DAMASCUS,
March 5, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Syrian
President Bashar Al-Assad told parliament on Saturday, March 5,
Damascus will withdraw all its troops in Lebanon to the eastern Bekaa
valley and at a later stage to the borders.
“We
will pull all our forces in Lebanon to the Bekaa area and from there
to the Syrian-Lebanese border,” Assad said in a rare speech to
parliament, reported Reuters.
“By
this measure Syria would have fulfilled its commitment towards the
Taif Agreement and implemented (UN Security Council) Resolution
1559,” asserted the Syrian leader.
The
agreement, which put an end to Lebanon's 1975-1990 civil war, 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.
Assad
said that the Syrian-Lebanese Supreme Council on Security will meet
later this week to approve the plan but gave no specific timetable for
the gradual withdrawal.
He
maintained that Syria was not against a full withdrawal from Lebanon,
pointing out that the country has already pulled out thousands of its
troops since September 2000 and wanted to see them come home.
The
series of redeployments have seen Syrian troop numbers fall from a
high of 40,000 after they first moved in a year after the start of
Lebanon's civil war to the current 14,000.
“The
natural place for Syrian forces is Syrian land,” Assad said,
asserting that the withdrawal is “in the interests of Syria.”
The
one-hour speech was punctuated by frequent bursts of applause from the
lawmakers, who surrounded Assad and cheered as he left the parliament
building.
Meanwhile,
hundreds of Syrians were gathered outside the parliament watching the
proceedings on big screens, waving Syrian flags and greeting Assad's
statements.
Earlier,
Lebanese forces in Beirut briefly deployed outside three Syrian
intelligence buildings in the Lebanese capital, although there was no
clear explanation for the move.
A
Lebanese officer at the scene said the move was a “prelude to the
Lebanese army taking charge of positions that will be evacuated by the
Syrian army.”
Last
September the UN Security Council passed Resolution 1559 sponsored by
Paris and Washington demanding the withdrawal of all foreign troops
from Lebanon, a clear reference to the Syrian forces.
The
United States and France have been piling pressure on Syria for a
complete withdrawal of troops and intelligence services.
Positive
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|
Lebanese
opposition protesters celebrate in Beirut. (Reuters)
|
Lebanon's
leading opposition politician Walid Jumblatt described as
“positive” Assad’s decision, which was widely expected.
“This
is a positive start ... Our hands are extended with the insistence on
a timetable for the withdrawal,” Jumblatt told Lebanon's LBC
television.
Thousands
of protesters, waving Lebanese flags, erupted in joy in central Beirut
after Assad’s speech.
Women
wept and men screamed in celebration when the crowd, watching Assad on
big screens, heard the Syrian leader declaring the move, according to
Reuters.
The
announces was also praised by a spokeswoman for the European Union as
“a positive development if it is a step towards a full withdrawal
because this would be very important for the peace and stability of
the region.”
She
added that the withdrawal “should take place as speedily and
smoothly as possible.”
“No
Half Measures”
 |
|
“Syria,
Syrian troops, Syrian intelligence services must get out of
Lebanon now,” Bush said. (Reuters)
|
Hours
before the Syrian announcement, US President George W. Bush stepped up
calls for a complete and immediate Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon.
“For
years, the Lebanese people have suffered from the aftermath of a
horrific civil war and occupation by Syria,” Bush said in his weekly
radio address on Saturday.
“A
Syrian withdrawal of all its military and intelligence personnel would
help ensure that the Lebanese elections occur as scheduled in the
spring, and that they will be free and fair.”
On
Friday, Bush warned the Syrian leadership that there could be “no
half-hearted measures.”
“There
are no half-measures involved. We mean complete withdrawal, no
half-hearted measures,” he said.
Bush
earlier called for all Syrian forces to be out by May to clear the way
for fair parliamentary elections.
French
President Jacques Chirac also pressed Friday for “full, entire and
immediate application of UN Security Council resolution 1559”.
British
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw warned Syria it risked becoming a
“pariah state” over the Lebanese crisis.
Syria
has long maintained that it needs to retain troops in Lebanon because
of Israel's continued occupation of the Lebanese Shebaa Farms and the
Syrian Golan Heights, seized in the 1967 Middle East war.