Archive for November, 2007

US and France warn Syria: don’t meddle in Lebanon elections

November 5, 2007

The U.S., France and the League of Arab Nations warned Syria on Saturday not to meddle in the upcoming Lebanese presidential elections.

Here’s a clip from the article explaining the conflict:

Presidential elections in Lebanon have been twice deferred because of a lack of consensus over who should replace the pro-Syrian President Emile Lahoud, whose term expires on November 24.  Fears are running high in Beirut that the standoff between the pro- and anti-Syrian camps could lead to two rival governments, a grim reminder of the end of Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war when two administrations battled it out.

The opposition has refused to recognize the legitimacy of the Western-backed government of Prime Minister Fuad Siniora since six pro-Syrian ministers quit in November last year.

United States invites Syria to Peace Party

November 5, 2007

The United States announced on Sunday that Syria is welcome to participate in the peace conference in Annapolis, Maryland, but only if it agrees to focus on Palestinian-Israeli issues, not on the Golan Heights.  Israel, Palestine and the U.S. are planning to meet to re-open the “roadmap to peace”  between the two nations.

Syria and Israel have remained officially at war since Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967. Syria has said it will not participate in any peace talks unless the Golan Heights is on the agenda.

Nearly 2 months on, all parties are silent on Syrian air strike

November 5, 2007

Nearly eight weeks have passed, and all is remains quiet regarding a Sept. 6 Israeli air strike on a Syrian military facility.  Many players have a lot at stake, including Syria, Israel, the US and North Korea.  Washington Post Deputy Editor Jackson Diehl spells out the diplomatic quandry in his editorial today:

“Now Israeli and U.S. officials are quietly debating whether to go on the record and allow those shock waves to explode across the Middle East and beyond. At stake are not only Israel’s tense relations with Syria, which so far has chosen not to retaliate, but a host of other pressure points: Israeli-Palestinian negotiations; the integrity of the International Atomic Energy Agency; Western leverage over Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad; and — not least — the fragile U.S. nuclear bargain with North Korea, which is believed to have aided the secret construction.”

Read the entire editorial here-

Syrian police kill a PKK demonstrator

November 5, 2007

The Syrian police killed one Kurdish demonstrator at a pro-PKK rally outside the Syrian village of Qamishli over the weekend. About 200 kurds had gathered there to show support for their PKK allies in northern Iraq and southern Turkey. The PKK, which advocates for a kurdish state in the region, has been involved in military skirmishes with the Turkish government after the PKK killed a dozen Turkish soldiers and kidnapped several others.  They have since been released.

Syria has strengthened its ties with Turkey recently. The two countries are discussing opening their borders for trade as Turkey clamps down on its own border with Northern Iraq, where the PKK is headquartered.

Syria has a sizeable kurdish population in the northern part of the country.

Syria won’t hold anti-Palestinian Authority conference

November 5, 2007

In response to outside pressure, Syria has forbidden a summit of Palestinian factions that was scheduled to be held in Damascus at the same time as the Annapolis Peace Conference. The factions included members of Hamas and the Islamic Jihad, which opposes the leadership of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Both groups are on the US Department of State’s list of terrorist organizations.

Abbas is scheduled to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Condoleeza Rice in Annapolis. The three will be attempting to reinitiate the “Roadmap to Peace”, a plan co-created in 2003 by the US, Europe and the UN.