Episode 11

Ba’ath Seize Power

This episode recounts the destruction of the two giant revolutionary projects of 1958: the union of Egypt and Syria under Nasser’s United Arab Republic and Iraq’s July Revolution that brought Qasim alongside communist allies to power. The rival radical projects of pan-Arabism and communism suffered huge blows. The Ba’ath also transform in this period, from an ideological movement to a party dominated by military men who want to turn the organization into an instrument of raw domination.

Ba’ath Seize Power
Discussion Questions
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Transcript
  • The Ba’ath party underwent a series of transformations in this period, from a dissident intellectual movement to a party wedded to Syrian state power. What changes in the course of these transformations and where does that leave Ba’ath ideology by the end of this episode? What social forces or institutional arrangements produce this outcome?
  • The Communists in Iraq were torn between a break with Qassim and a rallying around him against reactionary forces. Why did either side take the position that it did? Does this dilemma feel familiar in other political contexts?
  • Frequently sectarian explanations are brought out as the beginning and end of political analysis of the region. What reasons does Abed share in this episode for its explanatory limits?
  • Through competitor projects, this progressive Iraq and the United Arab Republic explode spectacularly around the same time. What larger historical currents contributed to their undoing? What challenges does this suggest for any emancipator project across the region?