CLOSE-UP THE POWER AND THE G1011)1 Making sense of the hostage crisis and the proposed peace conference. Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde He's bright, ambitious, private and likes flashy cars. Syria's Hafez al-Assad also is a key player in any Middle East negotiations. ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM Assistant Editor T o one observer, Hafez al-Assad is a modern-day Mr. Hyde: ruthless, crafty, a man who cannot be trusted. To another, he is the kind- ly Dr. Jekyll: reasonable, pa- tient and insightful. "Assad and (Iraqi leader Saddam) Hussein — they are the same," says Moti Zaken, national director of the In- stitute of Students and Faculty of Israel, located in New York. "Only maybe Assad is smarter and more shrewd." "Is Assad like Hussein? Not at all. Is he ruthless? No, and there's no doubt about that," says Wafa Nasr, national director of the Washington-based Arab- American Anti- Discrimination Committee (ADC). Both agree, however, that Syria's president is an intel- ligent, practical, ambitious man eager to build ties with the West. And both are cer- tain that Syria, the nation Mr. Assad has ruled for the past 21 years, is a powerful player in the hostage situa- tion and a key to peace in the Middle East. "He is the one who can deliver," Mr. Nasr says. Or as former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger explained while discussing Mr. Assad, "There can be no war without Egypt, no peace without Syria." Hafez al-Assad, whose name means "protector of lions," was born in 1930 in Qardaha. The oldest son of a farming family, Mr. Assad was raised a member of the Alawite sect. Alawites, who comprise about 12 percent of the Syrian population but occupy most leading posts in the nation's army and ruling Ba'ath Party, are a secretive Shi'ite Islamic sect. Alawites are followers of Ali ibn Abi Talib, Muhammad's son-in-law, whom they regard as a wali, "friend" of God and "custodian" of the faith. They are part of what is known as "popular" Shi'ism characterized by folk tradi- tion, as opposed to the "orthodox" Shi'ite distinguished by a scribal tradition. Because of Crusader invasions in the area, Alawites have incor- porated a number of Chris- tian traditions into their cul- ture, including an incense mass and the adham mass, during which followers chant hymns. Belief in rein- carnation is widespread among Alawites. The majority of Sunni ("orthodox") Muslims, which comprise 85 percent of Syria's population, regard Alawites as kuffar, disbelievers, and mushrikun, idolaters. In recent years, however, Alawites have made some ground in gain- ing acceptance among the Hafez al-Assad: "He is the one who can deliver." Sunni. The father of four sons and one daughter, Mr. Assad in his youth joined the Ba'ath Party, which supports unify- ing Arab lands into one nation and opposes foreign imperialism. In 1964, he was named commander of the Syrian air force; and several years later was appointed minister of defense. In a 1970 bloodless coup, he took control of the government. In the first two years of his presidency, Mr. Assad work- ed to improve Syrian and Soviet ties, obtaining in 1972 a $7 million aid package from the Kremlin. He also reached out to the West, hosting then- President Richard Nixon in Damascus in 1974. He did not, however, make any changes in Syria's policy toward Israel. Mr. Assad has repeatedly asserted that Israel is in- volved in international ter- rorism and, in a 1989 inter- view with Time, claimed that "Israel aspires to the establishment of a state from the Nile to the Euphrates." In July 1986, he appealed to his countrymen to follow in the footsteps of a girl who murdered 16 Israeli soldiers in a suicide attack. "This type of person is essential in the process of restoring the strategic bal- ance of power with Israel," he said. As extensive as Mr. Assad believes Israel's border goals to be, so are his own for Syria. His dream of a "Greater Syria" includes Israel, Jordan and Lebanon. Lebanon today is occupied in large part by the Syrian army and pro-Syrian forces. Mr. Assad's loathing of Israel is believed to be all the more intense because of Syria's defeat in the 1967 war. At the time, Mr. Assad was commander of the Syrian air force, and he re- portedly has never forgotten Syria's loss to Israel of the Golan Heights. Today, he continues to insist the return of the Golan Heights is central to any successful peace plan. The Syrian leader's desire for power and respect cannot be underestimated, observers say. A Mideast in-