For decades, Syrian President Hafez al-Assad and then his son, President Bashar al-Assad, deliberately and systematically equated their respective rules with Syria’s Alawite community, presenting the two as inseparable. Carefully engineered, this bound the fate of a religious community to the survival of an authoritarian regime.
Today, more than a year after Bashar al-Assad fled to Russia as his government and army crumbled, some Western media outlets still perpetuate this conflation between the Assads and Syria’s Alawites. By stripping events in Syria of their political context and framing them instead through a sectarian lens, it perpetuates the Assadist legacy. The result is a superficial narrative—one that reduces complex political struggles to crude communal labels and obscures the actual faultlines.
This was evident in the coverage of the recent demonstrations in Alawite areas, including Latakia, Jableh, and Tartus, on 28 December. Several reports described them as “Alawite protests” even after it became clear that they had been infiltrated by those loyal to the former regime.
Such framing implicitly aligns with the regime’s long-standing effort to brand Alawites as synonymous with Assadism. In reality, the protests weren't a show of communal will, but rather were heavily penetrated by Assadist networks seeking the return of former regime officers and the release of those responsible for atrocities against their fellow Syrians during the Assads’ rule.
False equivalence
The coverage also failed to make it clear that the counterprotests were not a response to the religious identity or perceived Alawite character of the protests, but to the perception of Assadist infiltration. In short, they were a response to a political provocation rather than a sectarian mobilisation. So when journalists casually note in their reports that Assad was an Alawite, this only serves to reinforce the false equivalence.
Regardless of the sectarian cloak some wish to dress their narratives in, the problem Syrians face isn't Alawites, it's Assadism. Therefore, there is a moral imperative to draw a distinction between Alawite identity and Assadist ideology and media institutions bear a responsibility here. Failure to do so comes with dangerous consequences.