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Washington seizes on UN report to threaten Syria
By Bill Van Auken
24 October 2005
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The Bush administration has seized upon the release of a United
Nations report implicating senior Syrian and Lebanese officials
in last Februarys assassination of Lebanons former
prime minister and billionaire businessman Rafik Hariri as a pretext
for escalating its threats against Damascus.
Backed by Britain, its principal ally in the Iraq war and occupation,
Washington is pressing for a meeting of the United Nations Security
Council this week to consider imposing international sanctions
against the Syrian regime of President Bashar Assad.
The UN report cannot be left lying on the table,
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said in a joint BBC interview
with her British counterpart, Foreign Minister Jack Straw. This
really has to be dealt with.
The report indicates that people of a high level of this
Syrian regime were implicated, declared Straw. We
also have evidence from the Mehlis report of false testimony being
given by senior people in the regime. This is very serious.
The report, prepared by German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis, represents
the interim findings of the UN-mandated investigation. Much of
it consists of a description of the political situation in Lebanon
in the period leading up to the assassination. The document makes
clear that there does not yet exist sufficient evidence to charge
anyone with Hariris killing, and that a presumption
of innocence applies to those supposedly implicated.
Calling the report politically biased, the Syrian
regime has vigorously denied the charge that top-level officialsincluding
two members of President Assads familywere involved,
and that it deliberately misled the UN investigators.
It is a political statement against Syria based on allegations
by witnesses known for their hostility to Syria, declared
information minister Mehdi Dakhlallah Friday in an interview with
the Qatar-based television network, Al Jazeera.
At a Saturday news conference in Damascus, Syrian Foreign Minister
Riyad Dawoodi also condemned the report as politically biased,
based upon presumptions and allegations, but no
proof.
Theres a presumption taken by the (UN) commission
that the very presence of Syrian troops and the Syrian security
organs in Lebanon is something which should imply so and so and
so, he said. You cannot put any weight on the idea
(that) because you are present in Lebanon, everything happening
in Lebanon ... should be done according to your knowledge and
you know about it.
The foreign minister continued: The report has a conclusion
that this operation, the assassination of late Prime Minister
Hariri, cannot be done without a means, a very sophisticated means
which belongs to a highly equipped security organ. And you just
look around you, who is very, very well equipped?
While Dawoodi did not elaborate, the statement reflected suspicions
within the region that the Israeli intelligence service, Mossad,
may have organized the assassination in order to destabilize both
Lebanon and Syria and create the conditions for US military actions
against the Damascus regime.
Just before the reports release, one of the principal
witnesses for the commissions allegations against Syrian
officials was arrested in Paris. The Lebanese government charges
that he gave the UN panel false testimony.
Mohammad Zuheir al-Siddiq, a Syrian émigré residing
in France, was detained on an international warrant and faces
extradition to Lebanon. Siddiq was reportedly the principal source
for claims that Syrian officials met to discuss the assassination.
Damascus has charged the former soldier with fraud and desertion.
He had lived since 1996 in Lebanon, where he was reportedly arrested
for theft.
While United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan has extended
the UN investigation until December 15, neither Washington nor
London appear willing to wait that long to demand conclusions
and punitive action. The extraordinary tension whipped up by the
Bush administration over what are the preliminary findings of
an investigation commission leaves no doubt as to Washingtons
determination to exploit the issue.
In a revealing comment, the German prosecutor Mehlis told the
German newsweekly Stern, I never wanted to be compared
with Hans Blix. But now I know how he must have felt. While
not providing a shred of evidence that Iraq had weapons of mass
destruction, the UNs chief weapons inspector Blix produced
a report accusing the Iraqi regime of failing to give sufficient
cooperation. The report was seized upon by the US to promote its
case for an unprovoked war.
In an article published Sunday, the Israeli daily Haaretz
pointed to the way in which these new findings against Syria are
being manipulated for similar political purposes:
[W]hy was an incomplete interim report necessary?
Haaretz asked. The answer lies in Washington and
Beirut. Washington needs some sort of incriminating evidence against
Syria to goad Damascus, regarded as abetting terror in Iraq, by
means of the UN Security Council. The Syria Accountability Act,
which allowed President George W. Bush to impose partial economic
sanctions, is not harsh enough, according to the US administration.
US trade with Syria is about $300 million a year, to Europes
more than $7 billion. Bush therefore needs European cooperation
to get Syrias attention.
Beyond sanctions, there are mounting indications that the Bush
administration is considering opening up a second front in its
war of aggression in Iraq. In an article entitled Plans:
Next, War on Syria, Newsweek magazine reported earlier
this month: Deep in the Pentagon, admirals and generals
are updating plans for possible US military action in Syria and
Iran.... The Defense Department unit responsible for military
planning for the two troublesome countries is busier than
ever, an administration official says.
There have been press reports of US attacks on Syria, some
attributed to fighting in western Iraq spilling over the border
and others to deliberate operations by American special forces
units.
Just days before the release of the UN panels interim
report, Secretary of State Rice appeared before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee to testify on US policy in the Middle East.
Asked if the administration was preparing for military action
against Syria, she replied, I dont think the president
ever takes any of his options off the table concerning anything
to do with military force.
Pressed by Republican Senator Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island
as to whether such action would not require a separate congressional
resolution, Rice demurred, I dont want to try and
circumscribe presidential war powers. And I think youll
understand fully that the president retains those powers in the
war on terrorism and in the war on Iraq.
Senator Christopher Dodd (Democrat-Connecticut) pressed further:
Is there a White House Syrian group, for instance, thats
meeting? Are we planning some action in Syria that we ought to
be aware of in this committee? Are we considering military action
against Syria?
Rice replied only, Im not going to get into what
the presidents options might be.
While the US military is already stretched to near the breaking
point by the ongoing war in Iraq, the launching of a new military
adventure in Syria cannot be ruled out. Facing an increasingly
desperate political crisis in Washington, the Bush administration
could well see another eruption of militarism as a way out.
There are clearly sharp divisions within the administration
over what policy to pursue. The Times of London reported
October 15 that US diplomats had proffered a deal to Damascus
modeled on the arrangement worked out between the Bush administration
and the Gaddafi regime in Libya. Syria would agree to cooperate
fully with the UN probeincluding turning over officials
charged in the Hariri casestop all activity in Lebanon and
effectively seal its border with Iraq. In return, Washington would
offer normalized relations.
According to several reports, however, the newspaper article
was itself the product of a deliberate leak from elements within
the administration who opposed any such deal and sought to sink
it by making it public.
Among the most opposed to such a compromise is Washingtons
ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton, who, as former under
secretary of state for arms control and international security,
attempted to make the case that Syria was developing weapons
of mass destruction while maintaining close ties to terrorist
groups. Speaking in London October 14, Bolton declared that
Syria should be dealt with very seriously.
The Assad regime has taken repeated steps aimed at placating
Washington. In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks,
Bashar Assad sent official condolences and provided information
and assistance to US intelligence, including allowing suspects
to be transported under the CIAs rendition program
to be tortured in Syria.
While Damascus publicly opposed the Iraq invasion, as a nonpermanent
member of the UN Security Council, Syria voted in 2001 for the
resolution demanding that Baghdad allow the return of the UN weapons
inspectors, and in 2003 for the measure authorizing UN cooperation
with the US occupation in Iraqi reconstruction.
The policy represented a continuation of the cooperation offered
by Bashars father, President Hafiz al-Assad, who provided
direct support for the US in the first Persian Gulf war.
Yet the predominant forces within the current US administration
have rejected all concessions by Damascus as meaningless. They
appear determined to press for regime change as part of a US strategy
to impose its strategic dominance over the region.
Playing a major role in these calculations is the tight connection
between US policy in the Middle East and that pursued by the right-wing
Likud bloc in Israel. Among those who prepared the US war in Iraq
were top officials who worked as Likud advisers. Among them were
David Wurmser, Vice President Dick Cheneys advisor on the
Middle East, Douglas Feith, the former undersecretary for policy
at the US Defense Department, and Richard Perle, the former chairman
of the Pentagons Defense Policy Board.
Together, these three drafted a 1996 document for incoming
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu titled A Clean
Break: a New Strategy for Securing the Realm, which advocated
a policy of rolling back Syria. This Likud policy
has been largely adopted by Washington.
If the Bush administration decides to carry out limited military
actionbombings, limited border attacks etc.or a full-scale
invasion and occupation, the consequences would prove catastrophic.
While the Syrian military would no doubt collapse under such an
attack, US forces would face another intractable war of resistance
which would enjoy widespread support from the countrys 18
million people and the broad masses throughout the Arab and Muslim
world.
Moreover, there is no credible pro-American opposition in Syria.
The Reform Party of Syria, backed by Washington and based in the
US, is virtually unknown in the country itself. To the extent
that the Assad regime faces any real opposition, it is from Islamic
fundamentalists who support the insurgency in Iraq, or from sections
of the military and intelligence forces that are supposedly implicated
in the Hariri assassination.
While one can only speculate as to who was ultimately responsible
for the murder of Hariri, a stench of hypocrisy surrounds the
US-led campaign to use the killing to isolate and undermine the
Syrian regime.
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw declared: The international
community can show that it is standing up for justice. You simply
cannot tolerate a situation where one state decides to deal with
problems of another state by assassinating the other states
leaders.
Yet both Washington and London have tolerated Israels
use of assassination as a state policy in the region for many
years. Just last month, the press reported that Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon convened an emergency meeting of the Israeli cabinet
which voted to resume its practice of targeted assassinations.
On the very night the UN report was released, an Israeli assassination
squad sneaked into the West Bank village of Anabat and shot to
death Raéd Ahmad Shehada, a local leader.
He was only the latest in a long line of victims of Israeli
assassinations aimed against the Palestinian leadership, from
the murder of Abu Jihad in Tunis in 1988 to the more recent killings
of Hamas founder Sheikh Ahmad Yassin in March 2004 and his successor,
Dr. Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi, barely one month later.
Needless to say, such killings invoke no calls for sanctions,
much less threats of military action, from either Washington or
London.
See Also:
Mossad, the CIA and Lebanon
The assassination of Rafiq Hariri: who benefited?
[17 February 2005]
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