Creation in Lebanon
The Eagles were formed in Lebanon in 1975, at the start of the Lebanese Civil War. They specialize in guerrilla actions and harassment of enemy troops. They formed an allied squad and then member of the Lebanese National Movement and then its successor, the Lebanese National Resistance Front, which brings together opponents of the Lebanese Front. At the same time, the divided SSNP reunified under a common leadership based in Beirut in 1978. The SSNP-L found its natural allies in the Palestinian guerrillas, mainly Fatah and the PFLP, as well as in its former bitter enemies: left-wing Arab nationalist movements, the Syrian Ba'ath Party and the communists.
The Eagles developed during the 1980s where they attacked and harassed both the Lebanese Forces and the Israeli Army, with some members using suicide bombings to destroy groups of enemy factions.
After the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 and the subsequent renewal of left-wing forces, a number of left-wing organizations banded together to participate in resistance to the Israeli occupation. Alongside the Lebanese Communist Party, the Organization of Communist Action in Lebanon, and some small left-wing groups, the Syrian Social Nationalist Party played a leading role in this regard. One of the most prominent sparks of resistance was the assassination of two Israeli soldiers at the Wimpy Café in the middle of Hamra Street, west Beirut, by party member Khaled Alwan. The party continues to celebrate this date. The FBI blamed them for the 1982 assassination of Bachir Gemayel, then Lebanese president-elect, who was supported by the Israeli invaders besieging Beirut.[22]
In 1983, the SSNP joined the Lebanese National Salvation Front alongside the Marada Brigade, a Christian militia allied with Damascus. The same year, the party joined the Lebanese National Resistance Front, created to oppose the failure of the May 17 agreement with Israel, signed by Bachir Gemayel's brother, Amine Gemayel.[23] Some party members were willing to sacrifice their lives by participating in suicide bombings against Israel, the first in 1985. One of the party's members, Sanaa Mehaidli, a sixteen-year-old member of the Eagles who committed a suicide attack against an Israeli checkpoint in Lebanon, was considered "a predecessor of all the martyrs of the Palestinian cause."[23]
Within the Lebanese National Resistance Front, the Eagles participated alongside Hezbollah in the war against the Israeli Army and its collaborators in the South Lebanon Army, thus explaining why the Eagles did not surrender their arms after the end of the Lebanese civil war, as they participated in the anti-Israeli war in South Lebanon between 1991 and 2000.
In 2006, the Eagles participated, in collaboration with Hezbollah, in the 2006 Israel–Lebanon War.
In Syria
In 2011, against the backdrop of the Arab Spring, a rebellion broke out in Syria, leading to the Syrian Civil War. The Syrian branch of the Eagles was formed in 2012 and supports loyalist forces but is autonomous from the Syrian armed forces.[24] The Syrian Eagles also fought alongside Hezbollah and the Syrian Armed Forces against various rebel and jihadist groups, notably during the battle of Maaloula where the town, inhabited by Christians (like most of the Eagles including a large number of them are Christians), had fallen into the hands of Sunni Islamist insurgents of the al-Nusra Front.[25] Subsequently, the Eagles, in cooperation with Hezbollah, participated in the Battle of Zabadani supported by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards.[26] They also took part in the Battle of Aleppo, allied to the pro-Assad Palestinian units of the Liwa al-Quds,[27] Hezbollah, various Shiite militias of Iraq and the Ba'ath Brigades which ended by a decisive victory for the Syrian Arab Republic against ISIL and the rebels of the Free Syrian Army.[27]
In 2019, the Syrian Ba'athist government decided to integrate the Eagles into the Syrian Arab Army.[17]