http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13165161/
<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/13165161/>
Syria official: `Ready to be soldier' for Hezbollah  A regional
war would be `most welcome,' Damascus diplomat says
Updated: 10:25 a.m. ET Aug. 6, 2006

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Syria's foreign minister offered on Sunday to join
Hezbollah and said his country's army had standing orders to respond
immediately to any Israeli attacks.

"If you wish, I'm ready to be a soldier at the disposal of
(Hezbollah chief) Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah," Walid Mouallem told
reporters on arrival in Lebanon in a symbolic gesture.

Asked about concerns that the war in Lebanon could spill over into a
regional war, Mouallem said: "Most welcome."

"Syria is readying itself and doesn't hide its (military)
readiness. We will respond to any Israeli aggression immediately,"
he added.

Mouallem said later after talks with President Emile Lahoud: "If
Israel attacks Syria by any means, on the ground, in the air, our
leadership ordered the armed forces to reply immediately."

Mouallem, the first senior Syrian official to visit Lebanon since Syria
ended three decades of military presence in April Last year, criticized
a U.S.-French draft of a U.N. Security Council resolution to end the
war.

"This draft resolution is a description for the continuation of the
war because, unfortunately, it's not fair for Lebanon, therefore
it's a plan for the possibility of the eruption of civil war in
Lebanon and nobody, nobody, nobody has anything to gain from that
happening, except Israel," he said.

Syria, with Iran, is a key backer of Hezbollah. A 26-day-old Israeli
offensive designed to cripple Hezbollah in Lebanon has boosted the
militant group's popularity among Arabs and cemented a personality
cult around the charismatic Nasrallah.

"Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and the Lebanese national resistance today
are defending the dignity of the Arab nation and the unity of the nation
like it is defending the dignity of Lebanon, the unity of Lebanon and
the Lebanese people," Mouallem said.

The veteran diplomat, who will attend an Arab foreign ministers'
meeting in Beirut on Monday, dismissed allegations that Hezbollah was
fighting a proxy war for Iran and Syria.

"This talk is silly. Hezbollah is fighting the battle of
Lebanon."





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