http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/world/middleeast/israeli-military-responds-after-patrols-come-under-fire-from-syria.html?ref=global-home&_r=0

Syrian Opposition Leader Quits Post
By ANNE BARNARD and HALA DROUBI
Published: March 24, 2013 
BEIRUT, Lebanon – The president of the main Syrian exile opposition group, who 
had pushed for political talks between the Syrian government and its armed 
opponents, resigned on Sunday, days after the coalition elected an interim 
prime minister who rejects such dialogue. 

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Associated Press
Moaz al-Khatib at a conference in Istanbul on March 18.  The leader of the 
Western-backed Syrian opposition coalition announced his resignation on Sunday. 


Moaz al-Khatib, the president of the Syrian Opposition Coalition, announced his 
resignation in an online statement. He blamed the Syrian government for 
ignoring his overtures and bitterly criticized unnamed nations for placing too 
many conditions on aid to Syria and manipulating the crisis for their own 
interests. 
“They support whomever is ready to obey, and the one who refuses has to face 
starvation and siege,” Mr. Khatib said in his statement. “We will not beg to 
satisfy anyone, and if there is a decision to execute us as Syrians, so let it 
be.” 

It was not clear which of the opposition’s many frustrations Mr. Khatib, often 
cryptic in his public statements, was referring to — the reluctance of Western 
countries to send arms to rebels for fear they will fall into the hands of 
extremist fighters, meddling by the uprising’s foreign supporters in the choice 
of a prime minister, or both. 

His resignation appeared to be an at least short-term blow to prospects for a 
political solution to the conflict. And it underscored the challenges the 
opposition coalition still faces in establishing legitimacy and effective 
leadership, four months after dozens of countries recognized it as the 
legitimate representative of Syrians. 

Mr. Khatib, a prominent imam who had preached at the revered Umayyad Mosque in 
Damascus and sided early on with the revolution, had drawn criticism from some 
in the coalition for being willing to talk with some members of Mr. Assad’s 
government. But others saw him as a moderate who was ideally suited to reach 
out to Damascus residents who support the government or fear the rebels, and he 
had begun to build respect among some fighters inside Syria. 

Last week, the coalition, divided and under pressure to choose a temporary 
leader to try to administer rebel-held areas, selected a relatively unknown 
Syrian-born Texas businessman, Ghassan Hitto, as prime minister. 

Mr. Hitto quickly made clear that he sees no room for dialogue with anyone in 
the government, after a conflict that has killed more than 70,000 people. 

“The regime missed the most valuable opportunities to implement national 
comprehensive reconciliation,” Mr. Khatib said in his statement. 

Mr. Khatib projected an earnest, unpolished persona and never fit the profile 
of a politician, sometimes failing to build support for controversial moves 
before announcing them and then posting mournful statements on Facebook about 
how he had been misunderstood. Some coalition members and anti-government 
activists in Syria said they wished he had stayed in office to push back 
against the foreign interference he spoke of, rather than resigning abruptly 
and emotionally. 

A coalition member familiar with Mr. Khatib’s thinking, who spoke on condition 
of anonymity to discuss politically sensitive matters, said Mr. Khatib resigned 
over interference from Saudi Arabia, a key backer of the Syrian uprising. 

The member said that Saudi Arabia threatened to cut off funding and split the 
coalition if it did not select its favored candidate for prime minister, Assad 
Mustafa, who had promised to appoint a Saudi favorite as defense minister. 
That, the member said, enraged members, who then hastily settled on Mr. Hitto, 
who was backed by Qatar and the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood. 

Another member, Mustafa Sabagh, who is close to the Saudi government, denied 
the Saudis had interfered and said he believed Mr. Khatib resigned over the 
many conditions Western countries had placed on aid to the uprising. 

Mr. Hitto was elected with a large majority, but some members complained about 
the process, and the Free Syrian Army, the umbrella group for many of the rebel 
battalions, said on Saturday that it rejected him because he was not a 
consensus choice. 

“We in the Free Syrian Army do not recognize Ghassan Hitto as prime minister 
because the National Coalition did not reach a consensus,” Louay Mekdad, the 
Free Syrian Army’s media and political coordinator, said, raising further 
questions about the interim government’s ability to establish authority. 

Mr. Khatib promised to keep working for Syria outside official channels. “The 
door to freedom has opened and won’t close,” he said, “not just in the face of 
Syrians but in the face of all peoples.” 

Some read that remark as a possible dig at Gulf monarchies like Saudi Arabia 
and Qatar that support the Syrian uprising but keep a tight political clampdown 
on their own citizens – but given Mr. Khatib’s oblique style, it was hard to 
tell. 

The turmoil in the opposition came as the Israeli military said it hit a Syrian 
position after two Israeli patrols came under fire from across the decades-old 
Israeli-Syrian cease-fire line in the Golan Heights, adding to fears that the 
Syrian conflict will spill over its borders. 

Israel’s newly appointed defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, warned in a statement 
that “Any violation of Israeli sovereignty and fire from the Syrian side will 
be answered with the silencing of the source of fire,” adding, “The Syrian 
regime is responsible for every breach of sovereignty. We will not allow the 
Syrian army or any other groups to violate Israel’s sovereignty in any way.” 

Israel captured part of the Golan Heights, a strategic plateau that overlooks 
northern Israel, from Syria in the 1967 war and has since effectively annexed 
it in a move that has not been internationally recognized. 

The military said that two military patrols came under fire from the Syrian 
side on Saturday night and Sunday morning, escaping without injury. Israeli 
forces fired back at the source, a machine gun position, destroying it, 
according to the military. 

The military did not specify whether the Syrian position belonged to Syrian 
government forces or rebels. Rebels in recent days have expanded their grip on 
the area and control several miles along the boundary after overrunning a 
military base on Saturday. 


Isabel Kershner contributed reporting from Jerusalem, and Hania Mourtada from 
Beirut.


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