In this article, we will explore List of Ba'athist movements and its impact on society. List of Ba'athist movements is a topic that has captured the attention of many people in recent times, and its implications cover a wide range of areas, from technology to politics, culture and economics. Throughout this text, we will analyze different aspects of List of Ba'athist movements, from its origins to its current consequences, and we will examine its influence in different contexts, both locally and globally. In order to fully understand this phenomenon, we will also consider expert opinions and testimonials from those who have been impacted by List of Ba'athist movements.
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The Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party (Arabic: حزب البعث العربي الاشتراكي, romanized: Hizb Al-Ba'ath Al-'Arabi Al-Ishtiraki) was a political party mixing Arab nationalist and Arab socialist interests, opposed to imperialism, and calling for the renaissance or resurrection and unification of the Arab world into a single state. Ba'ath is also spelled Ba'th or Baath and means "rebirth," "resurrection," "restoration," or "renaissance" (reddyah). Its motto — "Unity, Liberty, Socialism" (wahda, hurriya, ishtirakiya) — refers to Arab unity, and freedom from non-Arab control and interference. Its ideology of Arab socialism is notably different in origins and practice from classical Marxism and is similar in outlook to 'third-worldism'.
The party was founded in 1940 by the Syrian intellectuals Michel Aflaq and Salah al-Din al-Bitar. It has established branches in different Arab countries, although it has only ever held power in Syria and Iraq. In Syria it held a monopoly on political power following the party's 1963 coup. Ba'athists also seized power in Iraq in 1963, but were deposed some months later. They returned to power in a 1968 coup and remained the sole party of government until the 2003 Iraq invasion. Since the invasion, the party has been banned in Iraq.
In 1966, a coup d'état by the military against the historical leadership of Aflaq and Bitar led the Syrian and Iraqi parties to split into rival organizations — the Qotri (or regionalist) Syria-based party and the Qawmi (or nationalist) Iraq-based party. Both retained the Ba'ath name and parallel structures within the Arab world, but hostilities between them grew to the point that the Syrian Ba'ath government became the only Arab government to support Iran (a non-Arabic nation) against Iraq during the First Persian Gulf War.
On 8 December 2024, Syrian opposition forces entered the Syrian capital Damascus, announcing the fall of the Syrian Baath Party regime that had lasted for 53 years.[1]
Party | Founded | Dissolved | Founder(s) | Notes |
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Arab Ba'ath | 1940 | 1947 | Zaki al-Arsuzi | The party merged with the Arab Ba'ath Movement to form the Arab Ba'ath Party in 1947. |
Arab Ba'ath Movement | Michel Aflaq and Salah al-Din al-Bitar | The direct predecessor to the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, it merged with the Arab Ba'ath to form the Arab Ba'ath Party in 1947. | ||
Ba'ath Party | 1947 | 1966 | Founded as the Arab Ba'ath Party, it later merged with the Arab Socialist Party in 1952 and renamed itself the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party. The party broke into two in 1966, between rival Baghdad and Damascus-based factions. |
Party | Founded | Dissolved | Founder(s) | Notes |
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Socialist Lebanon | 1965 | 1970 | Ahmed Beydoun | The party was merged into the Communist Action Organization in Lebanon in 1970. |
Arab Socialist Revolutionary Ba'ath Party | 1960 | 1962/63[20] | Abdullah Rimawi | |
Arab Revolutionary Workers Party | 1966 | – | Yasin al-Hafiz | Still active, as of 2011 |
Democratic Socialist Arab Ba'ath Party | 1980 | – | Ibrahim Makhous | Is part of the National Democratic Rally and still active in France |
Sudanese Ba'ath Party | 2002 | – | Mohamed Ali Jadin | Was established by a split inside the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party – Country of Sudan, the pro-Iraqi ba'ath branch. |