Posted on 02/01/2004 12:00:27 PM PST by yonif
Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom told cabinet ministers Sunday that his ministry had launched a "campaign" aimed at ousting Syria from Lebanon.
Shalom, who was speaking at the weekly cabinet meeting, said Syria was an occupying power in Lebanon and that there were currently some one million Syrians in Lebanon. Shalom also called on the international community to stop ignoring Syria's control of Lebanon.
Shalom said he recently raised the issue in meetings with United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, in Davos, Switzerland, and with Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, who was in Israel last week.
The foreign minister said he planned to raise the issue in all his meetings with heads of state, and that Israel's diplomatic representatives abroad had been instructed to bring the issue to the attention of officials in the countries in which they were serving.
Due to budgetary problems, the Foreign Ministry does not plan to disseminate written material on the matter.
Shalom's remarks come against the backdrop of overtures by Syrian President Bashar Assad to Israel to renew peace talks. Assad first expressed readiness to re-engage Israel around the negotiating table in an interview in the New York Times in early December, but so far Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has reacted coldly to the Syrian leader's courting.
Israeli officials believe Assad's declaration of readiness to restart talks is aimed at Washington and is meant to reduce U.S. pressure on Damascus over any weapons of mass destruction and its behavior during the Iraq war.
Mofaz: Yassin isn't immune from attack
Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz said at the cabinet meeting that Hamas leaders, including the group's spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, were not immune from Israeli attack. Mofaz was replying to a question by Agriculture Minister Yisrael Katz (Likud) on whether the army had been given a directive not to harm Hamas leaders.
Meanwhile, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon spoke optimistically about Israel's relationship with Egypt. He said at the cabinet meeting that Egypt plays an essential role in its relationship with Israel.
Sharon said there was no crisis in Israel's relationship with Egypt or with Jordan. The prime minister recently attacked Jordan, saying it was leading the campaign against the security fence Israel is building in the West Bank and was a vigorous supporter of taking the matter to the International Court in The Hague.
Jordan, whose population is 60 percent Palestinian, fears that the fence will force a growing number of Palestinians living in the West Bank into its territory and that this poses an existential threat to the Hashemite Kingdom.
Only reason they have a kingdom is because they agreed to settle there instead of Israel. As usual the Arabs fear having to keep their word.
Funny how there is a 20+ year old Security Council resultion demanding Syria's "immediate withdrawl" from Lebanon...yet Israel must conduct a "campaign" to pressure them to actually leave? Meanwhile Israel is threatened with UN peacekeepers on its soil unless it complies with the outrageous "Road Map".
Jordan, whose population is 60 percent Palestinian, fears that the fence will force a growing number of Palestinians living in the West Bank into its territory and that this poses an existential threat to the Hashemite Kingdom.What a weird attitude! Just because the PLO, with the help of Syria, tried to overthrow the late King Hussein? Imagine. The Hashemites have been a minority in Jordan for a long while. It has gotten worse since the Kuwaitis chased them out of Kuwait after the Iraqis were driven out. Something to do with "Palestinian" [Arabs from Israel] guestworkers' support for the invasion of Kuwait.
It is the UN Security Council. The consensus interpretation in most of the world is that Syria would hypothetically withraw from Lebanon immediately after the destruction of Israel ...
The Syrian terrorist regime must be dismantled or destroyed before there will be peace. The same applies for the Iranian regime.
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