 |
|
Boucher
said Bush summoned the ambassador for “urgent consultations.”
|
WASHINGTON,
February 15 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – US President
George W. Bush recalled the US ambassador to Syria Tuesday, February
15, following the killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq
Al-Hariri in Beirut.
Meanwhile,
the UN Security Council condemned on Tuesday the “terrorist”
Beirut bombing, vowing to punish the killers.
US
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Bush summoned
Ambassador Margaret Scobey back to the United States for “urgent
consultations,” Reuters news agency reported.
“It's
too early to know who was responsible for this attack,” White House
spokesman Scott McClellan told reporters.
But
he said: “Syria's presence in Lebanon is a destabilizing force. The
terrorist attack further underscores the importance of letting the
Lebanese people control their future.”
Hariri
was killed Monday, February 14, in a deadly blast that targeted
his motorcade passing in a western Beirut area near St. George
hotel.
The
shattering explosion also claimed the lives of at least 14 others,
including several bodyguards of the 60-year-old charismatic Lebanese
figure.
Pundits
believed that the assassination was more likely the work of state
security agencies.
They
maintained that the magnitude of the blast indicated it was
masterminded by state intelligence services not just by toothless
militant groups.
An
online statement attributed to Al-Qaeda denied Tuesday that its men in
the Levant were behind the killing of Hariri, holding Syrian, Israeli
or Lebanese intelligence services accountable for it.
Syrian
Vice President Abdel Halim Khaddam arrived in Beirut on Tuesday to pay
his last respects to Hariri, accusing Israel of killing the former
premier.
Intense
Pressures
The
recalling of the US ambassador is a sign of US displeasure over
Syria's military presence in Lebanon, which the White House cited on
Monday in condemning the assassination of Hariri, Reuters said.
Washington
has been warning Syria for months that it may face new sanctions for
allegedly supporting Palestinian “militants” and allowing money
and arms to flow to “insurgents” in Iraq, the news agency added.
Last
week the State Department called in Syria's ambassador, a sign a
decision may be near.
“We
are constantly reviewing all our diplomatic options across the board,
including further sanctions under Syria Accountability Act,” a
senior administration official told Reuters.
On
December 12, Bush signed into law the Syria Accountability bill which
allows economic
and diplomatic sanctions on the Arab country.
The
White House said on Monday that it would work with its allies and the
UN Security Council to end Syria's “occupation” of Lebanon.
Spokesman Scott McClellan said that the people of Lebanon “deserve
the freedom to choose their leaders, free of intimidation, terror and
foreign occupation.”
“The
US will consult with other governments in the region and on the
Security Council about measures that can be taken to punish those
responsible for this terrorist attack, to end the use of violence and
intimidation against the Lebanese people, and to restore Lebanon's
independence,” he said.
Security
Council Condemns
Meanwhile,
the UN Security Council on Tuesday condemned the “terrorist"
bombing in Beirut that killed Hariri and expressed concern over
“further destabilization” in Lebanon, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported.
The
council also asked UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to deliver a report
into Monday's killing, something the UN chief said earlier the United
Nations was prepared to do.
In
a statement, the 15-nation council also recalled last year's
resolution calling for the withdrawal of all Syrian forces from
Lebanon.
“The
bottom line of this statement is that other countries should get out
of (Lebanon's) business,” said Anne Patterson, the US deputy
ambassador to the United Nations.
“We've
had a long history of conversations with them and the message does not
seem to be getting through. Syria has got to get out of Lebanon,”
Patterson added.
The
United States and France had engineered a UN resolution in September
telling Syria to withdraw its troops from Lebanon and refrain from
intervening in Lebanese affairs.
They
further sought, though unsuccessfully, to head off a constitutional
amendment that extended the term of Lebanese president Emile Lahoud,
by three years.