| The Syrian Socialist Nationalist Party (SSNP)
has been one of the most influential multisectarian parties in Lebanon.
Its main objective has been the reestablishment of historic Greater Syria,
an area that approximately encompasses Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel.
Over the years the SSNP has often resorted to violence to achieve its
goals.
The SSNP was founded in 1932 by Antun Saadah, a Greek Orthodox, as a secret
organization. His party, very much influenced by fascist ideology and
organization, grew considerably in the years after independence. In fact,
in a survey taken in 1958 by the French newspaper L'Orient , the SSNP
was said to have 25,000 members--at the time, second only to the Phalange
Party. Concerned by its strength, the government cracked down on the SSNP
in 1948, arresting many of its leaders and members. In response, SSNP
military officers attempted a coup d'état in 1949, following which
the party was outlawed and Saadah was executed. In retaliation, the SSNP
assassinated Prime Minister Riyad as Sulh in 1951.
In the 1950s, although still banned, the SSNP renewed its activities fairly
openly. During the 1958 disturbances, the SSNP militia supported President
Shamun, who rewarded it by authorizing it to operate legally. But in December
1961, when another attempted coup by SSNP members failed, it was again
outlawed and almost 3,000 of its members imprisoned. In prison, the party
underwent serious ideological reform when certain Marxist and pan-Arab
concepts were introduced into the party's formerly right-wing doctrine.
Since the 1960s, the party has become more leftist. Most of its members
joined the Lebanese National Movement and fought alongside the PLO and
Syrians throughout the war. The SSNP fielded a militia of about 3,000
men. After the 1976 Syrian intervention, it split into anti-Syrian and
pro- Syrian factions. The latter group,with Syrian agents, assassinated
Druze patriarch Kamal Jumblatt in 1977 and President-elect Bashir Gemayel
in 1982. Since March 1985, the SSNP has dispatched about a half-dozen
suicide vehicle-bombers against Israeli positions in southern Lebanon.But
during this period the party suffered internal divisions and defections,
and since then party unity has been elusive. By the late 1980s there were
at least four separate factions claiming to be the authentic inheritors
of Saadah's ideology. The two most important were led by Issam Mahayri,
a Sunni, and Jubran Jurayj, a Christian. Each faction was trying to settle
disputes by means of violence.
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