Posted on 03/02/2005 8:56:04 AM PST by GulfBreeze
Bush Demands That Syria Leave Lebanon Bush Demands That Syria Get Out of Lebanon, Saying the World Is Speaking With One Voice By NEDRA PICKLER The Associated Press Mar. 2, 2005 - President Bush on Wednesday demanded in blunt terms that Syria get out of Lebanon, saying the free world is in agreement that Damascus' authority over the political affairs of its neighbor must end now.
He applauded the strong message sent to Syria when Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier held a joint news conference on London on Tuesday.
"Both of them stood up and said loud and clear to Syria, `You get your troops and your secret services out of Lebanon so that good democracy has a chance to flourish," Bush said during an appearance at a community college in Maryland to tout his job training programs.
The world, Bush said, "is speaking with one voice when it comes to making sure that democracy has a chance to flourish in Lebanon."
The president's words, taken with those from Rice and others in the Bush administration this week, amount to the strongest pressure to date on Syria from Washington.
"Syria knows the concerns of the international community, and they know what they need to do to change their behavior and become a constructive member of the region and the international community," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said earlier Wednesday.
Turkish ambassador Osman Faruk Logoglu urged the administration to offer trade and other economic and diplomatic incentives to Syria.
"The chances of Syria withdrawing are greater than ever before," Logoglu told reporters. "But it is obviously going to take a long time."
Rice, in London to attend an international conference on Palestinian security and government reform, had said Tuesday that Syria is "out of step" with a growing desire for democracy in the Middle East.
The Bush administration also on Tuesday blamed terrorists based in Syria for last week's deadly suicide attack in Israel.
McClellan said the White House has "firm evidence" that Syria was home base for the terrorist attack in Israel that rocked the latest efforts for peace between Israel and the Palestinians. Bush made a similar point during a White House meeting with congressional leaders, participants said, and so did Rice while in London.
All key Lebanese political decisions are assumed to have a stamp of approval from the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Huge street demonstrations and Monday's resignation of the pro-Syrian Lebanese government marked the most serious challenge to Syrian authority in Lebanon since the end of the civil war that killed 150,000 and crushed the Lebanese economy in the 1970s and 1980s.
The events also were an opening for the Bush administration to press its wider goal of democracy across the Middle East and to throw a spotlight on what the United States contends is long-standing Syrian support for terrorists who are trying to undermine progress toward Israeli-Palestinian peace.
At the news conference with Barnier, Rice said their two countries would support the scheduled election this spring in Lebanon, perhaps by sending observers and monitors.
She also suggested international peacekeepers might be needed eventually and could help secure democracy for the Lebanese if Syria were to withdraw.
Assad indicated in an interview with Time magazine that he would withdraw Syria's 15,000 troops from Lebanon "maybe in the next few months." Later, however, a Syrian official speaking on condition of anonymity in Damascus questioned whether it could occur within months.
U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State David Satterfield, on Capitol Hill after a trip to Lebanon, was dismissive of what he called the "rhetoric" out of Damascus.
"Neither this government nor the people of Lebanon will believe anything other than what we see with our eyes," Satterfield told the Senate Foregin Relations Committee.
Separately, on the issue of Iran's nuclear program, Rice indicated that the administration was working with European leaders on a plan to offer Iran economic incentives in exchange for abandoning its nuclear ambitions. The United States has accused Iran of developing nuclear weapons, a charge Tehran denies.
"We are designing, I think, an important common strategy with Europe so that Iran knows there is no other way," Rice said in a brief interview aired Wednesday on NBC's "Today" show.
Until recently, the administration had opposed any rewards for Tehran's cooperation. But during the president's trip overseas last week, European leaders urged Bush to join them in offering incentives such as possible membership at some time for Iran in the World Trade Organization and the White House suggested he would consider that route.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Copyright © 2005 ABC News Internet Ventures
There has been a lot going on with Syria lately.
They turned over Saddams brother, they have made public statements about getting out of lebannon.
I believe that Bush knows that this is where the remnant of Saddams loyalists are along with the WMD's that were in Iraq. His very stong words, along with Condi's public statements are a prelude to something.
Now Bush is stepping up the pressure. To make these public statements has to mean follow up action is imminent if visible action is not taken by Syria soon.
That Syria declared that they would "stand" with Iran in the face of an Israeli attack was probably not the smartest prounouncement they could make.
Something has got to give.
Wonderful!
We can, and that's what President Bush is telling Assad.
Post #39
I love it when the President says this. He said it to Saddam, he's said it to Iran and now Assad.
It's ratcheting up.
If it were any other president other than George W. Bush there would be no historic times. It would just be the same old, same old that it's been for the last 50 years.
Obvious to whom, you yahoo? If we said "All Syrian troops and agents out of Lebanon in 2 weeks, or Damascus becomes a glass parking lot!", do you actually think Syria wouldn't be able to physically comply?
You bet your sweet ass they would!
So where are the peace loving hippie Hollywood freaks now? We have people demanding peace and freedom and non-violence and the wacko crowd are SILENT!!!!!!!!!!! Where you at Danny GLover, Alec Baldwin, Babs, Ashton, Sean Penn, .........etc.? Oh, and Michael Mooooooooooore!
I totally agree with Dubya on this
Yeah Syria get F*** out of Lebanon how long been there 30 YEARS?
"So where are the peace loving hippie Hollywood freaks now? We have people demanding peace and freedom and non-violence and the wacko crowd are SILENT!!!!!!!!!!! Where you at Danny GLover, Alec Baldwin, Babs, Ashton, Sean Penn, .........etc.? Oh, and Michael Mooooooooooore!"
They are waiting until GW says that it is time to take action against Syria.
Then as usual, they and the anti war gang will gather around the tyrants and try to protect them with anti war mantras, like "No Oil or War for Assad's A$$!"
Proud I voted for Dubya. I'm also a .....
Thanks for the ping Ernest.
Bold (and reasonable, in my view) statement. Is that that really Lawrence Saunders behind those Foster-Grants?
North Korea threatens to test missiles (unless US agrees to co-exist with NK)
They're still hung over from their over glorified industry banquet from Sunday night.
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