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http://www.antiwar.com/orig/zunes.php?articleid=5017

All Set for War With Syria
by Stephen Zunes

The broader implications of the Feb. 14 assassination of former Lebanese
Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, who was seen by many as the embodiment of the
Lebanese people's efforts to rebuild their country in the aftermath of its
15-year civil war, are yet to unfold. A Sunni Muslim, Hariri reached out
to all of Lebanon's ethnic and religious communities in an effort to unite
the country after decades of violence waged by heavily armed militias and
foreign invaders.

The assassination took place against the backdrop of a growing political
crisis in Lebanon. This began in September 2004, when Syria successfully
pressured the Lebanese parliament, in an act of dubious constitutionality,
to extend the term of the unpopular pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud, a
move roundly condemned by the international community. Washington was
particularly virulent in its criticism, which can only be considered
ironic, given that the United States attempted a similar maneuver back in
1958 to extend the term of the pro-American president Camille Chamoun. The
result was a popular uprising suppressed only when President Dwight
Eisenhower sent in U.S. Marines.

Hariri had his critics, particularly among the country's poor majority,
whose situation deteriorated under the former prime minister's adoption of
a number of controversial neoliberal economic policies. A
multi-billionaire businessman prior to becoming prime minister, there were
widespread charges of corruption in the awarding of contracts, many of
which went to a company largely owned by Hariri himself. A number of
treasured historic buildings relatively undamaged from war were demolished
to make room for grandiose construction projects.

The size and sophistication of the explosion that killed Hariri, his
bodyguards, and several bystanders have led many to speculate that foreign
intelligence units may have been involved. Initial speculation has focused
on the Syrians, who had previously worked closely with Hariri as prime
minister. That relationship was broken by the Syrians' successful effort
to extend the term of President Lahoud, with whom Hariri had frequently
clashed as prime minister. As a result, Hariri was poised to lead an
anti-Syrian front in the upcoming parliamentary elections in May.

Hariri made lots of other enemies as well, however, including rival
Lebanese groups, the Israeli government, Islamic extremists, and powerful
financiers with interests in his multi-billion dollar reconstruction
efforts. A previously-unknown group calling itself "Victory and Jihad in
Syria and Lebanon" claimed responsibility for the attack, citing Hariri's
close ties to the repressive Saudi monarchy. As of this writing, there is
no confirmation that they were responsible for the blast or if such a
group even exists.

While Syria remains the primary suspect, no evidence has been presented to
support the charge. Damascus has publicly condemned the killings and
denied responsibility. Syria's regime, while certainly ruthless enough to
do such a thing, is usually not so brazen. They would have little to gain
from uniting the Lebanese opposition against them or for provoking the
United States and other Western nations to further isolate their
government.

The United States, however, has indirectly implicated Syria in the attack
and has withdrawn its ambassador from Damascus.


Syria's Role in Lebanon

Syrian forces first entered Lebanon in 1976 at the invitation of the
Lebanese president as the primary component of an international
peacekeeping force authorized by the Arab League to try to end Lebanon's
civil war. The United States quietly supported the Syrian intervention as
a means of blocking the likely victory by the leftist Lebanese National
Movement and its Palestinian allies. As the civil war continued in varying
manifestations in subsequent years, the Syrians would often play one
faction off against another in an effort to maintain their influence.
Despite this, they were unable to defend the country from the U.S.-backed
Israeli invasion in 1982, the installation of the Phalangist Amin Gemayel
as president, and the U.S. military intervention to help prop up Gemayel's
rightist government against a popular uprising. Finally, in late 1990,
Syrian forces helped the Lebanese oust the unpopular interim Prime
Minister General Michel Aoun, which proved instrumental in ending the
15-year civil war. (Given that General Aoun's primary outside supporter
was Iraq's Saddam Hussein, the United States quietly backed this Syrian
action as well.)

The end of the civil war did not result in the end of the Syrian role in
Lebanon, however. Most Lebanese at this point resent the ongoing presence
of Syrian troops and Syria's overbearing influence on their government.

The Bush administration, Congressional leaders of both parties, and
prominent media commentators have increasingly made reference to "the
Syrian occupation of Lebanon." Strictly speaking, however, this is not an
occupation in the legal sense of the word, such as in the case of
Morocco's occupation of Western Sahara or Israel's occupation of Syria's
Golan region and much of the Palestinian Gaza Strip and West Bank
(including East Jerusalem), all of which are recognized by the United
Nations and international legal authorities as non-self-governing
territories. Lebanon has experienced direct foreign military occupation,
however: from 1978 to 2000, Israel occupied a large section of southern
Lebanon and – from June 1982 through May 1984 – much of central Lebanon as
well, resulting in the deaths of thousands of Lebanese civilians.

A more accurate analogy to the current Syrian role would be that of the
Soviets in the Warsaw Pact countries of Eastern Europe during much of the
Cold War, in which these nations were effectively client states. They were
allowed to maintain their independence and distinct national institutions
yet were denied their right to pursue an autonomous course in their
foreign and domestic policies.

Currently, Syria has only 14,000 troops in Lebanon, mostly in the Bekaa
Valley in the eastern part of the country, a substantial reduction from
the 40,000 Syrian troops present in earlier years. This does not mean that
calls for an immediate withdrawal of Syrian forces and an end to Syrian
interference in Lebanon's political affairs are not morally and legally
justified. However, the use of the term "occupation" by American political
leaders is an exaggeration and may be designed in part to divert attention
from the continuing U.S. military, diplomatic, and financial support of
the real ongoing military occupations by Israel and Morocco.

In September of last year, the United States – along with France and Great
Britain – sponsored a resolution before the UN Security Council that,
among other things, called upon "all remaining foreign forces to withdraw
from Lebanon." UN Security Council resolution 1559 was adopted with six
abstentions and no negative votes and builds upon UN Security Council
resolution 520, adopted in 1982, which similarly calls for the withdrawal
of foreign forces.

The Bush administration, with widespread bipartisan Congressional support,
has cited Syria's ongoing violation of these resolutions in placing
sanctions upon Syria. Ironically, however, no such pressure was placed
upon Israel for violating UNSC resolution 520 and nine other resolutions
(the first being adopted in 1978) calling on Israel to withdraw its forces
from Lebanon. In fact, during the Clinton administration, the U.S. openly
called on Israel to not unilaterally withdraw from Lebanon as required,
even as public opinion polls in Israel showed that a sizable majority of
Israelis supported an end to the Israeli occupation, during which hundreds
of Israeli soldiers were killed.

Today, many of the most outspoken supporters of a strict enforcement of
UNSC resolution 1159 – such as Democratic Senator Barbara Boxer of
California – were also among the most prominent opponents of enforcing
similar resolutions when they were directed at Israel. In short, both
Republicans and Democrats agree that Lebanese sovereignty and
international law must be defended only if the government challenging
these principles is not a U.S. ally.

(Israel was finally forced out of Lebanon in May 2000 as a result of
attacks by the militant Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah. Four months
later, the Palestinian uprising against the Israeli occupation of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip began. Militant Palestinians claim they were inspired
by the fact that Israel ended its 22-year occupation not because of the
U.S.-led peace process and not because of the United Nations – which was
blocked by the United States from enforcing its resolutions – but because
of armed struggle by radical Islamists. Though, for a number of reasons,
such tactics are unlikely to succeed in the occupied Palestinian
territories, the support of extremist Islamist groups and the use of
violence by large sectors of the Palestinian population under Israeli
occupation can for the most part be attributed to the United States
refusing to support an Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon through
diplomatic means.)


What Next?

Whether or not the Syrians played a role in Hariri's assassination, his
death will likely escalate pressure by the Lebanese to challenge Syria's
domination of their government. Once centered primarily in the country's
Maronite Christian community, anti-Syrian sentiment is growing among
Lebanese from across the ethnic and ideological spectrum. Ultimately, the
country's fate will be determined by the Lebanese themselves. If the
United States presses the issue too strongly, however, it risks hardening
Syria's position and allowing Damascus to defend its ongoing domination of
Lebanon behind anti-imperialist rhetoric.

While there are many areas in which the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad
should indeed be challenged, such as its overbearing influence in Lebanon
and its poor human rights record, there is a genuine fear that increased
U.S. efforts to isolate the regime and the concomitant threats of military
action against Syria will undermine the efforts of Lebanese and Syrians
demanding change.

One major problem is that most charges against the Syrian government by
the Bush administration and the Congressional leadership of both parties
are rife with hyperbole and double standards.

For example, the United States has demanded that Syria eliminate its
long-range and medium-range missiles, while not insisting that pro-Western
neighbors like Turkey and Israel – with far more numerous and
sophisticated missiles on their territory – similarly disarm. The United
States has also insisted that Syria unilaterally eliminate its chemical
weapons stockpiles, while not making similar demands on U.S. allies Israel
and Egypt – which have far larger chemical weapons stockpiles – to do the
same. The United States has demanded an end to political repression and
for free and fair elections in Syria while not making similar demands of
even more repressive and autocratic regimes in allied countries like Saudi
Arabia and Uzbekistan.

Contrary to U.S. charges that Syria is a major state supporter of
international terrorism, Syria is at most a very minor player. The U.S.
State Department has noted how Syria has played a critical role in efforts
to combat al-Qaeda and that the Syrian government has not been linked to
any acts of international terrorism for nearly 20 years. The radical
Palestinian Islamist groups Hamas and Islamic Jihad have political offices
in Damascus, as they do in a number of Arab capitals, but they are not
allowed to conduct any military activities. A number of left-wing
Palestinian factions also maintain offices in Syria, but these groups are
now largely defunct and have not engaged in terrorist operations for many
years.

Much has been made of Syrian support for the radical Lebanese Shi'ite
group Hezbollah. However, not only has Syrian support for the group been
quite minimal in recent years, the group is now a legally recognized
Lebanese political party and serves in the Lebanese parliament. During the
past decade, its militia have largely restricted their use of violence to
Israeli occupation forces in southern Lebanon and in disputed border
regions of Israeli-occupied Syria, not against civilians, thereby raising
serious questions as to whether it can actually still be legally
considered a terrorist group.

Currently, the Bush administration has expressed its dismay at Russia's
decision to sell Syria anti-aircraft missiles, claiming that it raises
questions in regard to President Vladimir Putin's commitment against
terrorism. The administration has been unable to explain, however, how
selling defensive weapons to an internationally recognized government aids
terrorists.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Congressional leaders have also
accused Syria of threatening the Arab-Israeli peace process. However,
Syria has pledged to provide Israel with internationally enforced security
guarantees and full diplomatic relations in return for a complete Israeli
withdrawal from Syrian territory seized in the 1967 war, in concordance
with UN Security Council resolutions 242 and 338, long recognized as the
basis for peace. They have also called for a renewal of peace talks with
Israel, which came very close to a permanent peace agreement in early
2000. However, the right-wing U.S.-backed Israeli government of Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon has refused to resume negotiations and pledges it
will never withdraw from the Golan, thereby raising questions as to
whether it is really Syria that is primarily at fault.

Another questionable anti-Syrian charge is in regard to their alleged
support of Saddam Hussein and ongoing support of anti-American insurgents
in Iraq. In reality, though both ruled by the Ba'ath Party, Syria had
broken diplomatic relations with Baghdad back in the 1970s and was the
home of a number of anti-Saddam exile groups. Syria and Iraq backed rival
factions in Lebanon's civil war. Syria was the only country to side with
Iran during the Iran-Iraq war and contributed troops to the U.S.-led
Operation Desert Shield in reaction to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. Syria,
as a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council in 2002, supported
the U.S.-backed resolution 1441 demanding that Iraq cooperate with UN
inspectors or else face "severe consequences." The Syrian government has
substantially beefed up security along its borders with Iraq, and U.S.
military officials have acknowledged that relatively few foreign fighters
have actually entered Iraq via Syria. Most critically, there is no reason
that Syria would want the insurgents to succeed, given that the primary
insurgent groups are either supporters of the old anti-Syrian regime in
Baghdad or are Islamist extremists similar to those who seriously
challenged the Syrian government in 1982 before being brutally suppressed.
Given that Assad's regime is dominated by Syria's Alawite minority, which
has much closer ties to Iraq's Shi'ites than with the Sunnis who dominate
the Arab and Islamic world, and that the Shi'ite-dominated slate that won
the recent Iraqi elections shares their skepticism about the U.S. role in
the Middle East, they would have every reason to want to see the newly
elected Iraqi government succeed so U.S. troops could leave.

Despite the highly questionable assertions that form the basis of the Bush
administration's antipathy toward Syria, there have essentially been no
serious challenges to the Bush administration's policy on Capitol Hill.
Indeed, Democratic House leader Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic leader
Harry Reid have strongly defended President George W. Bush's policies
toward Iraq and Lebanon and helped push through strict sanctions against
Syria based upon these same exaggerations and double standards. (See my
article "The Syria Accountability Act and the Triumph of Hegemony," Oct.
27, 2003.) During the 2004 election campaign, Senator John Kerry, the
Democratic presidential nominee, criticized President Bush for not being
anti-Syrian enough.

Among the few dissenters is Senator Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who
expressed his concern to Secretary of State Rice during recent hearings on
Capitol Hill that the tough talk against Syria was remarkably similar to
what was heard in regard to Iraq a few years earlier. One of only eight
members of Congress to vote against the Syria Accountability and Lebanese
Sovereignty Restoration Act in the fall of 2003, he warned his fellow
senators that the language was broad enough that the administration might
later claim it authorized military action against Syria.

As long as the vast majority of Democrats are afraid to appear "soft"
toward the Syrian dictatorship and as long as so few progressive voices
are willing to challenge the Democrats, President Bush appears to have few
obstacles in his way should he once again choose to lead the country to
war.

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