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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Bashar rattles cabinet
2006-02-12
Syria's president ordered a major Cabinet shake-up Saturday, signaling he has no plans to cave under growing U.S. and international pressure over the assassination of a former Lebanese leader and alleged failure to stop militants from crossing into
Iraq.

President Bashar Assad named his hard-line Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa as vice president and replace him with his deputy, Walid Moallem, a former ambassador to the United States and
United Nations. Al-Sharaa was also put in charge of implementing Syrian "foreign and information policies."

The U.N. investigation into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri has accused both men of giving false information to the probe.

Hariri died in a truck bombing that killed 20 other people in Beirut on Feb. 14, 2005. Syria has denied involvement, although U.N. investigators said the assassination could not have occurred without Damascus' knowledge.

Hariri's murder spurred demonstrations in Beirut and intense international pressure that prompted the Syrians to comply with a standing U.N. resolution to pull its troops out of Lebanon after dominating the country for nearly three decades.

A U.N. report in October said Assad threatened Hariri at an August 2004 meeting over the extension of the term in office of Lebanese President Emile Lahoud, Hariri's political foe.

Syria's former vice president Abdul-Halim Khaddam, a close friend of Hariri who resigned and later defected, has said Assad had threatened Hariri at a meeting months earlier.

Al-Sharaa, in a letter to the U.N. commission, said the August 2004 Assad-Hariri meeting was "in the framework of the ongoing political consultation between the Syrian and Lebanese leaders."

The former chief U.N. investigator, Detlev Mehlis, accused Moallem of giving the commission false information about a meeting in Beirut with Hariri 13 days before he was killed. According to a taped conversation of that meeting, Moallem told Hariri that "we and the (security) services here have put you into a corner." He continued, "Please do not take things lightly."

The Mehlis report said the recorded conversation "clearly contradicts" Moallem's witness account taken in September "in which he falsely described the Feb. 1 meeting as 'friendly and constructive' and avoided giving direct answers to the questions put to him."

Syria also repeatedly has rejected accusations from Washington and Baghdad that it is lax in efforts to close its border with Iraq to foreign fighters entering the country to join the insurgency. The Syrians claim they are doing all they can to clamp off the flow of militants.

The U.N. commission has asked to interview both Assad and al-Sharaa. Syria has not responded directly, but Assad rejected an earlier request.

Syrian political analyst Imad Shuaibi said that naming al-Sharaa as vice-president had been expected "but it was delayed until now in order to show that Syria does not bow to foreign pressures."

Al-Sharaa served as foreign minister since 1984, and becomes one of two vice presidents, the other — Zuhair Masharqa — was named to the post under the late President Hafez Assad, father of the current leader.

In all, the reshuffle brought in 15 new ministers to the 34-member Cabinet.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria Says It Will Send Envoy to Iraq
2006-02-03
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Syria will exchange ambassadors with Iraq after a new Iraqi government is formed, Syria's official news agency reported Thursday, marking the first time Damascus has set a time frame for restoring full diplomatic ties with Baghdad after a 23-year break.

Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa said Syria wished to have "the closest relations with Iraq based on historical and geographical ties," according to SANA. "After the formation of the new Iraqi government, (Syria and Iraq) will exchange ambassadors, and delegations from both countries will make visits to strengthen cooperation in all fields," al-Sharaa told a visiting delegation of Iraqi journalists, according to SANA.
"And we hope our Iraqi brothers can restrain those Americans," he added anxiously.
Syria broke relations with Baghdad in 1982 after accusing Iraq of inciting riots by the banned Muslim Brotherhood in Syria. Commercial ties improved in the last few years of Saddam Hussein's regime before he was overthrown in 2003. The two countries maintain only interest sections in each other's capitals. There have been talks in the past year between Syria and Iraq on restoring diplomatic ties and exchanging ambassadors but no date has been set for opening embassies and appointing ambassadors.

The announcement comes at a time Syria is feeling increasingly frightened isolated, particularly over last year's assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in Beirut.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
'Berri blocked Lahoud's exit'
2006-01-07
A former Syrian vice president disclosed that Lebanon's Parliament speaker, in coordination with Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa, had hampered Spanish mediation efforts to halt the extension of President Emile Lahoud's mandate. In remarks published Friday in the London-based As-Sharq al-Awsat, Abdel-Halim Khaddam revealed that Spain, upon Syrian request, undertook mediation efforts to help stop the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 1559 on condition that Syria dropped plans to extend Lahoud's term. "Assad asked Sharaa to contact Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos" on the issue, Khaddam told the pan-Arab daily from his residence in Paris.

Following talks between Moratinos, President Jacques Chirac, Premier Tony Blair, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and President George W. Bush, "there was an agreement to abandon the resolution on condition that the head of the Lebanese Parliament cancels a call for a parliamentary session," that would vote for the extension, Sharaa told the newspaper. "When Moratinos informed Sharaa of the deal, the latter asked that the Spanish foreign minister convey the request directly to [Speaker Nabih] Berri. And when he did [Berri] replied: 'Lebanon is a sovereign country and Syria cannot impose anything on us,'" Khaddam said. "Two hours after Berri's response the Security Council voted in favor of the resolution," Khaddam said. A day later, on September 3, Lebanon's Parliament voted to give Lahoud three more years in office, in a defiant response to Resolution 1559.

Khaddam said Assad's decisions had "brought considerable damage to Syria." These, he said, led to the adoption of 1559, the murder of Hariri, the "humiliating pullout" of Syrian forces, a split in relations with Lebanon and international isolation. Khaddam openly advocated Assad's overthrow. "This regime cannot be reformed. The only alternative is to overthrow it," he told As-Sharq al-Awsat. "Syria is in danger. She is isolated as a result of the regimes policies, and national unity is threatened. When the country is in danger, it is necessary to reinforce national unity and ... the domestic front."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
U.N. Seeks Interview With Syrian President
2006-01-02
U.N. investigators want to question Syria's president and foreign minister about the assassination of a former Lebanese leader and have made a request to that effect, a spokeswoman for the probe said Monday.
Let's make sure we have a Predator in the air that day ...
Nasra Hassan, who speaks for a U.N. commission heading the inquiry, also said investigators want to interview former Syrian Vice President Abdul-Halim Khaddam "as soon as possible."
Before he's bumped off, y'mean?
Khaddam alleged in a television interview broadcast Friday from Paris that the Syrian president had threatened former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri several months before Hariri was assassinated in a Feb. 14 truck bombing. "The U.N. commission has already sent a request to interview Syrian President Bashar Assad and Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa, among others," Hassan told The Associated Press. "The commission is waiting for a response from the Syrians," she said. She refused to say when the request was made. There was no immediate Syrian government comment on the request, the first time the probe has touched directly on the president.
They're gonna wait awhile for that response, and when it comes it's going to be so stunted they may not even recognize it.
The commission has said several people whom Hariri spoke to after he met Assad in August 2004 said he told them the Syrian leader had threatened him over his opposition to extending the term of Lebanon's pro-Syrian president. Syrian officials, including Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa, have denied any threat was made.
"No, no! Certainly not!"
But after Khaddam's interview, Syria's ruling Baath Party stripped him of membership and joined parliament in demanding his trial on a charge of high treason, the official news agency SANA reported Sunday. While Khaddam, who is in France, said Friday that he planned to return to Syria with his family to write a book, it was unclear if he would go back facing a treason charge. Conviction would bring the death penalty.
Might be a good idea to hold off until afteer 9-11-06.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Sanctions Dropped From Syria Resolution
2005-10-31
Key U.N. Security Council members dropped the threat of sanctions against Syria on Monday in a last-minute effort to get all 15 nations to back a resolution demanding that Damascus cooperate with an investigation into the assassination of Lebanon's former prime minister.
The resolution co-sponsored by the United States, Britain and France had called for possible economic sanctions if Syria didn't comply, citing the U.N. Charter. But Russia and China objected strongly to mentioning sanctions while the investigation into Rafik Hariri's killing is still under way.

The new text, obtained by The Associated Press, dropped the reference to the U.N. Charter, saying only that if Syria doesn't cooperate "the council, if necessary, could consider further action." In another concession to try to get Russia and China on board, the co-sponsors also agreed to drop an appeal to Syria to renounce all support "for all forms of terrorist action and all assistance to terrorist groups."

U.S. Ambassador John Bolton told reporters that foreign ministers of the five permanent veto-wielding nations agreed to the changes because of "the prospect of getting a near unanimous vote in the council."
Despite the changes, he said, "it's going to be unmistakably a clear message" and "a strong resolution."

The U.S. urged foreign ministers of the 15 council nations to attend Monday's meeting to cast their country's vote on the resolution and thereby send a high-level message to Syria of the international demand for action. Almost all the ministers flew to New York for the meeting.
British Ambassador Emyr Jones Parry said that adoption of the resolution by the foreign ministers "is to show the intensity of the concern, and to make it very clear at the highest level what we expect."
Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa also flew to New York Sunday to attend the council meeting and meet with some of the foreign ministers and Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

The final negotiations on the text began Sunday night at a dinner hosted by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice for the foreign ministers of the four other permanent council nations — Russia's Sergey Lavrov, China's Li Zhaoxing, Britain's Jack Straw and France's Philippe Douste-Blazy. Lavrov and Li met separately for 45 minutes before the dinner, which lasted more than two hours. The negotiations among the five countries resumed early Monday morning and then the entire 15-member council met behind closed doors. Washington, Paris and London co-sponsored the resolution to follow up last week's report by a U.N. investigating commission, which implicated top Syrian and Lebanese security officials in the Feb. 14 bombing that killed Hariri and 20 others. The report also accused Syria of not cooperating fully with the probe.

The latest draft would require Syria to detain anyone the U.N. investigators consider a suspect and let investigators determine the location and conditions under which the individual would be questioned. It also would freeze assets and impose a travel ban on anyone identified as a suspect by the commission. Those provisions could pose a problem for Syrian President Bashar Assad as the suspects include his brother, Maher Assad, and his brother-in-law, Assef Shawkat, the chief of military intelligence.

Russia said last week it opposed sanctions against Syria, its longtime ally. Late Sunday, Lavrov said that Russia fully backs further U.N. inquiry into Hariri's murder but criticized what he described as attempts to turn the Security Council into an investigative body. "We are concerned that the draft resolution's co-authors are not just trying to support the commission, but also to meddle into its sphere of responsibility," Lavrov said in comments broadcast by Russia's Channel One television. Tishrin, a government newspaper in Syria, criticized the draft as "tough and unbalanced" and called on the Security Council to adopt "a balanced and objective" resolution "that would not be a clear translation of the U.S. administration's will."

As al-Sharaa headed to New York, Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Walid Moallem toured Gulf countries in what appeared to be an effort to rally Arab support ahead of Monday's council meeting. Syria's official news agency, SANA, quoted Moallem as saying he was bearing a message from the Syrian president to the leaders of Gulf countries concerning "the dangers Syria faces" as a result of the U.N. action.

In Saudi Arabia on Saturday, Moallem delivered a message from Assad to King Abdullah "on the current situation in the region ... and the debate under way in the Security Council concerning the (Hariri) investigation," SANA said. Moallem traveled to Qatar on Sunday where he told reporters that the resolution was prepared prior to the release of the report by the U.N. investigation. SANA quoted him as saying the resolution was "dangerous" and aimed at hurting Syria, not uncovering the truth in the Hariri assassination. But Moallem said that Syria will "continue to cooperate" with the U.N. investigation despite "legal and political gaps in its report."

Assad on Saturday ordered that a judicial committee be formed to investigate Hariri's assassination. A presidential decree said the committee will cooperate with the U.N. inquiry and Lebanese judicial authorities. While Syria has rejected accusations of its involvement in Hariri's killing, it buckled under international pressure and withdrew its soldiers from Lebanon in April, ending a 29-year presence in its smaller neighbor.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria Supporters Silent Ahead of U.N. Vote
2005-10-31
Syria had few vocal supporters ahead of a Security Council vote Monday on a tough resolution that would threaten sanctions if Damascus doesn't cooperate with the U.N. investigation into the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

Even Security Council members concerned by some provisions of the resolution did not object to sending Syria a stern message. The United States, France and Britain had little doubt the council would approve the resolution.
Syrian state media, meanwhile, urged the council to ignore American pressure and adopt a "balanced" resolution.

The three countries co-sponsored the resolution to follow up last week's report by a U.N. investigating commission, which implicated top Syrian and Lebanese security officials in the Feb. 14 bombing that killed Hariri and 20 others. The report also accused Syria of not cooperating fully with the probe.

Britain's U.N. Ambassador Emyr Jones Parry said that adoption of the resolution by foreign ministers "is to show the intensity of the concern, and to make it very clear at the highest level what we expect."

The latest draft would require Syria to detain anyone the U.N. investigators consider a suspect and let investigators determine the location and conditions under which the individual would be questioned. It also would freeze assets and impose a travel ban on anyone identified as a suspect by the commission.

Those provisions could pose a problem for Syrian President Bashar Assad as the suspects include his brother, Maher Assad, and his brother-in-law, Assef Shawkat, the chief of military intelligence.

If Syria does not fully cooperate with the investigation, the draft says the council intends to consider "further measures," including sanctions, "to ensure compliance by Syria."

Ahead of Monday's vote, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice hosted a dinner for her counterparts from France and Britain, as well as Russia and China, who oppose the resolution's threat of sanctions.

The two-hour dinner meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel was a last chance for the five permanent veto-wielding council nations to discuss the resolution.

There was no immediate word from the ministers, including Rice, Russia's Sergey Lavrov, China's Li Zhaoxing, Britain's Jack Straw and France's Philippe Douste-Blazy, on their two-hour dinner meeting.

Lavrov and Li, who met alone for about 45 minutes before dinner, refused to say how they will vote. "Just wait and see," Li said.

Russia said last week it opposed sanctions against Syria, its longtime ally. Late Sunday, Lavrov said that Russia fully backs further U.N. inquiry into Hariri's murder but criticized what he described as attempts to turn the Security Council into an investigative body.

"We are concerned that the draft resolution's co-authors are not just trying to support the commission, but also to meddle into its sphere of responsibility," Lavrov said in comments broadcast by Russia's Channel One television.

U.S. Ambassador John Bolton said Friday the resolution has the nine "yes" votes required for adoption and will likely have more by the time of the vote. "I don't foresee a veto," he said, a view echoed by his French and British co-sponsors.

But council diplomats said that if Washington, Paris and London want unanimous support from all 15 council nations _ which would send a more powerful message to Syria _ they will have to drop the sanctions threat.

Otherwise, the resolution will likely be adopted with 12 "yes" votes and three abstentions _ Russia, China, and Algeria, a non-permanent council member and its only Arab representative, the diplomats said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment ahead of the vote.

The United States urged foreign ministers of all 15 Security Council nations to come to New York for the vote to send a high-level message to Damascus that the international community is demanding its cooperation with the probe _ and almost all the ministers are coming.

Tishrin, a government newspaper in Syria, criticized the draft as "tough and unbalanced" and called on the Security Council to adopt "a balanced and objective" resolution "that would not be a clear translation of the U.S. administration's will."

Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa also flew to New York Sunday to attend the council meeting and meet with some of the foreign ministers and Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

As al-Sharaa headed to New York, Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Walid Moallem toured Gulf countries in what appeared to be an effort to rally Arab support ahead of Monday's council meeting.

Syria's official news agency, SANA, quoted Moallem as saying he was bearing a message from the Syrian president to the leaders of Gulf countries concerning "the dangers Syria faces" as a result of the U.N. action.

In Saudi Arabia on Saturday, Moallem delivered a message from Assad to King Abdullah "on the current situation in the region ... and the debate under way in the Security Council concerning the (Hariri) investigation," SANA said.

Moallem traveled to Qatar on Sunday where he told reporters that the resolution was prepared in Washington, Paris and London prior to the release of the report by the U.N. investigation.

SANA quoted him as saying the resolution was "dangerous" and aimed at hurting Syria, not uncovering the truth in the Hariri assassination. But Moallem said that Syria will "continue to cooperate" with the U.N. investigation despite "legal and political gaps in its report."

Assad on Saturday ordered that a judicial committee be formed to investigate Hariri's assassination. A presidential decree said the committee will cooperate with the U.N. probe and Lebanese judicial authorities.

While Syria has rejected accusations of its involvement in Hariri's killing, it buckled under international pressure and withdrew its soldiers from Lebanon in April, ending a 29-year presence in its smaller neighbor.

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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria rejects accusations
2005-10-21
Syria on Friday hotly dismissed a U.N. report linking embattled President Bashar Assad's regime to the assassination of a former Lebanese prime minister, and Damascus geared up to fight growing Western sentiment to punish it with economic sanctions. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice telegraphed the Bush administration's next move by declaring that Syria must be held accountable for the slaying of former Lebanese said during a visit to Alabama.
Actually, she spoke. She didn't use a telegraph.

The U.N. report is the latest development in what has been an extremely bad diplomatic patch for the authoritarian Syrian regime, which is facing intensifying censure from many parts of the world over its conduct in the Middle East. The findings were also likely to deepen explosive political divisions between Lebanon's pro- and anti-Syrian groups. Syria's foes there hailed the report as a long-awaited truth-telling about Damascus' complicity in the assassination and its interference in Lebanese affairs. Pro-Syrian politicians vilified the findings.

Hariri's murder touched off street protests in Lebanon and heated up international pressures on Damascus, forcing Assad's regime to end a nearly three-decade military occupation of its neighbor. Syria also has been under increasing U.S. pressure to stop interfering in Lebanon, to shut its border with Iraq to anti-American terrorists insurgents and to halt support for Palestinian terrorist militant groups. Syria has denied doing any of those things.
"Cetainly not!"

"This is the worst period in Syria's modern history," said Hazem Saghieh, a senior Lebanese columnist with the London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat. "I do not rule out a confrontation with the international community and sanctions on Syria."

While the U.N. findings did not directly incriminate Assad, the report cited a witness who said Assef Shawkat, the president's brother-in-law and Syria's military intelligence chief, forced a man to tape a claim of responsibility for Hariri's killing 15 days before it occurred. The report also said Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa lied in a letter to the investigating commission.
Al-Sharaa lied, Hariri died!

Assad's government repeated its claim of innocence in the Hariri killing and declared that the U.N. document was heavily politicized because of Syria's staunch anti-Israeli position. Information Minister Mohammed Said al-Sahaf Mahdi Dakhlallah said the report lacked hard evidence and was based on witnesses "who are well known for their anti-Syria stands."

The report also said Lebanese intelligence officials helped organize the Hariri killing. It further said Lebanon's pro-Syrian president, Emile Lahoud, got a phone call minutes before the assassination from the brother of a prominent member of a pro-Syrian group who also called one of four Lebanese generals arrested later in the killing. Lahoud's office issued a statement "categorically" denying that the president received such a phone call. "There is no truth to it," the statement said.

In Damascus, few Syrians were willing to comment, but those who did took the Assad regime's view of the U.N. report for fear of being next. "This is a big fabrication," said Basil Deheim, a 26-year-old marketing executive sitting with friends at a packed coffee shop. "I don't believe it," he added to the nearby secret police, pointing to a large-screen TV showing continuous coverage of the probe on an Arab satellite channel. No other customer was watching.

In one of the most critical parts of the U.N. report, German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis said Syria must cooperate if the investigation is to succeed. So I guess we know the result there. The inquiry, which was ordered by the U.N. Security Council on April 8, was extended for a second time by Secretary-General Kofi Annan — this time until Dec. 15.

Even before the report, Syria was suffering growing isolation, with an unstated moratorium in place on visits by high-ranking Western officials and the shelving of a European Union-Syria trade agreement. Syria's relations with other Arab countries also have deteriorated.

The drive for sanctions against the Assad regime was under full steam. Earlier this week, a U.S. official and two U.N. diplomats said the United States and France were preparing Security Council resolutions critical of Syria for its role in the Hariri assassination and its alleged arming of anti-Israeli militias in Lebanon. Sanctions would further weaken Syria's struggling economy.
But strengthen its smuggling economy.

Joshua Landis, a University of Oklahoma professor who is spending the year in Damascus as a Fulbright scholar, said Syria's political establishment is divided on how to deal with the U.N. report. He said hard-liners believe Syria is in a strong position, arguing the United States is mired in the Iraqi insurgency and its failure to curb Iran's nuclear program.

Those who are more moderate, he said, contend Washington is succeeding in creating a new order in the Middle East despite problems in Iraq. They also say Syria no longer has any allies and must remake itself by opening up the economy and cooperating with its neighbors, he said. Landis put Assad in the moderate camp. "He wants to modernize but he wants to keep an authoritarian state structure."
He wants to be like China? Or the EU?
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Bush calls for immediate U.N. session on Syria
2005-10-21
(AP) -- President George W. Bush on Friday called on the United Nations to convene a session as soon as possible to deal with a U.N. investigative report implicating Syrian officials in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.

"The report strongly suggests that the politically motivated assassination could not have taken place without Syrian involvement," Bush said after helping dedicate a new pavilion at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum in Southern California.

The U.N. investigative report, which Bush called "deeply disturbing," established a link between high-ranking Syrian officials and their Lebanese allies in Hariri's murder February 14 in Beirut.

Earlier Friday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said she was deeply troubled by the U.N. report. She said the international community must find a way to hold Syrian authorities accountable.

Rice spoke to reporters in Birmingham, Alabama, after the release of a report by U.N. investigator Detlev Mehlis that established a clear link between Syrian officials and their Lebanese allies to the assassination.

In Washington, another top State Department official said Hariri was the victim of a "political crime" that could not have been carried out without the involvement of senior Syrian and Lebanese intelligence officials. (Full story)

Assistant Secretary of State C. David Welch said in Washington said "we would like to see those responsible for this crime and others in Lebanon brought to justice."

The United Nations' exhaustive report linked the brother and brother-in-law of Syria's president to the February 14 car bomb that killed Hariri and 20 others, and said Lebanese intelligence officials helped organize it.

The report stopped short of fingering Syrian President Bashar Assad or his inner circle. But it accused the regime of failing to cooperate in the inquiry. The report also alleged Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa lied in a letter to the investigating commission.

Rice declined to discuss next steps beyond saying that some kind of international mechanism must be established to ensure that Syria is held accountable.

She said there is strong support among U.N. members for an extension of Mehlis' mandate, perhaps until December 15.

"Accountability is going to be very important for the international community," she said.

Welch, speaking at the Foreign Press Center, said the Bush administration had begun discussions at the United Nations and with Arab and other governments on how to act on the report.

Welch said some Arab governments share the administration's concern about Syria's "destabilizing" actions in Lebanon, but he declined to identify with whom the United States was finding initial support.

Welch, who said he had read the report, said it contained "amazing evidence."

"The report concludes there is probable cause to believe the (assassination) decision could not have been taken without the collusion of top Syrian and Lebanese intelligence officials," Welch said
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syrian 'hold' starts to slip
2005-03-24
Syria's long been known to call the shots in Lebanese politics, but as the country struggles with its worst political crisis in years, Lebanon's government has slipped out of sight. Foreign dignitaries come and go without calling on the government, anti-Syrian opposition leaders are traveling the globe visiting world leaders, the Lebanese president skipped an Arab summit this week and his designated prime minister, who quit Feb 28 but was reappointed 10 days later, can't from a Cabinet. Some Lebanese consider it an undeclared isolation of the government because of accusations leveled by the opposition that state security agencies were involved in the Feb 14 assassination of former premier Rafik Hariri.

The government's grip on the political agenda also may be slipping. President Emile Lahoud, canceling participation in an Arab summit in Algeria that opened Tuesday, cited "exceptional circumstances" in the wake of a car bombing early Saturday that injured nine people and raised the specter of renewed violence similar to that of the 1976-90 civil war. Lahoud called for immediate dialogue but the opposition rejected that, saying the president was a party to the political standoff. Former Prime Minister Salim Hoss, who has launched a third-option campaign offering Lebanese ground between that of the pro-Syrian government and the anti-Syrian opposition, did not spare either side of criticism. He has warned that the polarization would drive the country toward the unknown, expressing concern about a power vacuum, but his calls, have not caught on. "It seems as if the government, even while being a caretaker one or in the process of designation, lacks the vision and the initiative and consequently a role," Hoss said in a statement. "This is (political) bankruptcy."

Premier-designate Omar Karami also has warned of a power vacuum without a government, insisting he may bow out if he is unable to form a Cabinet. Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa went further when he questioned the wisdom of the calls for Lahoud to resign. "Is it in the interest of national harmony to have a big constitutional vacuum in Lebanon?" he asked in an interview on LBC television. Despite Lahoud's control of the military, security services and the pro-Syrian camp's majority in parliament, the president's prestige has suffered amid opponents' calls for him to step down.

Opposition leaders, by contrast, are being receiving by leaders around the region and beyond. Maronite Catholic Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir, considered the silent force behind the opposition, was received at the White House last week and also met with UN Secretary General Kofi Annan in New York. Walid Jumblatt, a Druse whose also been a leading figure in the opposition, traveled to Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Moscow, Berlin and Brussels. He met Monday with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Cairo. Dignitaries visiting Lebanon to pay their respects to Hariri's family and visit his tomb - but skipping even a courtesy call on the Lebanese president or prime minister - include French President Jacques Chirac, Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf and members of a US congressional delegation. A long line of Arab dignitaries, including many from the Gulf where Hariri - a naturalized Saudi - had many contacts, also ignored Lebanese government officials when they streamed to the Hariri family home and to the grave on the central Martyrs' Square. The explanation, some said, was because the visits were private to offer condolences.

But many were unconvinced. Visitors shunned the Lebanese government because it is "under political siege and because administering Lebanon has been put practically in the hands of the (UN) Security Council, which grants domestic legitimacy or withholds it and sets the general political course," wrote Bishara Charbel, editor-in-chief of the Lebanese newspaper Sada Al Balad.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria takes heart after battering over presence in Lebanon
2005-03-10
Tens of thousands of people rallied in Damascus Wednesday in support of Syrian President Bashar Assad, who is under intense international pressure over his regime's dominance of Lebanon. The crowd chanted: "One, one, one, Syria and Lebanon are one," as they brandished portraits of the president, his late father Hafez Assad and the head of Lebanon's movement Hizbullah, Hassan Nasrallah. Unofficial estimates said some half-a-million people filled the streets.

The rally, broadcast live on state television, came a day after a massive pro-Syrian demonstration in Beirut organized by Hizbullah in a bid to counter international demands for Damascus to end its three-decade military and political grip on Lebanon. The crowd marched to Al-Rawda presidential palace amid shouts of: "We want to see you Bashar," prompting the Syrian leader to appear at a window of the building and wave to the crowd. As the demonstrators rallied, Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa met with the visiting deputy foreign minister of Iran, Syria's closest ally, Ahmad Azizi, to discuss the situation in Lebanon, Syria's official news agency SANA said. "The two sides agreed on the need for the two countries to continue working together to maintain security and stability in the region," SANA said.

Meanwhile, the Damascus crowd sang patriotic songs by renowned Lebanese diva Fairouz and carried placards reading "Syria is the protective fortress of the Lebanese." "The pullback from Lebanon strengthens our interests and does not mean that Syria will no longer have a role," read one banner. Another read, "Syria is the beating heart of the Arab world." Other supporters waved Syrian, Hizbullah and Palestinian flags as well as that of Syria's ruling Baath party, while one person carried a Syrian flag stamped with the Lebanese national symbol, the cedar tree.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Martin Indyk: Assad offering to make peace with Israel
2004-10-07
By The Associated Press / Haaretz. Thu., October 7th, 2004 Tishrei 22nd, 5765

Once Iran is no longer able to assist Syria, since the mullahs will have their own major headaches very soon, Syria will be on her own.

WASHINGTON - Syrian President Bashar Assad is offering to make peace with Israel and says he is ready to cooperate with the United States in stabilizing Iraq, a former senior State Department official said Wednesday.

"Something is going on in Syria and it is time for us to pay attention," said Martin Indyk, assistant secretary of state for the Near East and U.S. ambassador to Israel during the Clinton administration.

In a three-hour meeting with the Syrian president last month in Damascus, Indyk said he detected a "clear change" in Assad's views on a number of fronts.

On peacemaking, Assad offered to hold talks with Israel without preconditions, Indyk said, and had made several overtures to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon that the latter rebuffed.

In the past, Indyk said, Syria had insisted that any peace talks should resume where they left off during the Clinton administration - with Israel offering to give up all of the Golan Heights, a strategic area Israel won in the 1967 Mideast war.

And, Indyk said, Assad had dropped a demand that Israel reach an agreement with the Palestinians before Israel could resume negotiations with Syria.

On the domestic side, Indyk said, Assad spoke "about the need to reform the government."

"It's worth watching and it is worth testing," Indyk said at a seminar at the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution, of which Indyk is the director.

Indyk said Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa was not at his meeting with Assad, evidence the former American diplomat said that change was under way and that al-Sharaa "and others in the old guard are being systematically silenced."

On Monday, Assad shuffled his Cabinet. Ghazi Kenaan, 62, until two years ago Syria's top intelligence general in neighboring Lebanon, was named interior minister. Al-Sharaa retained his post.

Assad switches to cooperation with U.S. over Iraq
On Iraq, Assad "figured out he was on the wrong side" and has switched to cooperation with the U.S. occupation forces in the country, Indyk said.

On support for terrorism, Assad was responding to U.S. demands by moving some leaders of militant Palestinian groups out of Damascus, Indyk said.

Last month, Syria was praised publicly by Secretary of State Colin Powell for dismantling military camps in the hills near Beirut, Lebanon.

Powell told reporters after a meeting with Al-Sharaa that the redeployment of Syrian occupation forces in Lebanon was "a positive step."

At the same time, the State Department has continued to call for a crackdown on terror. And Syria remains one of seven countries branded by the department as sponsors of terror.

Thousands of Syrian troops also remain in Lebanon despite passage on September 2nd of a UN Security Council resolution calling for a withdrawal and for Syria to respect Lebanon's sovereignty.

Also, President George W. Bush's administration has accused Syria of pursuing biological and chemical weapons programs as well as nuclear weapons.


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Israel-Palestine
Israel-Syria in War of Words
2004-09-03
This week's suicide attack in Israel has sparked a war of words between Israel and Syria and increased pressure on the Israeli government to finish the West Bank barrier that many Israelis believe saves lives. As Israel mourned its 16 dead from Tuesday's twin bus bombings in the southern desert city of Beersheba, officials ratcheted up their rhetoric against Syria, hinting at possible military action. The militant group Hamas, whose leaders are based in Syria, claimed responsibility for the attacks. Syria and Hamas, apparently fearful of an Israeli strike, accused Israel of trying to aggravate tensions. Although no Israeli strike appeared imminent - security officials said they had not begun discussing the possibility - the heated rhetoric underscored Israel's growing impatience with Syrian support for Palestinian militants.
"Don't make us come in there!"
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon told Israel's president that the bus bombings, the deadliest attack in Israel in nearly a year, were carried out on direct orders from Hamas leaders in Damascus, the Syrian capital. A senior adviser to Sharon, Raanan Gissin, warned earlier that neither Hamas nor Syria was "immune" to an Israeli strike. Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom said Syria's support for terrorists "will have very clear consequences."
"And we aren't telling you again!"
However, the chief of Israeli military intelligence refused to draw a straight line from Beersheba to Syria. "We did not directly connect the terror attack that was carried out in Beersheba to the (Hamas) headquarters in Damascus," Maj. Gen. Aharon Zeevi-Farkash said in an interview with Channel 10 television. But he also stressed there is "wide and comprehensive support from Damascus" for militants in the West Bank and Gaza. Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa was quoted as saying threats would "worsen the already aggravated situation in the region." Ahmed Haj Ali, an adviser to the Syrian information minister, said Syria was taking the Israeli talk seriously.
"Cheez, have you seen their order of battle?!"
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