Members of Assad family established control over vast swathes of the Syrian economy and corruption became endemic in the public and private sectors 8 After Hafiz al Assad s death family connections continued to be important in Syrian politics Several close family members of Hafiz al Assad also held vital positions in the government since his rise to power an arrangement which exists to the present day 9 10 Syrian bureaucracy and business community are also dominated by members of the Assad dynasty and individuals affiliated with them 11 12 Hafiz Al Assad built his regime as a bureaucracy that was marked by a distinct cult of personality uncharacteristic in modern Syrian history Images portraits quotes and praises of Assad are displayed everywhere from schools to public markets and government offices and Hafiz al Assad is referred as the Immortal Leader and the al Muqaddas Sanctified One in official Assadist ideology Hafiz re organised the Syrian society in militaristic lines and persistently invoked conspiratorial rhetoric on the dangers of foreign backed plots abetted by fifth columnists and promoted the armed forces as a central aspect of public life Following the death of Hafiz the personality cult was inherited by his son and successor Bashar al Assad who is hailed by the party as the Young Leader and Hope of the People Highly influenced by the model of the North Korean Kim dynasty official propaganda ascribes divine features to the Assad dynasty and reveres the Assad patriarchs as the founding fathers of modern Syria 13 14 15 Contents 1 Origin 2 Cult of personality 3 Hafiz s family 3 1 Hafiz al Assad 4 Hafiz s siblings 4 1 Jamil al Assad 4 2 Rifaat al Assad 4 3 Shalish family 4 4 Ahmed al Assad 4 5 Isma il al Assad 4 6 Ibrahim al Assad 5 Anisa s siblings 5 1 Makhlouf family 6 Hafiz s cousins 7 Other relatives 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksOrigin editThe Assad family originates from Ali Sulayman al Wahsh Hafiz al Assad s father who was born in 1875 and lived in the village of Qardaha in the coastal Syrian mountains The locals reportedly nicknamed him Wahsh Arabic for wild beast because he was physically strong and a good fighter Al Wahsh remained the family name until the 1920s when it was changed to al Assad Arabic for lion 16 17 Because of Sulayman s reported strength and marksmanship he was respected in his village At the outbreak of World War I the Ottoman governor of the Aleppo Vilayet sent troops to the area to collect taxes and round up recruits The troops were reportedly fought off by Sulayman and his friends who were only armed with sabres and old muskets 18 Because Sulayman was respected he was a local mediator between quarreling families He was also one of the local chieftains who were the de facto rulers of the area The chieftains from the powerful families would provide protection to their neighbours and in return they gained loyalty and respect 19 He lived until 1963 long enough to see his son s rise to power He married twice and over three decades had eleven children His first wife Sa ada was from the district of Haffeh They had three sons and two daughters His second wife was Na isa twenty years younger than him She was the daughter of Uthman Abbud from the village of Al Qutailibiyah a dozen kilometres further up the mountain They had a daughter and five sons Hafiz was born on 6 October 1930 and was the fourth child 20 Al Assad family is affiliated with the Alawite sect a syncretic sect with links to early Shi ism Since coming to power in 1970 Assad family traditionally used sectarian loyalty from the Alawite sect as a vital component to legitimize their dynastic rule Many Sunni loyalists have been assigned to crucial posts in the bureaucracy security forces military judiciary etc in order to consolidate Assad family s grip on power 21 Cult of personality editSee also Cult of personality In no other country in recent memory not Mao s China nor Tito s Yugoslavia has the intensity of the personality cult reached such extremes Asad s image speaking smiling listening benevolent or stern solemn or reflective is everywhere Sometimes there are half a dozen pictures of him in a row His face envelops telephone poles and trucks churches and mosques His is the visage a Syrian sees when he opens his newspaper Middle East Insight magazine 22 23 nbsp A square in Aleppo displaying the statue and portrait of Hafiz al Assad 2001 During the 1950s Syrian Alawites started becoming influential in the Syrian Armed Forces and Ba ath party Led by Alawite military officers like Salah Jadid Ba athist factions staged a series of coups during the 1960s and built up a one party state The party cemented its total control over the state and society by purging civilian elites pursued an aggressive propaganda policy of state nationalist indoctrination and established patronage networks based on sectarian lines to mobilise support 24 Following the 1970 coup d etat that ousted his rival Salah Jadid Hafiz al Assad developed a Stalinist style personality cult around him which depicted him as the father figure of Syrian nation After Hafiz s death the personality cult was extended towards his son Bashar al Assad Monuments pictures statues symbols and billboards of both the leaders extensively pervade the Syrian society designed to consolidate the notion of Assad s Syria Observers view the state propaganda efforts as a strategy for securing the compliance of the masses and identifying the Syrian nationhood with the Assad dynasty 25 26 27 28 29 On the other hand exaggerations of the propaganda and ever deepening importance attached to upholding the personality cult around the Assad patriarchs have resulted in the simultaneous de emphasis on the Syrian identity itself due to the duplication of reality In addition to criminalising any and all critiques of the regime the modes of conveying messages between the state and civil society are restricted strictly within bounds of what is officially acceptable The state further banned private political opinions critical of the regime and encourages citizens to report relatives and friends who exhibit undesirable attitudes The policies of economic liberalization implemented during the 2000s worsened the corruption since the chief grantees of the outcomes were businessmen and relatives close to the Assad family such as Rami Makhlouf 30 31 32 Unlike other Arab dictatorships this feature of the Baath regime and total centralisation of power in the hands of the Assad patriarchs had enabled it to instill apoliticism amongst its citizens where the ritualisation of state slogans and symbolism had led to de facto compliance As a result there are far fewer avenues of free political activism for ordinary Syrians as compared to other Arab states Until recently political activism was shunned by many people instead preferring the stability offered by the regime The rise of internet and satellite channels and proliferation of civil society groups and independent political activists during the 2000s increasingly began to challenge state monopoly on information which have led to rising political dissidence amongst the younger generations 33 34 35 36 Describing the hardships to raise the political consciousness of Syrian citizens by contrasting their situation with other Arab protestors Caroline a Syrian Christian and civic activist imprisoned by regime during the 2011 12 Arab Spring protests states Before the revolution in Egypt people were allowed to gather had political parties people were exposed to political life In Syria we were away from politics We were raised in Syria and our parents used to tell us that we shouldn t talk with anyone about our religion or about politics 37 Since Hafiz al Assad s seizure of power in 1970 state propaganda has promoted a new national discourse based on unifying Syrians under a single imagined Ba athist identity and Assadism 38 Fervently loyalist paramilitaries known as the Shabiha tr ghosts deify the Assad dynasty through slogans such as There is no God but Bashar and pursue psychological warfare against non conformist populations 39 Hafiz s family edit nbsp President Hafiz al Assad with his family in the early 1970s Left to right Bashar Maher Anisa Makhlouf Majid Bushra and BasselHafiz al Assad edit Hafiz al Assad 1930 2000 President of Syria 1971 2000 Anisa Makhlouf 1930 2016 wife of Hafiz and First Lady of Syria 40 Bushra al Assad died as an infant before 1960 41 Bushra al Assad born 1960 is a pharmacist and married with five children 42 to Gen Assef Shawkat 1950 2012 was deputy chief of staff of the Syrian army and the former head of military intelligence He was killed on 18 July 2012 in a bombing in Damascus during the Syrian Civil War Bassel al Assad 1962 1994 was the original candidate for presidential succession however he died in a car accident 43 nbsp Billboard featuring Hafiz al Assad s eldest son Bassel al Assad d 1994 who was initially heralded as the successor of his fatherBashar al Assad born 1965 is the President of Syria since 2000 Before Bassel s death he was an ophthalmologist He is married to Asma al Assad born 1975 She is the current First Lady of Syria and takes a prominent public role Before being married she was an investment banker They have three children 10 The couple are also regarded as the main economic players in Syria and control large parts of Syrian business sectors banking telecommunications real estate and maritime industries 44 Majid al Assad 1966 2009 was an electrical engineer with a reported history of severe mental problems citation needed Died after a long unspecified illness 45 46 47 He was married to Ru a Ayyoub born 1976 and had no children 48 Majid died in Damascus on 12 December 2009 citation needed Maher al Assad born 1967 is the commander of the Republican Guard which are also known as the Presidential Guard and the army s elite Fourth Armored Division which together with Syria s secret police form the core of the country s security forces 49 He is also a member of the Ba ath Party central command and is said to have an aggressive and uncontrollable personality He is married and has two daughters 45 50 He is reported to have been severely disabled in a 2012 bombing in Damascus during the Syrian Civil War 51 52 He reportedly shot Assef Shawkat in the stomach in October 1999 during an argument Maher is also known by many to be the most ruthless in the Al Assad family 53 Hafiz s siblings editJamil al Assad edit Jamil al Assad 1932 2004 parliamentarian and commander of a minor militia Politically marginalized years before his death 10 Children Mundhir al Assad born 1961 was arrested in 2005 at the Beirut Airport while entering Lebanon 10 He was reported to have been involved in arms smuggling to the Iraqi insurgents 54 In 2011 the EU placed sanctions on him for being involved with the Shabbiha militia in the repression of protestors during the Syrian Civil War 50 55 Fawwaz al Assad 1962 2015 was the first real Shabiha and gave the meaning known today to the word Shabiha and the concept of Tashbeeh that is to act like a thug 56 He had sanctions placed on him in 2011 by the EU for being involved with the Shabbiha militia in the repression of protestors during the Syrian Civil War 54 55 One daughter is married to Yarob Kanaan whose father is Ghazi Kanaan 1942 2005 who in 2005 during his term as interior minister presumably killed himself The Kanaans come from the Kalabiyya tribe 57 Rifaat al Assad edit nbsp Rifaat al Assad and Hafiz in the early 1980sRifaat al Assad born 1937 Formerly a powerful security chief and commander of the Defense Companies who was responsible for the 1982 Hama massacre After attempting a coup d etat in 1987 he went into exile in France and now lives in London 58 He is married with four wives Amira Aziz al Assad died 2019 a cousin 57 Sana Ismail Makhluf died 2021 from the family of Hafiz s wife 57 Rajaa Bakrat from a wealthy Sunni Damascene family 57 Lina al Khayer sister of Hessa bint Tarad al Shaalan wife of the late Saudi king Abdullah bin Abdulaziz 57 Rifaat has a number of children from these marriages including Ribal al Assad has lived abroad since he was nine years old currently he lives in the United States In an interview in 2010 he denied that his father was involved in the massacre of Hama or that his family s branch was connected to Abdul Halim Khaddam or Ghazi Kanaan 58 Somar al Assad supports his father actively in his opposition to Bashar 57 Lamia is married to Ala al Fayad the son of Shafiq Fayadh former Syrian General 54 57 59 Mudar al Assad is married to May Haydar daughter of the Syrian multimillionaire Muhammad Haydar 60 Tumadhir is married to Mu ein Nasif Kheirbek also from the Kalabiyya tribe and related to Mohammed Nasif Kheirbek who is indirectly related by marriage and blood to Abd al Halim Khaddam Rafik Hariri and the influential Homs al Atassi family 57 Firas al Assad accused his cousin president Bashar of killing more than 100 000 Alawites and more than half a million Syrians in order to stay in power 61 Shalish family edit Sister of Hafiz al Assad married into the Shalish family The family through paternal cousin General Dhu al Himma al Shalish maintains a significant level of influence in the Bashar al Assad government The Shalishes are mainly active in the automobile and construction sectors Gen Dhu al Himma Shalish 1956 2022 a cousin of Bashar al Assad was the head of presidential security and was part of the inner circle of leadership of the Bashar al Assad government 62 63 He had sanctions placed on him by the US government for supplying weapons to Saddam Hussein and his government 62 64 On 24 June 2011 the EU sanctioned him for being involved in violence against demonstrators during the Syrian Civil War 65 Asef Isa Shalish nephew of Dhu al Himma is the manager of SES a company that was involved in the weapons trade with Iraq and Iran 45 59 66 Riyad Shalish a cousin of Bashar Assad and the former director of the governmental construction organization the Military Housing Establishment which during the 1990s he managed to transform into his own company He made a fortune on construction and contracting deals in Syria involving large scale projects financed by other Arab states On 24 June 2011 the EU sanctioned him for providing funding to the regime to repress protesters of the Syrian Civil War 65 67 Ahmed al Assad edit Ahmed al Assad 1910 1975 was an older half brother of Hafiz from Ali s first wife Sa ada 68 Anwar al Assad Hilal al Assad was the president of the Syrian Arabian Horse Association Hilal was killed on 22 March 2014 in the battle for a border crossing with Turkey in the north of Latakia Suleiman al Assad Hilal s son was arrested in August 2015 after allegedly murdering an off duty colonel in a road rage incident in Latakia 69 He was sentenced to 20 years in prison but in late 2020 was released after four years 70 Hael al Assad is the head of the Military Police of the army s 4th Armoured Division whose official commander is General Ali Ammar but whose de facto commander is Maher al Assad He is also the director of the prison in which Maher al Assad keeps his personal prisoners outside of state jurisdiction 68 Haroun al Assad is an elected municipal official of the village of Qardaha 68 Daad al Assad is married to General Zouheir al Assad who was born in 1958 and is a distant cousin General Zouheir al Assad commanded the 90th Regiment a unit of some 10 000 men charged with protecting the capital 68 Karam Al Assad leads a group of Shabiha He and his group of shabiha led an assault against the peaceful protests during the night of destiny The assault ended in two deaths and dozens injured 68 Isma il al Assad edit Isma il al Assad 1913 was an older half brother of Hafiz from Ali s first wife Sa ada Tawfiq al Assad Muhammad al Assad another leader of the Struggle companies He was killed in a dispute with a powerful person over control in the al Qerdaha area of Latakia province on 14 March 2015 71 Hussein al Assad son of Muhammad He took over the criminal network of his father and reorganized it into a paramilitary unit the Lions of Hussein 72 Ibrahim al Assad edit Ibrahim al Assad was an older half brother of Hafiz al Assad from Ali Sulayman s first wife Sa ada He was married to Umm Anwar who took over the smuggling business of her son Malek 73 Malek al Assad was the first known smuggler in the Assad family 73 About Hafiz s siblings who died early Bayat Bahijat and an unknown sister almost nothing is known 7 Anisa s siblings editMakhlouf family edit The Makhloufs belong to the Alawi Haddad tribe 57 74 both Hafiz and Rifaat are related through marriage to the Makhloufs The Makhlouf family rose from humble beginnings to become the financial advisor to Hafiz al Assad after the former President married Makhlouf s sister The family headed by Mohammad Makhlouf has established a vast financial empire in the telecommunication retail banking power generation and oil and gas sectors The net worth of the family was estimated in 2010 to be at least five billion dollars 45 75 Mohammed Makhlouf 1932 2020 76 made a fortune both through management of state companies and in the private sector 77 Rami Makhlouf born 1969 is a wealthy businessman and the main owner of SyriaTel 45 According to the Financial Times he is thought to control as much as 60 of the economy through his web of business interests that include telecommunications oil and gas construction banking airlines and retail and he is widely seen as the business arm of the Assad government 50 78 He is regarded as Syria s wealthiest man worth approximately 5 billion dollars 79 In 2020 intense dispute arose between Makhlouf and Bashar al Assad over the issue of backtaxes which severely damaged Assad s reputation amongst Alawite loyalists 80 Col Hafez Makhlouf 1971 was the deputy director of the General Security Directorate and intelligence chief of the Damascus branch 81 50 78 82 83 62 Iyad Makhlouf born 1973 twin of Ihab Makhlouf is a General Security Directorate officer The EU US 84 and UK 85 sanctioned him for being involved in violence against the civilian population during the Syrian Civil War 55 Ihab Makhlouf born 1973 twin of Iyad Makhlouf is former Vice Chairman of SyriaTel 86 and caretaker for Rami Makhlouf s US company The EU sanctioned him for providing funding to the Assad government and allowing violence against demonstrators in the Syrian Civil War 55 He is believed to be in charge of the sniper units that are being used to shoot at protestors in the uprising 87 Fatma Makhlouf sister of Anisa Makhlouf Atef Najib is the former head of Political Security Directorate in Deraa 88 The EU sanctioned him for being involved in violence against demonstrators in the Syrian civil war 50 General Adnan Makhlouf first cousin of Anisa former commander of the Republican Guard 89 Hafiz s cousins editNamir al Assad reportedly established the Shabiha with Rifaat al Assad in the 1980s and controlled the organized smuggling networks anchored in Latakia s port 90 Adnan al Assad leader of Struggle Companies militia in Damascus 91 Gen Shafiq Fayadh cousin of Hafiz from his aunt in the village of Ayn al Arus in Jableh Commander of the 7th Mechanized Infantry Division 1973 78 92 Commander of the 3rd Armored Division since 1978 93 Reportedly incapacitated in 1991 92 due to a heart attack 92 Batatu describes him as an army corps general Other relatives editNumeir al Assad second degree cousin of Hafiz s children led the Shabiha in Latakia 10 Nizar al Assad is a cousin of Bashar Al Assad He was the head of the Nizar Oilfield Supplies company He was sanctioned by the EU for being very close to key government officials and for financing Shabiha in the region of Latakia 65 Fawaz al Assad nephew of Hafiz leader of Shabiha 94 Mundhir al Assad nephew of Hafiz leader of Shabiha 94 Samer al Assad son of Kamal and grandson of Ismael who was a half brother of Hafiz al Assad runs one of several Captagon factories in Al Bassah 95 See also editList of political familiesNotes edit Arabic ع ائ ل ة ال أ س د romanized ʿaʾilat al ʾAsadReferences editCitations Ma oz Moshe 2022 15 The Assad dynasty In Larres Klaus ed Dictators and Autocrats Securing Power across Global Politics 605 Third Avenue New York NY 10158 Routledge pp 249 263 doi 10 4324 9781003100508 ISBN 978 0 367 60786 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link A Dangerous Dynasty House of Assad BBC Two 2018 Archived from the original on 21 November 2018 Eyal Zisser 2004 Bashar al Asad and his Regime Between Continuity and Change Orient Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2011 Chulov Martin 26 May 2021 Mob boss Assad s dynasty tightens grip over husk of Syria The Guardian Archived from the original on 26 May 2021 Eyal Zisser 2004 Bashar al Asad and his Regime Between Continuity and Change Orient Archived from the original on 1 August 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2011 Kmak Bjorklund Magdalena Heta 2022 Refugees and Knowledge Production Europe s Past and Present 4 Park Square Milton Park Abingdon Oxon OX14 4RN Routledge p 73 doi 10 4324 9781003092421 ISBN 978 0 367 55206 0 S2CID 246668129 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Turku Helga 2018 3 Long Term Security Repercussions of Attacking Cultural Property The Destruction of Cultural Property as a Weapon of War palgrave macmillan p 74 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 57282 6 ISBN 978 3 319 57282 6 Darke Diana 2010 Syria 2nd ed Bradt Travel Guides p 311 ISBN 978 1 84162 314 6 McConville Patrick Seale with the assistance of Maureen 1990 Asad of Syria The Struggle for the Middle East Berkeley University of California Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 520 06976 3 Kalbiya seale a b Martin Staheli Die syrische Aussenpolitik unter Hafiz Assad Franz Steiner Verlag Stuttgart 2001 ISBN 3 515 07867 3 p 40 M Sadowski Yahya 1987 Patronage and the Ba th Corruption and Control in Contemporary Syria Arab Studies Quarterly 9 4 442 461 JSTOR 41857946 via JSTOR Robin Wright 22 February 2008 Sanctions on Businessman Target Syria s Inner Sanctum The Washington Post Archived from the original on 20 August 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2010 a b c d e Bar Shmuel 2006 Bashar s Syria The Regime and its Strategic Worldview PDF Comparative Strategy 25 5 380 doi 10 1080 01495930601105412 S2CID 154739379 Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2011 Changes to Syria s Business Elite Concentrates Wealth in Hands of Presidential Couple The Syria Report 15 November 2022 Archived from the original on 2 December 2022 Cornish Khattab Chloe Asser 25 July 2019 Syria s Assad puts pressure on business elite Financial Times Archived from the original on 27 July 2019 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Halasa Omareen Mahfoud Malu Zaher Nawara 2014 Syria Speaks Art and Culture from the Frontline 26 Westbourne Grove London W2 5RH UK Saqi Books pp 125 147 156 161 ISBN 978 0 86356 787 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Pipes Daniel 1995 Syria Beyond the Peace Process 1828 L Street N W Suite 1050 Washington D C 20036 Washington Institute for Near East Policy pp 6 7 13 17 ISBN 0 944029 64 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Shamaileh Ammar 2017 Trust and Terror Social Capital and the Use of Terrorism as a Tool of Resistance 711 Third Avenue New York NY 10017 USA Routledge pp 66 70 72 82 ISBN 978 1 138 20173 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Zahler 2009 p 25 Alianak 2007 p 128 Seale 1990 p 3 Seale 1990 p 4 Seale 1990 p 5 Baltacioglu Brammer Ayse November 2013 Alawites and the Fate of Syria OSU EDU Ohio State University Archived from the original on 7 September 2023 Middle East Insight 4 United States 1985 15 via International Insight Incorporated a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Ma oz Moshe 1988 Asad The Sphinx of Damascus A Political Biography 10 East 53rd Street New York New York 10022 USA Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 43 ISBN 1 555 84062 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Carlos BC Juan 9 December 2021 The Assad Family Has Been Shaping Syria for 50 Years Fair Observer Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 L Stanton Andrea 2012 Al Assad Hafez Cultural Sociology of the Middle East Asia and Africa An Encyclopedia California USA SAGE pp 233 235 ISBN 978 1 4129 8176 7 A Reilly James 2018 7 Thirty Years of Hafez Al Assad Fragile Nation Shattered Land The Modern History of Syria London UK I B Tauris pp 160 162 169 ISBN 978 1 78453 961 0 Bonsen Sabrina 2019 2 Theoretical Framework State of Research and Method Martyr Cults and Political Identities in Lebanon Muhlacker Germany Springer p 9 ISBN 978 3 658 28097 0 Suzanne Kassab Elizabeth 2019 3 Tanwir Debates in Syria in the 1990s Enlightenment on the Eve of Revolution The Egyptian and Syrian Debates Columbia University Press pp 172 173 ISBN 9780231549677 Pipes Daniel 1995 1 Assad s Post Soviet Predicament Syria Beyond the Peace Process Washington Institute for Near East Policy pp 6 7 ISBN 0 944029 64 7 Shamaileh Ammar 2017 2 Trust Terror and the Arab Sprind Egypt Libya and Syria Trust and Terror Social Capital and the Use of Terrorism as a Tool of Resistance 711 Third Avenue New York NY 10017 USA Routledge pp 16 17 ISBN 978 1 138 20173 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Turku Helga 2018 3 Long Term Security Repercussions of Attacking Cultural Property The Destruction of Cultural Property as a Weapon of War Gewerbestrasse 11 6330 Cham Switzerland palgrave macmillan p 74 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 57282 6 1 ISBN 978 3 319 57281 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Aslan Ozgul Billur 2019 Leading Protests in the Digital Age Youth Activism in Egypt and Syria 1st ed Palgrave Macmillan pp 9 10 41 44 227 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 25450 6 ISBN 978 3 030 25449 0 S2CID 204449526 Aslan Ozgul Billur 2019 Leading Protests in the Digital Age Youth Activism in Egypt and Syria 1st ed Palgrave Macmillan pp 9 10 41 44 227 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 25450 6 ISBN 978 3 030 25449 0 S2CID 204449526 Stallard Katie 2022 Dancing on Bones History and Power in China Russia and North Korea 198 Madison Avenue New York NY 10016 Oxford University Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 19 757535 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Shamaileh Ammar 2017 2 Trust Terror and the Arab Sprind Egypt Libya and Syria Trust and Terror Social Capital and the Use of Terrorism as a Tool of Resistance 711 Third Avenue New York NY 10017 USA Routledge pp 16 17 ISBN 978 1 138 20173 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Turku Helga 2018 3 Long Term Security Repercussions of Attacking Cultural Property The Destruction of Cultural Property as a Weapon of War Gewerbestrasse 11 6330 Cham Switzerland palgrave macmillan p 74 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 57282 6 1 ISBN 978 3 319 57281 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Aslan Ozgul Billur 2019 2 Egypt and Syria Similarities and Differences between Two Countries Leading Protests in the Digital Age Youth Activism in Egypt and Syria 1st ed Palgrave Macmillan pp 43 44 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 25450 6 ISBN 978 3 030 25449 0 S2CID 204449526 Carlos BC Juan 9 December 2021 The Assad Family Has Been Shaping Syria for 50 Years Fair Observer Archived from the original on 9 December 2021 Phillips Christopher 2015 The Battle for Syria International Rivalry in the New Middle East London UK Yale University Press p 131 ISBN 9780300217179 Council Implementing Decision European Union Retrieved 21 January 2013 Mohamad Daoud October 2006 Dossier Bushra Assad Mideast Monitor Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 2 April 2011 Cookies op AD nl AD nl www ad nl Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 28 March 2018 William E Schmidt 22 January 1994 Asad s son killed in an auto crash The New York Times Archived from the original on 9 February 2011 Retrieved 31 March 2011 Changes to Syria s Business Elite Concentrates Wealth in Hands of Presidential Couple The Syria 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against Syria Official Journal of the European Union L121 11 10 May 2011 Archived from the original on 16 May 2011 Retrieved 10 May 2011 Syria Bashar al Assad s brother Maher loses leg The Telegraph London 16 August 2012 Archived from the original on 16 August 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2012 Assad s feared brother lost leg in bomb attack sources Reuters 16 August 2012 Archived from the original on 16 August 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2012 Brian Rokus Brian Todd Syrian Maher al Assad is ruthless aide to brother Bashar analysts say cnn com CNN Archived from the original on 29 March 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 a b c Landis Joshua An Asad Arrested for Smuggling Weapons Syria Comment Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2011 a b c d COUNCIL IMPLEMENTING DECISION 2011 302 CFSP of 23 May 2011 implementing Decision 2011 273 CFSP concerning restrictive measures against Syria Official Journal of the European Union L136 91 24 May 2011 Archived from the original on 3 March 2012 Retrieved 25 May 2011 The Original Shabiha Joshua Landis 17 August 2012 Archived from the original on 17 August 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2013 a b c d e f g h i Bar Shmuel 2006 Bashar s Syria The Regime and its Strategic Worldview PDF Comparative Strategy 25 5 381 doi 10 1080 01495930601105412 S2CID 154739379 Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2011 a b Robert Fisk 16 September 2010 Freedom democracy and human rights in Syria Ribal al Assad gives our writer a rare insight into the dynasty that has shaped modern Syria The Independent Archived from the original on 28 February 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2011 a b Duelfer Charles 30 September 2004 Comprehensive Report of the Special Advisor to the DCI on Iraq s WMD PDF Central Intelligence Agency pp 103 104 Archived from the original PDF on 13 August 2011 Retrieved 16 May 2011 Shmuel Bar Bashar s Syria The Regime and its Strategic Worldview In Comparative Strategy 25 2006 Special Issue p 382 Assad s cousin The regime has killed more than 500 000 Syrians Middle East Monitor 7 August 2019 a b c Al Hendi Ahed 3 May 2011 The Structure of Syria s Repression Foreign Affairs Archived from the original on 8 February 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2011 Biography for Dhu al Himma Shalish Siloworker Retrieved 16 May 2011 permanent dead link Alphabetical Listing of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons SDN List US Department of the Treasury 31 March 2011 Archived from the original on 16 March 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2011 a b c Council Implementing Regulation EU No 611 2011 of 23 June 2011 implementing Regulation EU No 442 2011 concerning restrictive measures in view of the situation in Syria Official Journal of the European Union L164 54 24 June 2011 Archived from the original on 15 October 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Bar Shmuel 2006 Bashar s Syria The Regime and its Strategic Worldview PDF Comparative Strategy 25 5 395 doi 10 1080 01495930601105412 S2CID 154739379 Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 15 May 2011 Biography for Riyad Shalish Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 25 June 2011 a b c d e Leverrier Ignace 25 February 2012 In Bashar al Assad s Syria the disinformation is also a family affair Le Monde Archived from the original on 29 February 2012 Retrieved 8 March 2012 Alawites rally after Assad s cousin killed officer www aljazeera com Archived from the original on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 28 March 2018 An unending nightmare Bashar al Assad s nephew is out of prison trtworld com 1 December 2020 AFP Al Arabiya News 14 March 2015 Assad relative assassinated in Syria Middle East alarabiya net Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 14 March 2014 Vincent Beshara Cody Roche 11 December 2016 Assad Regime Militias and Shi ite Jihadis in the Syrian Civil War Bellingcat Archived from the original on 17 April 2019 Retrieved 11 January 2017 a b Syria Comment Archives The Original Shabiha by Mohammad D Joshualandis com 17 August 2012 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April 2011 Le sanzioni americane colpiscono i boss dell apparato repressivo American sanctions target the leaders of repression Europa Archived from the original on 30 April 2011 Retrieved 9 May 2011 Biography for Atif Najib Silobreaker Able2Act Archived from the original on 12 March 2012 Retrieved 17 May 2011 Cable Viewer Wikileaks 7 February 1994 Archived from the original on 13 February 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Hugh Macleod Annasofie Flamand 15 June 2012 Inside Syria s shabiha death squads Toronto Star Archived from the original on 15 August 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2013 Seale Patrick 1988 Asad of Syria the struggle for the Middle East University of California Press p 429 ISBN 0 520 06667 7 a b Hanna Batatu 1999 Syria s Peasantry the Descendants of Its Lesser Rural Notables and Their Politics Princeton University Press p 220 ISBN 978 0 691 00254 5 Archived from the original on 31 December 2013 Syria s Praetorian Guards A Primer Middle East Intelligence Bulletin Vol 2 No 7 5 August 2000 Archived from the original on 4 July 2012 Retrieved 20 May 2011 a b Cooper 2015 p 20 Echte Drogen falsche Dschihadisten spiegel de in German 3 July 2020 BibliographyAlianak Sonia 2007 Middle Eastern Leaders and Islam A Precarious Equilibrium Peter Lang ISBN 9780820469249 Cooper Tom 2015 Syrian Conflagration The Civil War 2011 2013 Solihull Helion amp Company Limited ISBN 978 1 910294 10 9 Seale Patrick 1990 Asad The Struggle for the Middle East University of California Press ISBN 9780520069763 Zahler Kathy A 2009 The Assads Syria Twenty First Century Books ISBN 9780822590958 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Assad family Syria s First Family Slate Magazine 10 February 2012 Bashar al Assad s inner circle BBC 10 May 2011 Syria s Leaders Esther Pan Council on Foreign Relations 10 March 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Assad family amp oldid 1189518783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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