Sunday, October 05, 2008

Major powers warn against any Syrian move into Lebanon


Bombings, border deployment have raised suspicions
By Hussein Abdallah
Daily Star staff
Saturday, October 04, 2008

Major powers warn against any Syrian move into Lebanon

BEIRUT: French, Russian, and American officials were quoted by the Beirut press on Thursday as rejecting any form of Syrian military intervention in Lebanon following Syria's recent deployment of 10,000 soldiers on the border between the two countries. Damascus has sought to explain the deployment as a means of countering smuggling, but a number of Lebanese politicians have accused Syria of wanting to send its army to Lebanon under the pretext of fighting Islamist extremists in the North. An-Nahar newspaper quoted an official US source Friday as saying that US Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Welch had told Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem that the United States totally rejected any Syrian military intervention in Lebanon.

The source said Welch made it clear to Moallem that recent bombings in Damascus and Tripoli should not be used to justify any kind of military intervention in Lebanon.

At least 17 people were killed in a car explosion in Damascus last Saturday. Two days later, a similar blast targeting Lebanese troops killed seven people and wounded 33 others in Tripoli.

Future Movement leader MP Saad Hariri lashed out at Syrian President Bashar Assad in the aftermath of the Tripoli bombing, accusing Assad of trying to insinuate that Lebanon, the North in particular, was responsible for the apparently deteriorating security situation in Syria. Prior to Hariri's remarks, Assad told the head of Lebanon's Journalists Union, Melhem Karam, that North Lebanon had become "a real base for extremism and constitutes a danger for Syria."

Meanwhile, a French source was quoting as telling the pan-Arab Al-Hayat newspaper on Friday that Paris believed it was not possible for Syria to send its troops to Lebanon despite Assad's recent remarks.

In a related development, former MP Fares Soueid of the anti-Syrian March 14 Forces said on Friday that French authorities have recently assured a delegation from the March 14 Forces that Syria would not be given the green light to return to Lebanon.

The delegation, including Soueid, MP Marwan Hamadeh, MP Samir Franjieh, and National Liberal Party chief Dori Chamoun, met with French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner for talks in Paris on Thursday that addressed the mounting tensions between Lebanon and Syria.

Meanwhile, a Russian official was quoted as telling the local Al-Mustaqbal newspaper on Friday said that Moscow was also against any form of foreign intervention in Lebanon.

The paper added that Deputy Foreign Minister Alexander Sultanov stressed in a meeting with Iran's ambassador to Russia, Golam Reza Ansari, Moscow's complete commitment to stability in Lebanon.

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