Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Wally opposes Pencilneck's visit to Lebanon |
2008-06-09 |
Democratic gathering leader MP Walid Jumblatt expressed his objection to the visit of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad to Lebanon in light of the current division among the Lebanese "If this visit is inevitable, let President Michel Suleiman meet Assad at the Lebanese-Syrian border, just as happened when the late Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser met with the late Lebanese President Fouad Chehab in 1958. This will be the first step toward Syria's recognition of Lebanon," Jumblatt told the Euronews Television. He also renewed his accusations against the Syrian regime for the political assassinations in Lebanon, "for they only targeted those who objected to the extension of the term of former President Emil Lahoud, and those that demanded the independence of Lebanon and correcting our relations with Syria." Jumblatt was asked if the assassinations will continue : Re responded "Everything is possible." Jumblatt warned against any delay in the establishment of the Special Tribunal to try the killers of former PM Rafik Hariri . "Any delay in this regard means that the UN or another party is seeking a deal with the Syrian regime at the expense of Hariri ." He also noted the lack of unified vision within the European Union over Lebanon and the Middle East. Jumblatt criticized president Sarkozy's invitation to the Syrian president to participate in the celebrations in the French National Day on July 14 during the meeting of the Heads of the Mediterranean countries. He said Assad's presence during such an occasion is an insult to the French people." |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Damascus selected as Arab Culture Capital for 2008 | |
2008-01-20 | |
Under the auspices of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, the Festivity of Damascus as the Capital of Arab Culture for the year 2008, officially kicked off on Saturday at al-Assad House for Culture and Arts. Among participants in the festival are Qatari Amir Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al-Thani, Turkish President Abdullah Gul, Former Lebanese President Emil Lahoud, and Arab League Secretary General Amr Moussa.
In a statement to Syrian News Agency (SANA), Moussa pointed out that Damascus has a special place in Arabs' hearts because of its history, with Arab culture emerging from it and spreading all over the world, carrying with it the Arab and Islamic civilization that contributed in the evolution of mankind. Among those participating in the festival was the Secretary General of Arab Towns Organization Abdul-Aziz Al-Adsani, President of the Secretariat Arab Poetry Council Abdul-Aziz Al-Babtain, along with other Arab and Islamic Ministers of Cultures. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
Nasrallah: ' The whole world cannot disarm Hezbollah' | ||
2007-11-12 | ||
![]() Nasrallah attacked the Lebanese government accusing it of siding with the United States and Israel against the resistance and doing nothing about recovering the Shebaa Farms He also attacked the United Sates and accused it of meddling in Lebanese presidential elections to make sure that the new president implements UN resolution 1559 which calls for disarming all the militia in Lebanon including Hezbollah. He said " no one can ever disarm Hezbollah....he added " the whole world cannot disarm Hezbollah".
He lashed out at the parliament majority which is supported by the world community except Syria and Iran and said " they want a president that divides us and disarms us, we want a president that unites us and allows us to keep our arms"
Lebanon's parliament majority accused Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran and Syria of wanting a president that is a clone of outgoing pro-Syrian president Emil Lahoud. Syrian president Bashar el Assad calls Lahoud " my personal representative in Lebanon. The election of a new president was postponed 4 times by Hezbollah ally speaker Nabih Berri . the new date is set for November 21 , or 3 days before the term of Lahoud ends. | ||
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Israel-Palestine-Jordan |
Gaza: Tehran's greater game |
2007-06-20 |
By Amir Taheri Who sets Hamas strategy? As the radical Palestinian movement braces itself for what could be a long struggle against its rival Fatah, if not a full-blown civil war, the question merits more than mere academic interest. Just days after Hamas staged its coup to achieve exclusive control of Gaza, it's now clear that the military operation launched against the positions of the Palestinian security forces in the strip was never discussed in the Islamist organization's Consultative Assembly (shura). Well-placed sources close to Hamas tell me that, had the issue been brought up, a majority of shura members most likely would have opposed the coup de force, which has divided the Palestinians as never before. Many believe that even ousted Prime Minister Ismail Haniya, the man who headed the first Hamas-led Cabinet, is "less than enthusiastic" about the operation. "Only a few people knew about the scheme," says a member of the Palestinian National Assembly who, though close to Hamas, is an independent. "Many Hamas leaders knew that by seizing Gaza and expelling Fatah they would be burning all bridges." Haniya appears to have placed his hopes on an impending mediation by Saudi Arabia to persuade Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, Fatah's leader, to put all security forces under a neutral command. The issue of Fatah's armed forces in Gaza did not come up in the secret talks that led to the Mecca accord a few weeks ago. Nevertheless, there was an implicit understanding that Fatah would transfer control of the bulk of its armed groups in Gaza to the so-called national-unity government formed under Saudi patronage. Tehran, meanwhile, was concerned that a Hamas-Fatah deal would strengthen those in the Syrian leadership who dislike what they see as their country's increasing vassalization to Tehran. The same Syrian leadership elements recently opened an indirect dialogue with Israel and received some encouraging hints from Israeli Premier Ehud Olmert. Syrian critics of the alliance with Tehran pointed to the Mecca deals as a model that might help repair ties with moderate Arab states, placate the United States and, eventually, even persuade Israel to give up the Golan Heights, which it won in the 1967 war. A Hamas defection followed by a Syrian change of policy would have left the Islamic Republic isolated and exposed. Had the deals made in Mecca worked, Hamas would have geared its strategy to moderate Arab states, especially Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan and, indirectly through them, to the Middle East policies of the U.S.-led Western powers. Until earlier this month, when the first Hamas guns fired in Gaza, it seemed that hopes of Tehran and Damascus to organize a new "Rejection Front" to oppose Israel and the United States had hit a bump on the road. What looked like a Hamas sell-out to the moderate Arab powers came as major disappointment to the Islamic republic in Iran and its Syrian allies and Lebanese Hezbollah clients. Palestinian sources concur that the man who effectively vetoed the Mecca deals is Khalid Mishaal, Hamas' "Supreme Leader," who lives in exile in Damascus. Mishaal initially endorsed the Mecca deals but was persuaded to change his position under Iranian and Syrian pressure. During a visit to Tehran, where he was supposed to brief Hamas' Iranian allies on the Mecca deals, Mishaal heard point-blank that the Islamic Republic favored "an intensification of the struggle against the Zionist enemy" rather than an easing of tension that a coalition with Abbas implied. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has structured his foreign policy on the assumption that a military showdown with America and Israel is inevitable. He also thinks that, when and if it comes, the radical forces led by Tehran would be able to resist long enough and to raise the cost of the conflict in human terms to break the adversaries' will to fight. For Ahmadinejad's policy to succeed, it is imperative that Lebanon and the Palestinian territories become advanced posts for the Islamic Republic. Despite occasional threats to unleash a hailstorm of missiles against Iran's Gulf-Arab neighbors, it is unlikely that the Tehran leadership would take the risk of killing large numbers of the very people it hopes to win over to its cause. The only U.S. regional ally that the Islamic Republic might attack without concern for who gets killed there is Israel. Tehran and Damascus believe that they can win the tug of war with Prime Minister Fouad Siniora and his governing coalition in Lebanon. In November, the Lebanese parliament, in which Siniora has a majority of five seats, is scheduled to meet to elect a new president of the republic to succeed the pro-Syrian incumbent Emil Lahoud. It's enough to murder four more anti-Syrian parliamentarians for Siniora to lose his majority. In the meantime, the series of assassinations may well frighten some members of Siniora's coalition to switch sides and support ex-Gen. Michel Aoun, a Maronite Christian ally of Hezbollah and Syria's candidate for the Lebanese presidency. In anticipation of winning control of Lebanon, the Islamic Republic has increased its shipments of money and arms to Hezbollah and its allies. Most analysts agree that the Lebanese branch of Hezbollah had replaced virtually all of its losses in last July's war against Israel. A Lebanese army bogged down in battles against Sunni radical groups controlled by Syria would lack the means to take on Hezbollah if the Shiite party decided to stage a coup in Beirut. And with Lebanon in turmoil to its north, the last thing that Israel would want is to be forced to intervene militarily to its south in Gaza. The battle in Gaza was something more than a local struggle for power between rival Palestinian factions. It was dictated by strategic imperative that could affect the broader region as the Islamic Republic and the United States intensify their rivalry over who sets the agenda for the future of the Middle East. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Emile 'to block' Hariri Tribunal |
2006-12-01 |
![]() The president called for a new government of national unity. "In our constitution there is no legality to any institution if it doesn't represent all the religious communities," Lahoud told the BBC. Critics say Lahoud and other pro-Syrian politicians are trying to prevent the Hariri tribunal from going ahead because it might embarrass them and their Syrian backers - accusations they deny. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | ||
Both Bashar Assad & Mahmoud Abbas Are Teetering | ||
2005-10-24 | ||
DEBKA, salt to taste: The Syrian leadership has gathered itself in for the next shock after the UN Hariri investigationâs findings drawn up by Detlev Mehlis implicated President Bashar Assadâs close family circle in the assassination of Lebanese leader Rafiq Hariri last February. They expect the UN Security Council convening Tuesday, Oct. 25, to pass an American-French draft resolution condemning Damascus. They are also braced for another disastrous UN report. This one was drawn up by Special Middle East Envoy Terje Roed-Larsen - according to DEBKAfileâs sources, as a cooperative effort with Mehlis. It damns Damascus for violating Security Council resolution 1559 which ordered foreign forces to quit Lebanon and the dismantling of militias in the country. Larsen will expose Syria as continuing to maintain military intelligence agents in Lebanon and derailing efforts to start decommissioning the Hizballah. ![]()
Close enough to be seen as part of the Assad clan is the Syrian tycoon Rami Makhlouf. He is the ruling familyâs moneybags whose financial dealings, including transactions with Iraq, have filled the ruling Assad coffers with billions of dollars which are invested outside the country. Makhlouf is especially close to Bouchra. The first crack in the familyâs cohesion was forced by interior minister Ghazi Kenaan and his death (whether murder or suicide. Kenaan provided the cement for the strong bond between the president and brother-in-law Shawqat. Haririâs assassination convinced Kenaan to pull away from that partnership. This made him a liability and his days were numbered. Then came the traumatic night of Oct. 20, when the unrevised Mehlis report on the Hariri murder handed to the UN secretary implicated Maher Assad and Shawqat by name. Because of the universal assumption that the pair would never have performed a deed of this magnitude without the presidentâs knowledge, the ugly cloud moved over his head â even before any proof was adduced that could stand up in court. This foursome is now locked in together in stifling proximity. Given the slightest hint that any formation of three is willing to sacrifice the fourth member to save themselves will tip the group over into a life-and-death struggle. That is the moment the Assad clanâs enemies are watching and waiting for â within the Assadâs own Alawite sect, among his opponents in the intelligence, security, and military communities and, it goes without saying, among Syrian opposition parties in exile. Rifat Assad, the presidentâs uncle, is waiting in the wings for his chance to seize the presidency. Washington and Paris are also biding their time. They all judge the Assad family as being on the brink of imploding - which is why condemnation rather than sanctions will come out of the Security Council session Tuesday and why Condoleezza Rice spoke of accountability â but not punishment. This waiting game is also a game of hazard. The Assad family may hold up through its vicissitudes â only to be overthrown in a military coup; or by another branch of the Assad clan, such as the one led by Rifat. He may opt for violence to topple his nephewâs regime and save the dynasty. ![]()
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Debka: Assad Panics. Syrian Regime Targeted for Extinction? | |
2005-08-31 | |
![]() DEBKAfileâs intelligence sources report the Assad regime is in a panic as the UN teamâs findings on the murder case come closer to Damascus. In Beirut, the specter of civil war hovers as Syrian agents and Hizballah officers are seen handing out weapons to Muslims â the first sign that Assad has decided to react to the threat closing in on him by igniting fresh civil bloodshed. Warnings from French intelligence to were conveyed to Lebanese leaders in the last 24 hours to get out of Beirut and take temporary refuge in Paris. âBig events are in the making,â they said. Most Lebanese cabinet ministers, bankers, public figures and newspaper editors accepted the offer. They and Saad Hariri, leader of the ruling party with his family, fled to the French capital.
Also Wednesday, US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice interrupted her vacation for a conference with Terje Roed Larsen, the UN secretaryâs Middle East envoy who updated her on the latest turn in the Hariri inquiry. The European Unionâs external affairs executive Javier Solana, currently visiting Israel was on the point of traveling to Beirut but changed his mind. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |
Debka: Lebanon Is on the Brink | |
2005-02-23 | |
![]() The resignations of president Emil Lahoude and the Karame government were forcefully demanded by the opposition leader, Walid Jumblatt, head of the Lebanese Druses who speaks for a rare multiethnic coalition made up of his own community, Christian factions endorsed by Maronite Catholic Archbishop Nasrallah Sfeir, and Sunni Muslims led by the dead billionaire's oldest son, Bahaa Hariri, with the blessing of the Sunni Muslim Mufti of Lebanon. Saturday, February 19, Omar Karami, who succeeded Rafiq Hariri as prime minister, accused this group of attempting a coup d'etat. The belligerent Hizballah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned (or threatened) that "popular agitation against Syria's grip on the country following the killing of Rafiq Hariri could plunge Lebanon into civil war again. Backed solidly from Damascus and Tehran, he exhorted the 100,000 Shiites massed in Beirut to mark the Ashura festival not to forget the real enemy. "Death to Israel!" they roared after him. The sparks will fly in earnest when government and Syrians move into aggressive mode to crush the opposition, which will become increasingly inflamed by multiplying leads to Syria and its Lebanese minions as Hariri's assassins. Our sources report that US, French and Israeli intelligence have already gathered solid evidence that General Rostum Ghazallah of Syrian military intelligence orchestrated the murder on orders from Damascus with the aid of Lebanese general intelligence and its chief General Jamil al-Sayad. The Damascus-backed government in Beirut and its masters has no intention of going quietly. Bashar Assad desperately needs the political and economic benefits he extorts from Lebanon to prop up his regime. Monday, February 21, presidents George W. Bush and Jacques Chirac meet in Paris. With Lebanon at the forefront of their agenda, they will have to look hard at some tough questions. How to handle the situation if Assad orders his Syrian troops in Lebanon to march on Beirut in defense of his puppet government? And worse still, what if the full weight of the Syrian army is sent across the border to squash the uprising? Will the two Western leaders dispatch a joint US-French force to repulse the Syrian onslaught? If they did, it would be the most drastic event to hit the Middle East since the March 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq. The second American invasion of an Arab land might this time be partnered or endorsed by a European power. To force the hands of the American and French presidents, the leaders of the Lebanese uprising are preparing a spectacular event to coincide with their summit. One proposal is for a hundreds of thousands of protesters to march through Beirut's streets and seize the parliament building. | |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |||
Junbulat warns of bloodless coup to oust Lahoud | |||
2005-01-05 | |||
BEIRUT Waleed Junbulat, the Lebanese Druze leader and head of the Progressive Socialist Party, said he expected a bloodless coup to be staged in Lebanon during the current year. He made the statement during his campaign against the extension of incumbent President Emil Lahoud's presidency for an additional term, saying: "We hope that we do not come to the point in history whereby seven members of the parliament requested, under public pressure, President Bushara Al Khori to resign."
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Karami Named Lebanese PM |
2004-10-21 |
Lebanon's president appointed staunchly pro-Syrian politician Omar Karami as prime minister on Thurdsday, asking him to form the next government in a move that consolidates Syria's hold on Lebanese politics. Karami replaces billionaire Rafik Hariri, who has had a long rivalry with President Emil Lahoud a close ally of Damascus and who announced a day earlier he would not continue as prime minister in the new government. The shake-up came as Syria was under new pressure from the United Nations to end its decades-long domination of its neighbor Lebanon. In defiance of the U.N. Security Council, Lebanon's parliament last month extended Lahoud's soon-to-expire six-year term by another three years. The issue has divided Lebanon's leadership, creating its worst political crisis since the end of the 1975-90 civil war, and put the country and Syria which has 14,000 troops in Lebanon in direct confrontation with the United States and France at the world's highest body. Hariri, who enjoys wide international contacts, was seen as less dependent on Syria than many other politicians. Analysts said his departure cleared the field for a Lebanese government whose ministers are all loyal to Syria, helping Damascus face international pressure. |
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Syria-Lebanon |
Iraq riches whisked to Syria |
2004-01-20 |
Syriaâs Central Bank and the Medina Bank in Lebanon are holding at least $2 billion in cash, as well as gold bullion and platinum, that was smuggled out of Iraq, according to a letter written on the stationery of the Syrian armyâs intelligence department. Thatâs a fair amount of cash. The letter says $1.3 billion was deposited in the Syrian Central Bank in an official "presidency" account, while another $700 million was placed in the Medina Bank. The document does not state the value of the gold and platinum, although it says these are also in the Syrian Central Bank. Baby Assadâs retirement fund? The handwritten letter to a Syrian exile in Europe, which also bears what appears to be the official stamp of the Syrian army intelligence department, says the deal was struck not long before a U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq early last year. The document was sent to Nizar Nayouf, an exiled Syrian human-rights activist and past winner of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organizationâs World Press Freedom Prize who is living in Paris. While the claims in the letter could not be further verified, Mr. Nayouf, a journalist and democracy activist who was released from a Syrian prison in May 2001, said past information provided by the same person had proved reliable. Maybe heâs got friends in high places. The letter names two members of the Lebanese parliament as go-betweens. One of them is Emil Lahoud, son of the pro-Syrian president of Lebanon. The second is Talal Arsilan, a member of the minority Druze ethnic group. A third go-between is listed as Karim Bakr Adouni, who is described as head of the al Qataib Party. All three should have someone else starting their cars. The letter says the go-betweens met with three top Syrian security chiefs before they left on their secret trip to Baghdad. One security chief is listed as Gen. Ghazi Kanaan, Syriaâs former chief of military intelligence in Lebanon, who has since been put in charge of Syriaâs political security department. Other sources say Gen. Kanaan helped provide means of transporting the money and precious metals across the Iraqi-Syrian border. The other senior Syrian officers are listed in the document as Brigadier Zulhimmah Shalish, who is believed to be the chief of President Bashir Assadâs Special Guards, and Gen. Ristom Ghazali, the chief of Syrian intelligence in Lebanon. Theyâd be the oneâs Iâd have handling the transaction. Lebanon has been under varying degrees of Syrian domination for more than two decades. Really? American authorities have long suspected that Syria took Saddam Husseinâs money into safe custody shortly before the war. Among other "things". The Treasury Department sent senior investigators to Syria in October and again this month, demanding that the Syrians open their books. Saddam is believed to have stashed vast sums of money around the world, including funds that he and close associates siphoned from the United Nationsâ oil-for-food program beginning in 1996. Money deducted from officialsâ salaries supposedly to support Saddamâs Baâath Party is also unaccounted for. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell went to Syria soon after the war ended and publicly warned Mr. Assad to cooperate in tracking Iraqi fugitives and money. "Donât make me send for Rummy!" "The U.S. has Syria firmly in its sights," said one analyst, "and Assad may feel compelled to admit the Iraqi money is there, if only to reduce American pressure for changing his regime." |
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Syria-Lebanon | |
Lahoud confers with Solana | |
2003-05-19 | |
Lebanese President Emil Lahoud has indicated that Syria and Lebanon are fighting together to realize the just and comprehensive peace in the region. During his meeting with High Representative for European Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana on Saturday, he appealed to the return of the occupied Golan to Syria and the occupied Shebaa Farms to Lebanon. He stressed that Lebanon is always working to achieve peace according to the international legitimacy and the UN related resolutions to which Israel doesn't commit itself. Lahoud called on for disarming the region from the mass destruction weapons.
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