Hāshim al-ʿAtāsī (born 1875, Homs, Syria—died December 5, 1960, Homs) was a nationalist politician and three-time president of Syria.
An official in the Ottoman administration of Syria in his early life, ʿAtāsī became a member of the Syrian Congress in 1919. The next year the Congress proclaimed Greater Syria an independent constitutional monarchy. As one of the nationalist leaders opposing the French occupation and mandate in the 1920s, he was elected president of the Constituent Assembly, which, because of its adherence to the 1920 proclamation, was dissolved by the French authorities in May 1930. In 1936 he headed a Syrian delegation to Paris that negotiated the Franco-Syrian treaty providing for Syrian independence; on his return he was elected president of the republic. Faced with the French government’s refusal to ratify the treaty, he resigned in 1939.
In 1949, following a year of military uprisings, ʿAtāsī was called upon to form a provisional government and to hold elections for a Constituent Assembly. In December 1950 the Assembly, under a new constitution, elected him president, but he resigned the next year. With the fall of Adib ash-Shishakli’s regime by a coup in 1954, he was recalled to complete his term of office. After the 1955 elections ʿAtāsī retired to private life in Homs.