Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Haaretz: Assad, Hizbullah Killed Hariri |
2010-11-27 |
[An Nahar] The 2005 liquidation of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was a "joint venture between Syria and Hizbullah," the Israeli daily Haaretz said Friday, citing Western intelligence sources. They said Syria played a major role in Hariri's murder and believed that the U.N. probe into the killing is "wrongly absolving it of guilt." The Special Tribunal for Leb is reportedly set to implicate Hizbullah members in the liquidation. But the Western sources said the murder "had in fact been a joint venture between Syria and Hizbullah that served both their interests." "There's no doubt Syria's hereditary President Bashar PencilneckAssad ... who used to be referred to in the Egyptian press as the boy president... was involved in the liquidation," Haaretz quoted one source as saying. "Hariri had launched a process aimed at kicking the Syrians out of Leb, he was running for reelection as prime minister and was thought to have a good chance of winning. Above all, he recruited American, French and Saudi support for the moderate axis in Leb. Assad had every reason to get rid of him," the source explained. Haaretz went on to say that Abdel Halim Khaddam, who had served as Assad's deputy, related that Assad had openly made a threat against Hariri during their last meeting before the murder, saying, "If anyone tries to throw us out of Leb, we'll smash Leb over his head." It said that in October 2005, Syrian Interior Minister Ghazi Kanaan was found dead in his office. Kanaan had presided over Syrian intelligence in Leb for two decades and was considered Syria's strong man in Beirut, Haaretz went on to say. It said Damascus claimed he had did away with himself, but Western intelligence agencies believe he was killed by the Syrian regime because he knew too much about Hariri's murder. It is hard to believe, Western sources said, that anyone could have did away with himself by shooting himself three times in the back. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Damascus's Deadly Bargain | |
2008-11-14 | |
by Lee Smith The Bush administration has quietly authorized U.S. forces to attack Al-Qaeda bases around the Middle Eastan escalation in the war on terror that Eli Lake first revealed two weeks ago in The New Republic and that The New York Times reported on this week. One of the administration's most recent targets was Syria, where it struck Al-Qaeda leader Badran Turki Hishan al Mazidih last month. Though Syrian officials feigned ignorance at Al-Qaeda's encampment within its borders, the reality is that the country not only tolerates the presence of terrorists, but encourages them to use the country as a safe-haven, headquarters, and transit point. Why does Syria continue to harbor terrorists, knowing that it places the country squarely in the crosshairs of the Bush administration? Particularly in light of Syria's historical problems with its own Islamist groups, why would it welcome radicals from across the region? Finding the answer to these questions is crucial in trying to defeat one of the Middle East's most prolific boosters of terrorism. To better understand Syria's motivations, I visited Abdel Halim Khaddam, Syria's former vice president, in Brussels, where he was leading a meeting of the National Salvation Front (NSF), a Syrian opposition group. Having served under both Hafez al-Assad and his son Bashar, Khaddam is well-acquainted with the strategic and political exigencies driving the regime's support for terror. "Fighting the Americans in Iraq is very dangerous," he tells me. "But it also makes Bashar popular. Under the banner of resistance, anything is popular." | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Syria sentences self-exiled VP to hard labor |
2008-09-01 |
Self-exiled former Vice President of Syria Abdul-Halim Khaddam has been found guilty by a military court of lying to U.N. investigators about the assassination of Lebanon's former prime minister, and was sentenced to hard labor for life. "Judge Mohammed Kaddour Assad of the Damascus first military criminal court has handed Abdel Halim Khaddam 13 sentences, including hard labor for life," lawyer Hossam Eddine al-Habash said. The court has ordered that Khaddam, in his seventies, be stripped of his civil rights and prevented from residing in Damascus or Tartus, his native town, Habash said. Khaddam, who resigned as Syria's vice president in 2005 to join the opposition and now lives in Paris, is accused of "slandering the Syrian leadership and lying before an international tribunal regarding the killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri," according to the charge sheet obtained by AFP. He is also accused of "conspiracy to unlawfully seize political power" and of having "illegitimate links with the Zionist enemy, undermining the prestige of the state and of national sentiment and worst of all, plotting with a foreign country to launch an aggression against Syria." According to Habash, Syrian authorities will ask Interpol to cooperate in a bid to bring Khaddam to face the courts at home. Contacted by AFP in Paris, Khaddam's family said they were not aware of the court ruling. In 2006, Khaddam charged that Syrian agents implicated by a U.N. probe into the February 2005 assassination of Hariri could not have acted without Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's approval. The Damascus regime in turn accused Khaddam of treason, with parliament passing a motion calling for him to be brought to justice and tried for high treason. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Assef Shawkat attempted a coup in Syria | |
2008-06-09 | |
According to a report by the German newspaper Die Welt the Syrian military intelligence chief Shawkat attempted to seize power by force in February, but was arrested after Hezbollah military commander Imad Mughniyah informed Assad of the plot An attempt to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad's government was thwarted without the international community's ever having noticed, Die Welt reported yesterday, citing international German intelligence sources. The report stated that Assef Shawkat, Syrian military intelligence chief and Assad's brother-in-law, planned to seize control of the government while the president was hosting a meeting of the Arab League in Damascus in February. Shawkat was detained along with a hundred other Syrian intelligence officers. According to Die Welt the killing of Mughniyah had been planned by Shawkat's associates, as retaliation for the disclosure of the planned rebellion. Two months ago former Syrian vice president Abdel Halim Khaddam told a Lebanese news network that Assad had decided to take advantage of Mughniyah's death in order to dismiss Shawkat and to appoint his nephew Hafez Makhlouf in his stead.
Claims of Syrian intelligence officers' involvement in Mughniyah's death have been voiced recently. The Lebanese paper Al-Shiraa claimed that Syrian intelligence had broken into the homes of two of its officers on March 29, and killed them with shots to the head. The paper claimed the officers had been murdered due to their involvement in the targeted killing. Saudi Arabia's Okaz newspaper reported on February 24 that Mughniyah's widow, who is Iranian was extremely angered by the murder of her husband and blamed it on "treason and treachery" without expanding what she meant and whom she had in mind as the traitors . Mughniyeh's widow requested immediate departure from Syria to either Lebanon or Iran , but the Iranian embassy decided to take her to Tehran away from the Lebanese media. After reaching Tehran Mughniyah's widow, accused the Syrian regime of involvement in the murder. She said "This is why the Syrian regime has refused the help of Iran and Hezbollah in the investigation of the murder." The General Secretariat of the Damascus Declaration also accused the Syrian regime on March 17 of involvement in the assassination of Mughniyah . A statement issued by the Damascus Declaration headed by former MP Maamun al-Homsi stated: "It is our duty to expose the crimes of the Syrian regime and specifically the killing of Imad Mughniyah and the deception that accompanied this crime." | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Assef Shawkat under House arrest over Mughniyeh murder |
2008-04-07 |
General Assef Shawkat, the brother in law of Syrian president Basher al Assad has been put under heavily guarded house arrest following the assassination of Lebanon's Hezbollah commander Imad Mughniyeh , according to former Syrian VP Abdel Halim Khaddam. Speaking from self-imposed exile in France, Khaddam said Shawkat is banned from traveling. Khaddam, who was closely allied with former Syrian president Hafez Assad ( Bashar's father) , told the Lebanese newspaper Al-Mustaqbal that the arrest was made after Shawkat claimed the probe he was conducting into Mughniyeh's death showed that the explosion occurred inside Mughniyeh's booby trapped car , whch implied that the assassins came from Syria. "Following this revelation, Shawkat was removed from the investigation which was transferred to General Hafez Makhlouf (Assad's first cousin)" said Khaddam. Khaddam asserted that Assad used the assassination of Mughniyeh to bring about the dismissal of Shawkat and to appoint his cousin Makhlouf instead . Khaddam said that Syria's attempts to blame the killing of Mughniyeh on Arab intelligence services were "stupid" and "naive." "The Syrian regime tried to exert pressure on several Arab countries, to blackmail them and force them to participate in the Arab Summit in Damascus," claimed Khaddam. Khaddam noted that Mughiyeh managed to hide for 25 years from foreign intelligence agencies, from his associates in Hezbollah and from his neighbors. "During that time, he was subjected to Iranian and Syrian monitoring, so how is it possible that Arab agencies were involved in the assassination?" On Sunday, Syria is set to announce the results of the probe into Mughniyeh's death. The Ba'ath Party expelled Khaddam from Syria in 2005 after he blasted Syrian President Bashar Assad's "political blunders" in dealings with Lebanon. He has since been living in exile in Paris. In 2006, Khaddam announced that he was forming a "government in exile" to end Assad's. He also said he believed that Assad ordered the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Ya Libnan has reported Saturday that Bushra al Assad , Shawkat's wife and sister of Syrian president Bashar al Assad has been living in Paris along with her two children since Lebanon's Hezbollah commander was murdered. She was expecting to be joined by her husband as soon as gets fired. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Sleepless in Damascus |
2006-09-17 |
In an interview with UPI, Former Syrian Vice President Abdel Halim Khaddam reiterated his claim that Syrian President Bashar Assad is to blame for the murder. Asked why Assad was absent from the summit of Non-Aligned Movement nations in Cuba, Khaddam said Bashar cant sleep at night. He is very fearful regarding the internal situation and is afraid to leave the country for fear he may not be able to return. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Syria's silent purge | |
2006-05-31 | |
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by Simon Tisdall Almost a year after Syria completed a humiliating military withdrawal from Lebanon amid predictions of imminent regime change in Damascus, President Bashar Assad is clawing back lost ground. Dozens of dissidents have been arrested in recent weeks. Among those detained were Michel Kilo, a prominent democracy activist, and Anwar al-Bunni, a top human rights lawyer. US and EU diplomatic protests have been brusquely rejected. A silent purge of other signatories to this month's so-called Damascus-Beirut Declaration is also under way, sources said yesterday. Backed by about 300 Syrian and Lebanese intellectuals, it urged normalisation of bilateral relations. It coincided with a UN security council resolution demanding an end to Syrian interference in Lebanon. But Mr Assad, encouraged by Russia and China and backed by Lebanon's pro-Syrian president, Emile Lahoud, ignored that, too. The Syrian leader has cracked down on travel abroad for political purposes and renewed pressure on national media to toe the official line. And in a bid to neutralise the rise of political Islam, the secular ruling Ba'ath party has made a series of conciliatory gestures to the Sunni majority. Mr Assad has even taken to praying for the cameras. That contrasts with his late father's brutal suppression of the Muslim Brotherhood, symbolised by the 1982 Hama massacre. "There's a big effort to try to get everybody on side. The strong message is that no criticism will be tolerated from whatever quarter," said Rime Allaf, a Syria analyst and Chatham House fellow. Explanations of the regime's new bullishness lie largely beyond its embattled borders and, paradoxically, owe much to US policy choices. Washington's enthusiasm for regional democracy was tempered by Hamas' election victory in Palestine. The ensuing crisis there has in any case distracted attention from Syria, as has nascent civil war in Iraq. And then there is Iran, America's next big thing. Isolating Tehran means inducing Syria, one of its few Arab allies, to stand back. Though it would not admit it, Washington needs Mr Assad. At the same time, the Syrian leader's recent muscle-flexing is also motivated by fear, fixated on two looming events. One is next month's UN report into the killing last year of the former Lebanese prime minister, Rafiq Hariri. Whether or not Mr Assad is accused of wrongdoing, senior officials have already been implicated. But the extent of the regime's embarrassment is likely to be directly proportionate to American determination to pursue it. Potentially more problematic for Mr Assad in the longer term is the National Salvation Front, an umbrella opposition alliance that will hold its first conference in London next month. The NSF brings together two formidable figures: Syria's former vice-president, Abdel Halim Khaddam, who defected last year; and Ali Sadreddin al-Bayanouni, the exiled leader of Syria's Muslim Brotherhood. Such collaboration by secular and religious opposition leaders was unusual, Ms Allaf said, and was an echo of Mr Assad's own recent efforts at cohabitation. "This is the first time in four decades that we've seen significant organised opposition to the regime. They've gone out on a limb to draw in other exiles and groups from around the world." If the NSF proved a serious proposition, she said, all Mr Assad's machinations could count for nought. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Saad says Assad threatened father |
2006-05-24 |
![]() Former Syrian vice-president Abdel Halim Khaddam, who is now living in exile in France, has claimed that Assad personally ordered the assassination of the elder Hariri, allegations dismissed by Damascus as unfounded.Assad has denied all accusations that he or his government were involved in Harari's death, which prompted a UN investigation that is still underway. Saad Hariri met Friday with Vladimir Putin at the Russian President's Black Sea villa in Sotchi. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
Syria issues final summons to ex-VP traitor | ||
2006-05-08 | ||
DAMASCUS - Syria has issued a final summons for former vice president Abdel Halim Khaddam, branded a traitor by Damascus and currently living in exile in France, to appear in court. Khaddam and 24 other family members including his wife Najat Marqabi have been called to appear in court in his hometown of Banias in northwestern Syria in June after they failed to show up to a hearing last month. As you didnt attend the session on April 24, we ask you to come to the one on June 12, otherwise the judgment will be made, said a government announcement in the Tishrin daily.
Khaddam, who oversaw Syrias domination of neighbouring Lebanon for 25 years, but quit as vice president last year and left for Paris, has denied any wrongdoing. He issued a statement denying he had acquired public land on the seafront or took out loans from Syrian banks that he has not repaid but without saying whether he would appear in court. In addition to the civil court case, Khaddam has also been indicted on seven charges by a military court, including conspiracy and attempts to usurp power and to stir hostility against Damascus. Khaddam, who resigned last June to become a Paris-based opposition leader, was charged with plotting conspiracies to push a foreign country to show its hostility toward Syria, according to the charge sheet. The offense is punishable with a life prison sentence and hard labour. Khaddam is also accused of having published articles and works and delivered speeches without the Syrian governments approval. In January, Khaddam charged that Syrian agents implicated by a UN probe into the February 2005 assassination of former Lebanese premier Rafiq Hariri could not have acted without Syrian President Bashar al-Assads approval. The Damascus regime in return accused Khaddam of treason, with parliament passing a motion calling for him to be brought to justice and tried for high treason. Khaddam and other opposition figures have announced the formation of a group seeking regime change in Syria by peaceful means, but the domestic opposition has said it does not want to work with the new group.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Assad denies threatening al-Hariri |
2006-01-07 |
![]() "I wish to say here that no one joined us in the last meeting between me and Hariri, so where did these allegations come from," he said in the interview. Al-Assad also hinted that as president of Syria, he would be immune from questioning by a team investigating al-Hariri's February assassination. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Chirac urges Syria to meet demands of Hariri probe |
2006-01-05 |
![]() Chirac, a personal friend of the murdered leader, stressed âFrance's determination that the United Nations commission be able to fully carry out its mission,â spokesman Jerome Bonnafont told reporters. Mubarak's visit to Paris followed a lightning trip to Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, during which he discussed the Syrian crisis with King Abdullah, according to Egyptian diplomats. The UN probe into Hariri's murder in February has already implicated Lebanese and Syrian officials, and UN officials have requested interviews with both President Bashar Assad and Foreign Minister Farouk Sharaa. Former Syrian vice president Abdel Halim Khaddam, who is now based in Paris, charged last week that Assad had threatened Hariri just a few months before the assassination. The French president earlier Wednesday described Syria's situation as âvery serious.â âEverything that destabilises Lebanon will end up turning back against Syria,â he warned, speaking on the sidelines of a new year's press conference. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Syria: Khaddam to be tried for High Treason, Corruption |
2006-01-03 |
The Syrian government said Monday it will put on trial former vice president Abdel Halim Khaddam, who has linked Damascus to Lebanese ex-premier Rafiq Hariri's murder, for high treason and investigate him for corruption. The announcement came after Khaddam's explosive allegation that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had threatened Hariri a few months before his death, which he made in an interview Friday on Al-Arabiya television. "The Council of Ministers will take the necessary measures to try Khaddam for high treason, and to open an inquiry into corruption in a series of matters which will include seizing his assets," official daily newspaper Ath-Thawra said. The newspaper said the government announcement meant it would follow up on demands made by loyalist MPs, who called for Khaddam to be tried for treason and corruption. Khaddam, long the architect of Syria's military and political domination of neighbouring Lebanon, accused Assad of threatening Hariri just months before his murder, dealing a fresh blow to the increasingly pressured Syrian regime. Khaddam, who broke his silence for the first time since resigning in June and was speaking from Paris where he and his family now live, said the meeting took place a few months before the February 14 assassination of Hariri. The popular five time prime minister was killed in a Beirut bomb blast for which a UN probe has implicated Syrian intelligence. The UN commission of inquiry probing Hariri's murder asked Monday to interview Assad, Khaddam and Foreign Minister Faruq al-Shara and was awaiting an answer from Syria, a spokeswoman in Beirut said. She added that the commission wanted to meet Khaddam "as soon as possible". But the Damascus government daily Tishrin blasted Khaddam for his allegations against his country. "We were surprised by Khaddam's mudslinging against his country ... he is the last one who can talk about corruption," it wrote Monday. Khaddam was "the first to get in the way of reform measures. During all the (Baath) party meetings he warned against the risks of introducing democratic freedoms and economic and administrative reforms" in Syria, Tishrin said. |
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