http://www.dawn.com/2007/03/07/int9.htm

Syria holds the key to Iraq’s stability



By Khaled Yacoub Oweis


DAMASCUS: When Syria takes a seat along the United States at a meeting
to discuss Iraq this week, it will have something to offer to stop the
chaos, but Damascus has set a price for its cooperation.

Damascus wants Washington, Israel’s ally, to help it regain the Golan
Heights, occupied by Israel in 1967, and resolve a standoff over a
UN-backed tribunal and an inquiry that implicated Syrian officials in
the 2005 killing of former premier Rafik al-Hariri.

The killing pushed Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon after two
decades of military presence and most Western countries shunned Damascus
as a pariah state.

“The Americans want our help on Iraq, but still try and embarrass us at
every turn, saying Syria knows what it needs to do while offering us
nothing in return,” a Syrian official said.

“Everything America has done so far has been to promote Israel’s
interest and sectarian tension in the region,” he said.

Deputy Foreign Minister Fayssal al-Mekdad is expected to head Syria’s
delegation to the conference in Baghdad on March 10. Iran and the
permanent United Nations Security Council members will also attend,
despite US allegations that Damascus and its ally Tehran are helping the
insurgency.

It will be the first high-level meeting attended by US and Syrian
diplomats since early 2005, when a US official visited Damascus to urge
it to stop fighters from allegedly crossing its border into Iraq.

Syria has made it clear that before considering helping Washington and
Britain, its own interests must be addressed.

Despite being shunned by Washington for years, Damascus remained
confident the United States would eventually seek its help to solve the
upheaval ushered by its 2003 invasion of Iraq.

One million Iraqi refugees have been driven to Syria since.

Syrian officials say a timetable for a US pullout would help convince
insurgents to stop attacks and raise Syria’s influence with them.
Washington has refused to set a schedule.

“No one is thinking about imposing defeat on US forces. On the contrary,
we are trying to find an honourable withdrawal for them,” Syrian Foreign
Minister Walid al-Moualem told Just World News website.

Moualem has been pushing to adopt a friendlier tone to the Baghdad
government – a joint declaration in January condemned rebel attacks on
the U.S.-backed Iraqi army and security forces – but hardline officials
also influence Syrian policy.

Since the US invasion of Iraq, Iraqi officials say Syria has been
hosting large numbers of former intelligence operatives and officers in
the now defunct Iraqi army.

It allowed a meeting in January of senior members of Iraq’s Baath Party,
which ruled Iraq for 35 years, and held talks recently with Sunni tribal
leaders from the Ramadi province to gauge prospects of initiating
national reconciliation.

Syria has also been cultivating Sheikh Harith al-Dari, an influential
Sunni religious leader opposed to the US presence.

No one doubts that Saddam’s former officer core present in Syria has
links to the insurgents.

“Syria is a rear base for former officers,” Damascus-based Iraqi
parliamentary deputy Mishaan al-Jubouri said.

“Even if Dari asks the resistance to stop its operations without a
promise of US withdrawal and an overhaul of the political system devised
under occupation they will not listen,” said Jubouri, who fell out with
Baghdad’s Shia-led government and is wanted in Iraq on corruption
charges he denies.

Iraqi politicians who visited Syria recently said that Syria together
with Iran could play a main role in stopping the violence by pressuring
groups they influence – mainly Sunni rebels in the case of Syria and
Shia fighters loyal to populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in the case of Iran.

Although no one has a grip of all the groups behind attacks on US forces
or sectarian violence, Western diplomats say Syria’s intelligence
gathering capability, its links to a range of Iraqi groups and border
with Iraq ensure it can help the United States and Britain on the ground
if it chooses to.

They say a deal between Syria and the United States could emerge in the
long term with the secular government in Damascus starting to worry
about the spread of Al Qaeda sympathisers.

“Conditionality will not work,” a Western diplomat said.

“Syria can change its approach of supporting all sides in Iraq, stop
infuriating America, do more effort to sealing the border and then go to
Washington and say ‘look what we have done’.”—Reuters

+++




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