DAMASCUS,
March 2, 2005 (IslalmOnline.net & News Agencies) – Syria will
withdraw its military forces from Lebanon in the coming few months,
said Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, amid strenuous Syrian efforts
seeking an Arab cover to fend off mounting pressures over its presence
in its Arab neighbor.
“It
(withdrawal) should be very soon and maybe in the next few months. Not
after that,” Assad said during an interview with the American Time
magazine Tuesday, March 1.
Following
the assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri,
Syria has been coming under mounting international pressure,
especially from the United States and France, to withdraw its
14,000-strong forces from Lebanon.
The
Syrian leader, however, did not give a definite timetable on the
Syrian military withdrawal, saying it depended on technical rather
than political considerations, Reuters reported.
“I
could not say we could do it in two months because I have not had the
meeting with the army people. They may say it will take six months,”
he said.
“You
need to prepare when you bring your army back to your country. You
need to prepare where you will put the troops.”
Discussing
means of maintaining security in Lebanon and protection of the Syrian
borders must be put into consideration before the Syrian military
withdrawal from the Arab country, Assad stressed.
“There
are two factors. The first is security in Lebanon. The security in
Lebanon is much better than before. They have an army, they have a
state, they have institutions.
“The
second thing, which is related to Syria, is that after withdrawing we
have to protect our border. We need to talk about our borders, because
when Israel invaded (Lebanon) in 1982, they reached that point. It was
very close to Damascus. So we will need [fortifications for the
troops] along the border with Lebanon.”
Diplomatic
Efforts
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Anti-Syria rallies in Lebanon. (Reuters)
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Within
the same context, Syria has been holding intensive diplomatic talks
with its Arab allies, who are at the same time allies of the United
States, to defuse international pressures on Damascus to pull out
troops from Lebanon.
On
Thursday, Assad is due to hold talks with Saudi Crown Prince Abdallah
bin Abd al-Aziz in Riyadh to discuss means of alleviating the
international pressure on the Arab country and means of easing tension
between Damascus and Washington.
Assad
is also expected to hold talks with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
in Damascus following his return from Riyadh, Syrian official sources
told IOL.
Meanwhile,
Emir of Qatar Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani arrived in Damascus
Wednesday, March 2, for talks with senior Syrian officials.
“The
surprise visit of the Qatari emir will focus on the situation in the
Arab world, especially in Lebanon, and means of reaching a compromise
on withdrawing the Syrian forces from Lebanon in accordance with the
Taif agreement and UN Security Council resolution 1559,” Qatari
diplomatic sources told IOL.
A
senior Arab official told IslamOnline.net February 21, that some Arab
countries, especially Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan, fearing a
recurrence of the Iraqi scenario, are intensively moving on various
levels to spare Syria the predicament Iraq's Saddam faced that
eventually led to the invasion-turned-occupation of the Arab country.
The
official stressed that the efforts aim at “defusing the current
growing tension between Washington and Damascus through an acceptable
formula under which Syrian forces could pull out.
Arab
Cover
The
Syrian diplomatic moves are also aimed at seeking an Arab cover,
especially from Arab allies of the United States, for its military
pullout from Lebanon, analysts and diplomats said.
“There
is a drive to secure an Arab cover for the situation,” prominent
Syrian political analyst Imad Al-Shuaibi told Reuters.
“Syria
is directing its effort into preventing the situation from becoming an
international matter,” he stressed.
Earlier
this week, Syrian Foreign Minister Farouq Al-Shara held talks with
senior Egyptian and Saudi officials, apparently in a bid to offset US
pressures on the Arab country to withdraw troops from Lebanon.
An
Arab diplomat said that it was normal for Syria to seek cooperation
with its traditional Arab allies to deflate tension between Damascus
and Washington.
“It
seems Syria wants an easier way out ... a compromise of some sort
under an Arab umbrella,” the diplomat said.
“They
appear more convinced that they should comply with resolution 1559 but
maybe they want to dress it with an Arab cover.”
That
cover, the Arab diplomat said, could be in the guise of the Taif
Accord that ended Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war, under which Syrian
troops, which poured into Lebanon during the war, were to redeploy to
the eastern Bekaa valley.
The
1989 Taif Accord provides for “the two governments to determine the
strength and duration of the presence of the Syrian forces” but does
not set a specific deadline for a Syrian withdrawal.