Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Ex-Hezbollah Leader: Iran Told Us To Join Syrian War |
2013-04-26 |
[Jpost] Disaffected former leader of terrorist group, Sobhi al-Tofaili, says Hezbollah split over involvement in Syria conflict. Iran pressed Hezbollah fighters to join the civil war in Syria to bolster ![]() Pencilneckal-Assad Trampler of Homs... 's armed struggle, according to Sobhi al-Tofaili, a disaffected former leader of the orc group. The allegation, made on Leb's Future Television, echoes similar comments by George Sabra, interim leader of the Syrian National Coalition, at a presser in Turkey on April 22. The former Hezbollah secretary said that at least 138 Islamic fascisti had died in Syria and scores had been maimed. The organization is split over its involvement, he said. Lebanese Sunni Moslem holy mans called on April 23 for a holy war to defend co-religionists in Syria from Hezbollah, amid concern that Leb is being sucked into its neighbor's increasingly sectarian conflict. Leb's President Michel Suleiman ...before assuming office as President, he held the position of commander of the Leb Armed Forces. That was after the previous commander, the loathesome Emile Lahoud, took office as president in November of 1998. Likely the next president of Leb will be whoever's commander of the armed forces, too... dismissed the calls. The uprising against Assad began with peaceful protests in March 2011 that turned violent when the government forces turned their guns on demonstrators. "Hezbollah fighters have crossed the border and started to kill our people to support the murderer Bashir al-Assad," Sabra said at a televised presser. The group is "occupying Syrian villages, murdering civilians, preventing them from peacefully expressing their views." Hezbollah has denied it is backing Assad in the fighting, saying it's helping Lebanese Shi'ites living in Syrian border towns and villages to defend themselves against rebel assaults. It has remained largely silent amid a wave of recent accusations by Syrian opposition leaders and Lebanese groups about its involvement in Syria. "Hezbollah has not denied the claims and does not appear very concerned about how its involvement will be interpreted," said Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Middle East Center in Beirut. After the protests evolved into armed conflict and the al- Nusra Front's involvement was highlighted, both Iran and Hezbollah had a "convenient excuse -- that they are fighting against orc jihadis and not an Arab Spring uprising," he said. They may have concluded that "Assad is not about to fall and that they're not on the Titanic but on the side that's going to be around for a long time," he said. Syria's conflict is rapidly deteriorating and is threatening the stability of its neighbors, particularly Leb, Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the United Nations ...the Oyster Bay money pit... , told the Security Council Wednesday. "Hezbollah not only continues to undermine Leb from within by violating the government's policy of disassociation, but actively enables Assad to wage war on the Syrian people by providing money, weapons, and expertise to the regime in close coordination with Iran," she said. In a letter to Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah from Moaz al-Khatib, former SNC leader, he said: "Is it satisfying to you that the Syrian regime shells it citizens with fighter planes and Scud missiles? ''I demand that you withdraw all Hezbollah troops from Syria,'' al-Khatib said. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
Coalition calls for ouster of Lebanon's pro-Syrian president | ||
2005-12-19 | ||
![]() Monday's meeting of the coalition of anti-Syrian legislators and politicians came after An-Nahar newspaper general manager and legislator Gibran Tueni was killed in a Dec. 12 car bombing. Tueni was the third anti-Syrian critic slain in similar circumstances since the Feb. 14 blast that killed ex-Lebanese premier Rafik Hariri in Beirut. Hariri's killing sparked massive protests by Lebanese who accused Syria of involvement. The massive anti-Syrian sentiment forced Syria to withdraw its thousands of soldiers from Lebanon in April. "We call on all those who participated in the independence uprising to continue the battle and to oust the remnants of the security regime from the positions they are still holding, namely the presidency position," legislator Samir Franjieh said in a statement after the meeting.
The students camped there for more than two months last spring after Hariri's assassination until Syria withdrew its troops, which first deployed here in 1976 after the onset of Lebanon's 15-year civil war to act as a stabilizing force. Youth activists representing anti-Syrian groups urged Lebanese to come to the square and revive the camp "to defend Lebanon's unity in the face of the Syrian regime's attacks and the grudges of the ruling family in Syria." A statement issued by protest organizers in the northern city of Tripoli demanded Lahoud's resignation and blamed Syrian and allied-Lebanese security services for Tueni's assassination. Hundreds of Tueni's supporters, mainly journalists from An-Nahar and other media outlets, joined the victim's widow, Siham, and his two daughters, Nayla and Michelle, in a sit-in Monday outside the An-Nahar building in central Beirut, observing an hour of silence. | ||
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Syria to cooperate on al-Hariri probe |
2005-08-27 |
S![]() Lebanon's private Future Television reported that the commission's chief, German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis, would meet "a Syrian representative" in Geneva within 24 hours, citing a UN official in New York. The UN Security Council on Thursday called on Syria to fully cooperate with the probe into the February murder of the billionaire five-time prime minister, with the United States calling Damascus's stance "unacceptable". The council did not actually name Syria but in a statement said: "The members of the Council reiterated their call on all states and all parties, especially those who are yet to respond adequately, to cooperate fully in order to expedite the work of the (enquiry) commission." Many in Lebanon have blamed the killing of al-Hariri on Syria and its then allies in the Lebanese government, charges vehemently denied by Damascus. Al-Hariri's son Saad called on Syria to answer the probe's questions, saying in a statement that "countries that are brothers and friends of Lebanon are required to cooperate." |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Syrian Intelligence officer held in Baghdad admits to attack | |
2005-05-26 | |
BEIRUT: A Syrian intelligence officer detained in Baghdad has admitted to launching the missile attack on the late premier Rafik Hariri's Future Television in June 2003, according to Al-Rai al-Aam Kuwaiti newspaper. In an article published on Wednesday, the newspaper said Hussein Ahmad Tah, 32, was arrested by Iraqi police when he was attempting to assassinate employees in an Iraqi public institution. Following his arrest, Tah decided to admit to his previous crimes, among which is the Future TV bombing. Tah said he worked for Syrian intelligence services, adding that he worked for a long time in Lebanon where he perpetrated several attacks. He then moved to Iraq, where he committed several attacks against mosques and Iraqi civilians. Security sources in Iraq said that Tah recounted the details of the attack on Future TV. The television station, situated near Raouche in Beirut, was attacked on June 15, 2003, resulting in the destruction of one of the newsrooms. No casualties were reported. The attack was considered as a message to then-owner of the station, former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Sources said the car used to perpetrate the crime was stolen in 1997 and hidden in a garage until the date of the attack. A previously unknown group called Jamaat Ansar Allah had held itself responsible for the attack in a statement issued the next day. However, Tah told Iraqi police that the group did not exist and that he had written and issued the statement.
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