The second People's Party, representing northern Syrian commercial and landholding interests, favored the Fertile Crescent Plan and initiated diplomatic steps to implement it. However, the National Party and factions in the army were determined to block any plans for unity with Iraq as long as it had a military treaty with Britain. It was also opposed by Syrians who did not wish to live under a monarchy or in a pro-British state. The closest the plan came to fruition was during the regime (August-December 1949) of Colonel Sami al-Hinnawi, who had installed a People's Party government that entered negotiations to achieve unity. The opportunity was aborted by Colonel Adib Shishakli's coup d'état. Any faint hope remaining for the Fertile Crescent Plan ended with the overthrow of the Iraqi monarchy in July 1958.
Aspirations to unite the Fertile Crescent states continue to exist.[1][2]
^Marius Deeb, The Lebanese civil war, Praeger, 1980, p. 67.
^Tareq Y. Ismael, Jacqueline S. Ismael, Kamel Abu Jaber, Politics and government in the Middle East and North Africa, University Press of Florida, 1991, p. 192.
Bibliography
Commins, David Dean. Historical Dictionary of Syria, p. 105. Scarecrow Press, 2004, ISBN0-8108-4934-8.