Asad says there is a "Big Chance for Peace"
This Elaph article explains that Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, after meeting with Asad yesterday, said that Syria's president believes there is a "big chance" for peace in the region and renewed talks for Golan.
دمشق: أعلن وزير الخارجية التركي عبد الله غول اليوم أن دمشق وأنقرة تريان "فرصة كبيرة" للسلام في الشرق الأوسط وذلك بعد لقائه الرئيس السوري بشار الاسد. وقال غول للصحافيين "كنت سعيدا جدا للاستماع الى الرئيس الاسد ونائبه (فاروق الشرع) يقولان ان هناك فرصة كبيرة لاعادة تحريك عملية السلام في المنطقة". واضاف ان تركيا "تؤمن في ذلك. نعتقد ان هناك فرصة لتحقيق السلام. على كل واحد ان يستخلص العبر من الاحداث الاخيرة"، في اشارة الى الهجوم الاسرائيلي على لبنان.
Asad will be speaking on Dubai TV this evening. Let's see if he repeats this phrase and how he tries to repair relations with Gulf rulers.
The 'New Middle East' Bush Is Resisting
By Saad Eddin Ibrahim
WASHINGTON POST Wednesday, August 23, 2006; A15
President Bush and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice may be quite right about a new Middle East being born. In fact, their policies in support of the actions of their closest regional ally, Israel, have helped midwife the newborn. But it will not be exactly the baby they have longed for. For one thing, it will be neither secular nor friendly to the United States. For another, it is going to be a rough birth.
What is happening in the broader Middle East and North Africa can be seen as a boomerang effect that has been playing out slowly since the horrific events of Sept. 11, 2001. In the immediate aftermath of those attacks, there was worldwide sympathy for the United States and support for its declared "war on terrorism," including the invasion of Afghanistan. Then the cynical exploitation of this universal goodwill by so-called neoconservatives to advance hegemonic designs was confirmed by the war in Iraq. The Bush administration's dishonest statements about "weapons of mass destruction" diminished whatever credibility the United States might have had as liberator, while disastrous mismanagement of Iraqi affairs after the invasion led to the squandering of a conventional military victory. The country slid into bloody sectarian violence, while official Washington stonewalled and refused to admit mistakes. No wonder the world has progressively turned against America.
Against this declining moral standing, President Bush made something of a comeback in the first year of his second term. He shifted his foreign policy rhetoric from a "war on terrorism" to a war of ideas and a struggle for liberty and democracy. Through much of 2005 it looked as if the Middle East might finally have its long-overdue spring of freedom. Lebanon forged a Cedar Revolution, triggered by the assassination of its popular former prime minister, Rafiq Hariri. Egypt held its first multi-candidate presidential election in 50 years. So did Palestine and Iraq, despite harsh conditions of occupation. Qatar and Bahrain in the Arabian Gulf continued their steady evolution into constitutional monarchies. Even Saudi Arabia held its first municipal elections.
But there was more. Hamas mobilized candidates and popular campaigns to win a plurality in Palestinian legislative elections and form a new government. Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt achieved similar electoral successes. And with these developments, a sudden chill fell over Washington and other Western capitals.
Instead of welcoming these particular elected officials into the newly emerging democratic fold, Washington began a cold war on Muslim democrats. Even the tepid pressure on autocratic allies of the United States to democratize in 2005 had all but disappeared by 2006. In fact, tottering Arab autocrats felt they had a new lease on life with the West conveniently cowed by an emerging Islamist political force.
Now the cold war on Islamists has escalated into a shooting war, first against Hamas in Gaza and then against Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel is perceived in the region, rightly or wrongly, to be an agent acting on behalf of U.S. interests. Some will admit that there was provocation for Israel to strike at Hamas and Hezbollah following the abduction of three soldiers and attacks on military and civilian targets. But destroying Lebanon with an overkill approach born of a desire for vengeance cannot be morally tolerated or politically justified -- and it will not work.
On July 30 Arab, Muslim and world outrage reached an unprecedented level with the Israeli bombing of a residential building in the Lebanese village of Qana, which killed dozens and wounded hundreds of civilians, most of them children. A similar massacre in Qana in 1996, which Arabs remember painfully well, proved to be the political undoing of then-Prime Minister Shimon Peres. It is too early to predict whether Prime Minister Ehud Olmert will survive Qana II and the recent war. But Hezbollah will survive, just as it has already outlasted five Israeli prime ministers and three American presidents.
Born in the thick of an earlier Israeli invasion, in 1982, Hezbollah is at once a resistance movement against foreign occupation, a social service provider for the needy of the rural south and the slum-dwellers of Beirut, and a model actor in Lebanese and Middle Eastern politics. Despite access to millions of dollars in resources from within and from regional allies Syria and Iran, its three successive leaders have projected an image of clean governance and a pious personal lifestyle.
In more than four weeks of fighting against the strongest military machine in the region, Hezbollah held its own and won the admiration of millions of Arabs and Muslims. People in the region have compared its steadfastness with the swift defeat of three large Arab armies in the Six-Day War of 1967. Hasan Nasrallah, its current leader, spoke several times to a wide regional audience through his own al-Manar network as well as the more popular al-Jazeera. Nasrallah has become a household name in my own country, Egypt.
According to the preliminary results of a recent public opinion survey of 1,700 Egyptians by the Cairo-based Ibn Khaldun Center, Hezbollah's action garnered 75 percent approval, and Nasrallah led a list of 30 regional public figures ranked by perceived importance. He appears on 82 percent of responses, followed by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (73 percent), Khaled Meshal of Hamas (60 percent), Osama bin Laden (52 percent) and Mohammed Mahdi Akef of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood (45 percent).
The pattern here is clear, and it is Islamic. And among the few secular public figures who made it into the top 10 are Palestinian Marwan Barghouti (31 percent) and Egypt's Ayman Nour (29 percent), both of whom are prisoners of conscience in Israeli and Egyptian jails, respectively.
None of the current heads of Arab states made the list of the 10 most popular public figures. While subject to future fluctuations, these Egyptian findings suggest the direction in which the region is moving. The Arab people do not respect the ruling regimes, perceiving them to be autocratic, corrupt and inept. They are, at best, ambivalent about the fanatical Islamists of the bin Laden variety. More mainstream Islamists with broad support, developed civic dispositions and services to provide are the most likely actors in building a new Middle East. In fact, they are already doing so through the Justice and Development Party in Turkey, the similarly named PJD in Morocco, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Hamas in Palestine and, yes, Hezbollah in Lebanon.
These groups, parties and movements are not inimical to democracy. They have accepted electoral systems and practiced electoral politics, probably too well for Washington's taste. Whether we like it or not, these are the facts. The rest of the Western world must come to grips with the new reality, even if the U.S. president and his secretary of state continue to reject the new offspring of their own policies.
The writer is an Egyptian democracy activist and a sociology professor at the American University in Cairo. He is currently a public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, writing his prison memoirs.
19 Comments:
Excerpts of the interview have already been published:
No U.N. troops on Lebanon-Syria border, says Assad
DAMASCUS, Aug 22 (Reuters) - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Tuesday rejected Israeli demands for the deployment of international troops on the Lebanese-Syrian border to stop what Israel says is the smuggling of arms to Hizbollah.
"This would be a withdrawal of Lebanese sovereignty and a hostile position," Assad said, according to advance excerpts of an interview to be aired by Dubai Television on Wednesday.
...
Assad said, however, that his country would not draw the border until Israel withdrew from the area.
"There will be no drawing of the border in the Shebaa Farms before the Israeli forces leave it," Assad said.
"Hizbollah's victory was enough to teach Israel a lesson, that the isolation of Syria has failed and that anyone who tries to isolate Syria isolates himself from basic issues."
...
Assad said there was still a chance that peace could be achieved in the Middle East but that the window of opportunity could close within weeks or months.
Reuters
I hope that Kofi Annan is clever and accepts a general declaration by Syria that the farms are Lebanese while demarcating the border using the Lebanese title deeds.
Meanwhile, the German weekly Die Zeit is reporting that the two Lebanese bomb plotters may have links to al-Qa'ida. According to the report, Youssuf Mohamad E.H. was an acquaintance of Redouane E. H., a German citizen of Moroccan origin who also lived in Kiel. He is suspected of being a member of al-Qa'ida, working as a messenger for Said Bahaji, and was detained by German police in Hamburg on July 8, 2006.
Douste-Blazy has already replied to the Syrian president:
French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said one of the main tasks for a strengthened U.N. force would be to enforce the arms embargo.
He shrugged off a warning by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on Tuesday that deploying foreign troops on the Syrian-Lebanese border would be a hostile act.
"The reinforced UNIFIL will have two major tasks," Douste-Blazy told France 2 television. "On the one hand it will be there to enable the Lebanese army to deploy (to the south) and on the other hand it will be there to safeguard the arms embargo at all the borders. I repeat, at all the borders."
WP
As I said before, forget any talk of "Lebanese sovereignty".
Are we back to the days of gunboat diplomacy?
March 14 and sponsors are outsourcing the military force to disarm HA. This will not go down well with many lebanese. Looking from their (March 14) point of view i fail to imagine any other way to disarm HA. But the more they push Syria and Iran into a corner the more likely it is that a regional war will break out. Then again that could be the end game.
Top 10 achievements by 14 March people
Let's see what the 14 March guys were able to deliver to Lebanon in 18 months after the "Hurrie, Siede, Iste'lel" (freedom, sovereignty, independence) much celebrated rhetoric:
1- Sovereignty: They managed to replace 12 thousands Syrian military troops, with a 15 thousands military troops from god knows how many countries.
2- More Sovereignty: They replaced the Lebanese soldiers on the country's borders, with troops from 4 countries.. so far!
3- Even more Sovereignty: They replaced a prime minister that answers only to the President of Syria, with one that accepts orders from the neo-cons in Washington, the Saudi regime, the French and a long list of other masters.
4- Independence: They replaced the daily trips to Rustum Ghazale's residence for more frequent daily trips to Jeffrey Feltman's residence.
5- More Independence: They replaced receiving orders from AbdulHalim Khaddam to receiving them from Condoleeza Rice.
6- Freedom: They replaced the Syrian deterrence from Israel full-scale wars with a US protection from Israel wars.. oh and that one specifically worked best.
7- Security: They replaced the situation where the only party that does not have Lebanese blood on its hands gets to keep its arms, with the situation of arms being stocked continuously by all the war lords that have the bloodiest history of committing massacres in Lebanon.
8- More Security: They replaced a restricted and controlled sectarian political system with an exploding one on the verge of civil war.
9- Even more Freedom, Independence and Sovereignty: They replaced airports and borders controlled by Lebanese officials with the situation where every flight and its passengers are forced to be searched in Amman airport by Israeli agents before they are allowed to go to Beirut.
10- Economy: They replaced an economic system worth 40 Bn$ in debt with an almost failed-state under the mercy of Sa'ad Hariri.. if the skillful and well-connected Rafiq couldn't solve it, I'm sure that little Hariri and his group of opportunistic cronies would do a great job.
The things that the 14 March block did not manage to change (or more accurately I should say "not wanted to change") were the famous Lebanese nepotism, racism and sectarianism that were controlled and kept under a lid. They have developed a striving hate-society in which they managed to amplify all its nepotism, racism and sectarianism syndromes up to unprecedented levels.
If that's freedom, sovereignty and independence then THANK YOU LORD for all the authoritarian Arab regimes.
** If that's freedom, sovereignty and independence then THANK YOU LORD for all the authoritarian Arab regimes.** IDAF
I bet you that this is all you are after: Keeping those dictators in place.
Your desires to keep Arab dictators in place have nothing to do with the "smart" reasons you have listed in your post. You have defended Arab dictators before the war took place, and in particular, the Syrian regime. True or false?
I agree with Idaf, 100%. My only disagreement is the comparison at the end of an otherwise excellent essay. There is no need or reason to wish one despicable regime (the Makhloof/Asad) over another, equally unimpressive (the Hariri thugs) one. The irony, however, is that everyone knows the illegitimacy and the disgusting treachery of the Makhloof/Asad (in that order) junta; so Syrian managed to work around it – while the junta provides a general sense of security as they fill their pockets. The problem with the March 14 thugs in Lebanon is they hide under the veil of democracy. Actually, communist China is closer to democracy that these profiteers are. While I feel sorry for my Syrian brothers for the past 40 years and wish them fast and honorable relief, I feel even more sorry for my Lebanese cousins for the past 80 years!
Top 10 achievements by 14 March people (REPRESENTING MOST OF THE LEBANESE NOT ONLY INSIDE LEBANON BUT SPECIALLY ABROAD, REMIND THAT 18 MILLON FROM LEBANESE DIASPORA LIVING ABROAD HAVE NO RIGHT TO VOTE)
Let's see what the 14 March guys were able to deliver to Lebanon in 18 months after the "Hurrie, Siede, Iste'lel" (freedom, sovereignty, independence) much celebrated rhetoric:
1- Sovereignty: They managed to replace 12 thousands Syrian military troops, with a 15 thousands military troops from god knows how many countries.
15 SOLDIERS WHO WILL NOT HAVE RELATIONS WITH MAFIAS NOR INTERESTS IN STEALING, ETC. SINCE THEY HAVE A RIGHT SALARY.
2- More Sovereignty: They replaced the Lebanese soldiers on the country's borders, with troops from 4 countries.. so far!
IF THEY ACOMPLISH THE REAL GOAL OF A BORDER, WHICH SHOULD BE PREVENTING FROM SMUGGLING UNDESIRABLE GOODS AND PERSONS, THEY SHOULD BE WELCOMED.
3- Even more Sovereignty: They replaced a prime minister that answers only to the President of Syria, with one that accepts orders from the neo-cons in Washington, the Saudi regime, the French and a long list of other masters.
ALL GOVERNMENTS IN THE WORLD, EXCEPT THOSE OF USA AND ISRAEL, NEED TO ASK BEFORE THEY ACT. SO, UNLESS YOU THINK SUPERMAN IT IS BETTER TO ASK THE WISEMEN THAN ACTING LIKE A CRAZY.
4- Independence: They replaced the daily trips to Rustum Ghazale's residence for more frequent daily trips to Jeffrey Feltman's residence.
THE PRIVATE INTERESTS AND IMPLICATIONS OF THE FIRST SAYS NOTHING GOOD ABOUT HIM. MUCH BETTER TO TAKE ADVISE FROM THOSE WHO CONTROL THE REIGNS OF THE WORLD.
5- More Independence: They replaced receiving orders from AbdulHalim Khaddam to receiving them from Condoleeza Rice.
IN THIS POINT MAYBE IT WOULD BE BETTER RECEIVING ORDERS FROM KHADDAM SINCE HE WAS A VERY EXPERIENCIED AND WISE POLITICIAN (AS WELL AS THE RIGHT HAND OF HAFEZ) BUT UNFORTUNATELY HE IS NO ANYMORE THERE...
6- Freedom: They replaced the Syrian deterrence from Israel full-scale wars with a US protection from Israel wars.. oh and that one specifically worked best.
THE GOAL IS, AFTER THE CRISIS, NOT NEEDING ANYONE FOR AVOIDING ANY WAR. LEBANON WANTS TO BE FREE COUNTRY INTEGRATED IN THE GLOBAL WORLD. WITHOUT ARMY AND ACCEPTING THE RULES OF THE ECONOMIC RULERS.
7- Security: They replaced the situation where the only party that does not have Lebanese blood on its hands gets to keep its arms, with the situation of arms being stocked continuously by all the war lords that have the bloodiest history of committing massacres in Lebanon.
HEZBALLAH HAS MORE LEBANESE BLOOD IN THEIR HANDS FOR THE LAST 15 YEARS THAN ANY OTHER PARTY.
8- More Security: They replaced a restricted and controlled sectarian political system with an exploding one on the verge of civil war.
DO NOT INSULT OUR INTELLIGENCE. THE LEBANESE POLITICAL SYSTEM AND TENSIONS ARE THE RESULT OF FOREIGN INTERVENTION. ANYWAY IT SEEMS THAT YOU LIKE TO HAVE AN "EVER CONTROLLED" LIFE. THEY MAYBE ON THE VERGE ON CIVIL WAR BUT THEY ARE ALSO ON THE VERGE OF A REAL DEMOCRATIC AND FREE SYSTEM. IF THEY HAVE SUCCESS, AFTER 5 YEARS, LEBANON WILL BE SEEN AS THE MODEL FOR MANY OTHER DICTATORSHIPS.
9- Even more Freedom, Independence and Sovereignty: They replaced airports and borders controlled by Lebanese officials with the situation where every flight and its passengers are forced to be searched in Amman airport by Israeli agents before they are allowed to go to Beirut.
THIS IS NOT A PERMANENT SOLUTION. IT SEEMS THEY WANT TO "CLEAN" LEBANON UNTIL THEY CLEAR IT FROM UNDESIRABLE INFLUENCES.
10- Economy: They replaced an economic system worth 40 Bn$ in debt with an almost failed-state under the mercy of Sa'ad Hariri.. if the skillful and well-connected Rafiq couldn't solve it, I'm sure that little Hariri and his group of opportunistic cronies would do a great job.
GREAT ECONOMIC SYSTEMS ARE BASED ON CAPITALISM AND DEMOCRACY, CONSUMPTION AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR AN INCREASING MIDDLE CLASS. IT IS SOON TO TALK AS YOU DO.
The things that the 14 March block did not manage to change (or more accurately I should say "not wanted to change") were the famous Lebanese nepotism, racism and sectarianism that were controlled and kept under a lid. They have developed a striving hate-society in which they managed to amplify all its nepotism, racism and sectarianism syndromes up to unprecedented levels.
I THINK IN A WAY YOU ARE RIGHT IN THIS POINT. BUT NOTICE MANY OF THE EXPRESSIONS OF LEBANESE PEOPLE ARE EXPRESSIONS OF PEOPLE WITH EDUCATION LEVELS ASPIRING TO LIVE WITH DIGNITY IN A LANDSCAPE OF INTELECTUAL POVERTY. ALSO IT IS THE MOST DIFFICULT COUNTRY REGARDING CONFESSIONALISM.
ANYWAY NEPOTISM, RACISM AND SECTARIANISM ARE MUCH MORE INTENSIVE IN MOST OF ARAB COUNTRIES. BUT SINCE THERE IS NOT FREEDOM WE CANNOT APRECCIATE IT. SEE IRAK FOR EXAMPLE.
If that's freedom, sovereignty and independence then THANK YOU LORD for all the authoritarian Arab regimes.
I SEEMS YOU NEED DICTATORSHIP, BUT I AM SURE YOU DO NOT LIVE IN A POOR QUARTER AND YOU DO NOT HAVE TO SEND YOUR CHILDREN TO WORK IN ORDER TO MAKE MONTH'S END. REAL DEMOCRATS ACCEPT THE FATALITY THAT THERE ARE RULING AND RICH CLASSES BUT THAT AN ECONOMIC SYSTEM MUST BE FOUND FOR MOST OF THE PEOPLE TO LIVE IN DIGNITY (ECONOMICAL AND INTELECTUAL). MOST OF WEST EUROPEAN COUNTRIES GOT IT. LEBANON MAY BE THE FIRST IN THE ARAB WORLD.
Syria regime further isolated. May implode soon! Will Egypt kick Syrian ambassador soon?
مصر وسوريا
• في القاهرة، حملت صحيفة "الجمهورية" المصرية الحكومية على سوريا متهمة جيشها بارتكاب "مجازر" في حق اللبنانيين والمعارضين السوريين. وجاء في افتتاحية موجهة الى السفير السوري في القاهرة يوسف الاحمد ان "الجيش المصري فعل الكثير لانقاذكم على مر التاريخ... اما جيشكم البطل الهمام حامي الديار فسجله ناصع في قتل اللبنانيين وقتلتم الالاف من ابناء شعبكم في حلب وحماه عندما تمردوا على حكم الاسد الاب".
ونشرت الافتتاحية غير الموقعة ردا على خطاب السفير السوري خلال اجتماع وزراء الخارجية العرب الذي بحث الاحد في القاهرة في الازمة الاخيرة في لبنان، وقد اثنى فيه على "انتصار حزب الله" في النزاع مع اسرائيل.
وجاء في الافتتاحية "ان السفير ورئيسه وبلده كانوا في مقاعد المتفرجين طوال الاجتياح الاسرائيلي للبنان".
Looking for a good Syrian General
Split On How To Deal With Syria
Olmert insistent against negotiations; some observers say no resolution without Damascus.
Stewart Ain - Staff Writer
’Convergence” may soon be relegated to the scrap pile of outdated Mideast phrases, along with “road map” and so many others.
For as Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert struggled this week to shore up his faltering coalition and respond to calls for a commission to examine the failures of the war in Lebanon, his plans to withdraw from large areas of the West Bank were shelved.
The government’s new focus will be on repairing the damage Hezbollah rockets caused in the north and strengthening that area in the event of further attacks.
“It will be more of a security government” rather than the planned peace government committed to a unilateral West Bank pullout, said Yossi Alpher, a political analyst.
He added that this would allow Olmert to “realign with the right wing because the government will now be dedicated to dealing with the growing threat from Islamists and Iran and Hezbollah and Hamas.”
But Yaron Ezrahi, a political science professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said such an approach would ignore one of the lessons of the war: the Israel Defense Forces is not the fighting force is used to be because instead of preparing for war it was performing police duties in the territories.
“The occupied territories are not cards that give us strength but cards that poison us,” he said.
“I have students who belong to elite [IDF] units and who were sent to Lebanon unprepared,” Ezrahi said. “They had not rehearsed for war games. [Instead], they had accompanied school buses from one spot to another [in the territories].”
He said the Olmert government has been “at least seriously and perhaps fatally weakened. The next government is going to be committed to withdrawal from the occupied territories because this is the wish of the people. A stronger leader could perform the withdrawal with minimal internal strife.”
Olmert’s coalition began teetering this week when Labor Party members of the Finance Committee continued to balk at cutting 22 percent from welfare services to help pay for the war. The coalition chairman, Avigdor Yitzhaki, said the alliance would collapse if Labor, which is a part of the coalition, continued to oppose the cuts. He said he would ask Olmert to broaden the coalition.
The possibility that Olmert could be toppled, however, does not appear likely at this time, according to Tamir Sheafer, an associate professor of political science at the Hebrew University. He predicted the prime minister will survive by bringing into the government “people from the right,” which will keep him from making any peace overtures with Israel’s neighbors.
Meanwhile, Olmert appeared determined to maintain a naval and air blockade of Lebanon to prevent Iran and Syria from rearming Hezbollah. He said this week the blockade would not be removed until “robust” United Nations forces are deployed to assist Lebanese troops in enforcing Security Council Resolution 1701, which calls for Hezbollah to disarm.
Israeli forces carried out a pinpoint commando raid last weekend in the Bekaa Valley deep inside Lebanon and not far from the Syrian border in an effort to halt the flow of arms to Hezbollah. Once UN forces move along the Lebanese-Syrian border, Olmert said Israel would withdraw from Lebanon.
But Syrian President Bashar Assad told a Dubai television interviewer this week that he would not permit international troops on his border because it “would be a withdrawal of Lebanese sovereignty and a hostile position.”
Alpher said that comment was directed at the Lebanese government in an effort to “intimidate” it.
“Syria knows it can’t intimidate France or Italy,” he said, referring to two countries that have promised to contribute troops to the UN force. “This was a message to Lebanon to back off and let the arms flow through.”
Eran Lerman, director of the American Jewish Committee’s Israel/Middle East Office, said the international community should tell Assad that the Security Council resolution will be implemented and that if he tries to interfere “he will be considered an international outlaw.”
If that does not happen, Israel will have to enforce the border between Syria and Lebanon, he said, because the most destructive missiles in the recent war came “from Syrian-supplied missiles that reached Haifa and had very destructive warheads and carried little ball bearings.”
For Israel to permit Syria to resupply Hezbollah “would be a criminal act,” said Lerman, who was critical of Israeli leaders who this week called for peace talks with Syria. He said it “sends the wrong signal.”
“It might be logical to see if we could wean” Assad from Iran, “but if it ends up sending a message that he will be rewarded for what he is doing, it is highly problematic, and Olmert squashed it at an early stage.”
He was referring to Olmert’s remarks this week that he had ruled out talks with Syria, calling it the “single most aggressive member of the axis of evil. … I am the last person who will say I want to negotiate with Syria.”
But Internal Security Minister Avi Dichter told Israel Army Radio that he would be willing to give up the Golan Heights in exchange for peace with Syria.
“We have paid similar territorial prices for peace with Jordan and Egypt,” he said.
Although saying that the water question and the Lake Kinneret were serious and difficult issues, Dichter said that “any political process is preferable to a military-fighting process.”
Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, pointed out that Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni appointed Yaakov Dayan to explore possible talks with Syria. And he said there were reports that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also wanted to explore such talks but that President George W. Bush rejected the move.
“It seems a logical avenue to explore,” Alterman said, referring to talks with Syria. “I think the Syrians want to talk even more than we want to talk to them — and we can use that to our advantage.”
Although Assad delivered a forceful speech Aug. 15, filled with threats and bravado, Shibley Telhami, who holds the Sadat chair at the University of Maryland, said the “hot rhetoric was to cover up the fact that he is looking for a way to start negotiations.”
“I suspect that Israel is going through a phase of assessments,” he added. “I don’t think Israel has made up its mind. I do not believe there is a bilateral solution to a Lebanese-Israeli settlement without an arrangement with Syria.”
Telhami said the Syrian-Iranian alliance is one of convenience and that “given the right options, Syria could be persuaded to join the peace camp with Egypt and Jordan. There are people in the Arab world, particularly in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, who think Syria could be persuaded because [its alliance with Iran] is not an ideological one.”
Telhami pointed out that in 1990, Syria was persuaded to join the coalition that fought against Saddam Hussein in the first Gulf War.
Because the U.S. has refused to talk to Syria since it withdrew its ambassador from Damascus following the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in February 2005 — an action many believe was ordered by Syria — the U.S. could not host any Syrian-Israeli talks, noted David Newton, an adjunct scholar at the Middle East Institute.
Instead, he said, the Syrians would want an international conference that could be put together by the authors of the roadmap for peace — the U.S., Russia, the European Union and the United Nations.
Newton, who was America’s deputy chief of mission in Syria from 1979-81 and a top U.S. representative to the Israeli-Syrian talks in Madrid in 1992, said he agreed with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s observation that you “can’t make war without Egypt or peace without Syria.” He said Assad feels encouraged by the way Hezbollah fought Israel.
Assad wants the Golan Heights back, said Newton, and he will “continue to make life difficult until he gets it back. … He is not in as strong a position as his father, and this is an opportunity to strengthen himself and show himself a leader.”
Newton said the reason he believes Israeli-Syrian talks are needed to resolve differences between the two countries is because the war in Lebanon demonstrated that there are limitations to using military power for political ends.
“The Israeli people are beginning to sense the limitations, just as Americans are sensing the limitations in Iraq,” he said. n
Here is a list of other articles in this section
A Burning Issue
Environmentalists are scrambling to assess damage from the war in the north.
Despite War, U.S. Jews Not Shifting Rightward
Hawks don’t see American Jews moving toward more hard-line positions, despite trauma over land withdrawals.
Soldiers In Search Of Accountability
Just back from Lebanon, Israeli reservists call for Olmert’s resignation for a war, they say, that was badly executed.
Back to top
2000 - 2006 The Jewish Week, Inc. All rights reserved. Please refer to the legal notice for other important information.
Featured Jobs powered by JewishCareers.com
Direct Care - P/T
Brooklyn, NY
OHEL
Senior Sales Associate
New York, NY
The Jewish Museum
View All Jobs
More Local Jobs Post Jobs Post Your Resume Search Jobs
Lebanese army continues deployment north, east and south. Confiscates HA weapons despite objections from HA members. Lebanese people rally behind army. Syria may close borders - who cares? Less arms will come through..... that's even better - a window blowing wind is better shut....less headache. Siniora determined to take all actions to assert Lebanese sovereignty. Bashar may go to hell - he is better off close to dad.
في المقابل، عزز الجيش اللبناني مراكزه في القطاع الشرقي بإدخاله مزيداً من الآليات المدرعة الى شبعا وكفرشوبا والقرى المحيطة. وعلمت «الحياة» ان دورية للجيش وضعت يدها قبل يومين على كمية من الأسلحة والذخائر التابعة لـ «حزب الله»، كانت موجودة في أحد المخابئ. وقالت مصادر ثقة لـ «الحياة» إن بعض عناصر الحزب اعترضوا على ذلك، لكن الاتصالات أدت الى تجاوز الاعتراض، خصوصاً ان الاجراء يأتي في سياق الاتفاق الذي جرى داخل مجلس الوزراء، عند اعطاء الضوء الأخضر للجيش بالانتشار الاسبوع الماضي، على حق الجيش في المداهمة والتفتيش عن السلاح. وهو اتفاق استند الى تفاهم على مجموعة من المبادئ بين الجيش وقياديين من «حزب الله» من جهة، وبين قياديين من الحزب ومسؤولين في الأمم المتحدة والقوات الدولية، في سياق البحث الذي جرى بين الجانبين حول آلية تطبيق القرار 1701. ومن ضمن تلك المبادئ ان يصادر الجيش أي سلاح يجده وقبول الحزب كل اجراءات وقف الأعمال العدائية من جانبه. ورفضت مصادر رسمية تأكيد أو نفي نبأ مصادرة اسلحة لـ «حزب الله»، وأحجمت عن تحديد نوعها، لكن مصادر ثقة قالت لـ «الحياة» إن الحزب تعامل بمرونة مع هذه القضية في نهاية المطاف، في سياق تعاطيه المرن مع الجهود الهادفة الى تثبيت وقف الأعمال العدائية، يهمه الانتقال الى وقف نار دائم بالتزامن مع جهوده لتكريس عودة النازحين من جهة واستعجاله اعادة الإعمار من جانب الحكومة.
وفي سياق انتشار الجيش ايضاً، أبلغ مصدر عسكري لبناني وكالة «فرانس برس» ان مجموعة ألوية انتشرت بأعداد كثيفة على كل المعابر على الحدود الشرقية والشمالية مع سورية «لمنع تهريب أي ممنوعات»، وان الجيش يعتزم القيام بدوريات بالمروحيات على الحدود قريباً، في سياق تعزيز تدابير الرقابة.
Ameen..
This is called sarcasm. If you don't get it then I can't help you there. Let me make things clear for people who don't get sarcasm: believe me, I have no passion for Arab regimes, but even more, I can't stand hypocrisy and opportunistic exploitation of citizens’ feelings and aspirations. At least Arab dictators are honest about them being, well.."dictatorship" and illegitimate "regimes" who’s sole goals is hanging to their chairs. They know it and some claim to be working towards improving things (naturally under internal or external pressure), but the 14 March thugs get on my nerves with their exploitation of people's aspirations and conspiring against fellow Lebanese with foreign powers for narrow political goals. Hell, they are almost the same people who destroyed Lebanon once before! People who still defend them after their “achievements” (mostly out of sectarian reasons) annoy me even more.
Sandroloewe said about the 14 March guys that they are "REPRESENTING MOST OF THE LEBANESE NOT ONLY INSIDE LEBANON BUT SPECIALLY ABROAD".
It seems that you forgot my friend that if it wasn't for Hizballah's accepting to ally with them, they surely would have not been in control of Lebanon now. They became a "majority" because of 2 reasons: (1) They exploited the flawed election law they mastered for years. The one that used to get those same warlords to power when they were "Syrian allies" before.
(2) They begged HA to be their ally during the elections and they got the votes of its constituency (people that would not have voted for them otherwise). So stop lecturing us about how much "representing" the 14 March people are. I don’t think they were representing a majority then and for sure not now. If they are, then why are they so afraid of calls for re-elections now? They are accusing people who ask for re-election (like Aoun) of treason!
These people used a combination of sectarian inflammation, extreme nepotism, sucking up to foreign powers, unethical political tricks (with HA) and of course “fear politics” (they mastered as warlords) to get to office. I could not stand their style back then and now after their obvious “national achievements” and the exploitation of a national crisis to score sectarian political goals, I am even more disgusted.
This post has been removed by a blog administrator.
** but the 14 March thugs get on my nerves with their exploitation of people's aspirations and conspiring against fellow Lebanese with foreign powers for narrow political goals** IDAF
I agree with you on this point.
not all the people of 14 march,should be blamed,I am sure that some of them are very happy to see HA victory, they are elated with what HA achieved,they are proud of the heroic actions that has been performed by the great heros of HA, they are telling all the arab to see how the lebanese are better than three arab armies togather could not do,only small group of 14 of march,that are unhappy,afraid and they are full of hatred, they wanted for HA to be defeated, those are the lebanese forces,and their leader Samir Jaja,but not the rest of 14 of march, Iam sure that Seniora,Hariri and Junblat are very patriotic,and happy for HA victory.
Aoun says Hizbullah should try to 'reassure' rest of country
BEIRUT: The head of the Reform and Change parliamentary bloc, MP Michel Aoun, urged Hizbullah on Thursday to "reassure" the Lebanese, adding that the resistance should become "legitimate" by being placed under the control of the state. "The resistance achieved a victory and hence should be part of the government according to the Lebanese equation," Aoun said in an interview with NBN late Wednesday.
Aoun added that the Christian community was also part of this victory.
"The resistance cannot be disarmed after it has achieved a victory, but its weapons should belong to the state and become legitimate," the MP said.
The Daily Star
Sounds reasonable to me. Preserve the defensive capabilities of the resistance, but put them under the authority of the state.
norman, you are an idiotic "scroll troll".
Prof. Landis, keep up the good work and may I express my sorrow and indigation at some of the serial trolls around here.
t-desco, Hizballa being integrated in the Lebanese army is the solution ,(may be he can teach the Lebanese army and if posible the Syrian one how to fight )the problem is how to trust that the Lebanese gov reresents the Lebanese people , for that to happen i beleive a change in election laws in Lebanon is very needed to push faith in System and a one man one vote should be the answer.
Nur ,you are not worth answering.may be you can tell me how to link an artcle instead as i am not computer savey like you and others.that will make you more usefull to me.
Post a Comment
Links to this post:
Create a Link
<< Home