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World Alarmed Over Growing US
War Appetite PARIS, 16 April 2003 — World leaders and press reacted with a mixture
of caution and dismay yesterday to the United States’ escalating threats
to Syria, which it accuses of harboring Iraqi leaders and chemical
weapons. While Britain and Spain said the situation could be defused peacefully,
former colonial power France said it had seen no evidence to back up
Washington’s allegations, which Syria angrily denies. Having toppled Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq, the US has turned its
attention to Syria, accusing it of supporting terrorism, developing
weapons of mass destruction and harboring members of Saddam’s regime
fleeing from neighboring Iraq. Top aides to US President George W. Bush stopped short of threatening
military action but warned Damascus to take stock of the US-led rout in
Iraq. Syria yesterday condemned Washington’s “threats and accusations”
and said they were inspired by Israel, the strongest military power in the
Middle East. Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, in remarks published yesterday,
repeated charges that Baghdad had moved military equipment to Syria on the
eve of the conflict. But he did not say whether that included weapons of
mass destruction. Syria’s ambassador to the United Nations, Rostom Al-Zoubi, told CNN:
“We don’t have weapons of mass destruction. It is Israel which has a
big arsenal of weapons of mass destruction. Why focus on Syria at this
time, forgetting Israel. This is ... double standard.” British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush’s staunchest ally in the war
on Iraq, has pursued a more cautious line on Syria, whose President Bashar
Al-Assad last year had tea with the queen at Buckingham Palace. Blair’s spokesman said yesterday Damascus was showing signs of a
willingness to meet Washington’s demands to cooperate and Britain’s
Minister for Middle East Affairs Mike O’Brien visited the Syrian capital
on Monday. “The first thing is that we want the Syrians to cooperate, and we
believe that there is some evidence — in terms of border controls and so
on — of the Syrians starting to respond,” said the spokesman. “But
let’s take this step by step, and see how the Syrians respond to the
overtures that we have made.” Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar said Syria would not be the
target of any military action and that he hoped to talk to Assad as soon
as possible. “Syria is and will remain a friend of Spain and will not be
the target of any military action,” Aznar said during a visit to Warsaw.
“I am convinced that the conflict (in Iraq) will not spread to other
countries in the Middle East.” But France insisted it had seen no evidence to back up the charge made
by US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that Syria conducted chemical
weapons tests in the past year. “The situation around the world is
dangerous enough, without our targeting one country or another on the
question of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction,” French
European Affairs Minister Noelle Lenoir said. On Monday, French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin called for
restraint and moderation following the US accusations, saying dialogue was
the only way to resolve problems in the Middle East as a whole. “Do not
let us underestimate the fact that this region today — whether at
government or popular level — is experiencing a very deep feeling of
unease, frustration, sometimes even humiliation,” de Villepin said at a
meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Luxembourg. “In such
cases we must to talk to each other,” he added. Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said he had seen no evidence to
back up the US charges but urged Damascus to “act wisely”. “So far
we don’t have any evidence, but maybe the Americans have, we will see of
course,” he said. A senior Iranian official said yesterday that any US military action
against Syria should be seen as a prelude to action against Tehran. And if
Syria were attacked, Iran should not remain neutral as it has during the
US-led war on Iraq, Mohsen Rezaie, the secretary of Iran’s powerful
Expediency Council, told a press conference. “The US threats against Syria are not comparable to the threats
against Iran, but any action against Syria is a prelude to one against
Iran,” said Rezaie, who headed Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards under
former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. Rezaie said Syria is one of four countries along with Iraq, Iran and
Afghanistan “where the US wants to gain a foothold.” Syria’s policies towards Israel and the presence of its army in
Lebanon “have made US and Israeli interests converge in pursuing a US
presence there.” The “Americans will soon present Iran with a series of new
demands,” he said without elaborating. Russian newspapers claimed yesterday that Washington was acquiring an
appetite for war following the fall of Saddam and that US tanks were now
honing in on Syria. “Appetites grow in a war,” ran the Kommersant business daily’s
front-page banner headline. “The Iraqi crisis has been transformed into
a Syrian one.” The Gazeta splashed a photograph of Bush fumbling with a sandwich as he
brings it to his mouth under the headline: “Iraq will be left over for
dessert. The US will strike Syria next.” On Monday, a top Russian Foreign Ministry official urged the United
States to exercise more restraint. “Harsh statements from Washington in
relation to Damascus can only complicate the already difficult situation
in the Middle East after what has already happened,” said Deputy Foreign
Minister Alexander Losyukov. “We would urge greater restraint.” But Russian state-run television, which has been caustic in its
coverage of the Iraq war, failed to comment on the Western threats against
Syria Tuesday morning. However, the Moscow press appeared united in its defense of Damascus,
with some arguing that the United States’ only policy in the Middle East
was one aimed at defending Israel. “Clouds over Damascus,” the Vremya
Novostei, seen as close to President Vladimir Putin, warned. It argued
that US plans to defend Israel “may be a reason for war breaking out
between the US and Syria”. Leading US newspapers urged the Bush administration to avoid military
threats against Syria. Liberal dailies The New York Times and the Los
Angeles Times warned Washington against being viewed as too belligerent in
the Arab world. “Washington will only live up to the worst expectations of the Arab
world if it now adopts a belligerent military approach to every nation in
the region that it dislikes,” The New York Times said. In Britain, columnist Amir Taheri said, “The hawks are wrong to urge
war against Syria,” but added: “The British government is right to
insist that Syria’s leaders can be persuaded to play ball. Assad’s
regime has always understood the reality of power and the need to back
down when in a position of weakness.” Support for political and human rights reforms, an end to support for
terrorist groups and public support for the Middle East peace “road
map” could all be won, Taheri said.
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's.
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