DUBAI,
December 31, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Declaring
he has resigned his post, Syrian vice-president Abdel Halim Khaddam
claimed that Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad threatened former
Lebanese premier Rafiq Hariri just months before his murder.
"I
will destroy anyone who tries to hinder our decisions," Assad
told Hariri during a meeting in Damascus, Khaddam told Dubai-based
television Al-Arabiya Friday, December 30, in an interview from Paris.
Khaddam
said the meeting took place a few months before the February 14
assassination of Hariri in a Beirut bomb blast for which a UN probe
has implicated Syrian intelligence.
The
Syrian intelligence services could not have carried out such an
operation without Assad being informed, he said, when asked if the
head of state could have been unaware.
"We
must await the results of the investigation, but no Syrian security
service could take such a decision unilaterally," he said.
Khaddam
also blamed Lebanese President Emile Lahoud and other Lebanese
officials for "inciting" Assad against Hariri, who was once
a staunch ally of Damascus but who backed a 2004 UN resolution that
called for foreign troops to quit Lebanon.
Khaddam
said he had advised Hariri "to leave Lebanon because his
situation regarding Syria had become complicated" in the wake of
the threat. "But, of course, at no time did it occur to me that
Syria could assassinate Hariri."
In
late March, Syria denied a report from a UN fact-finding mission that
Assad had threatened both Hariri and Lebanon's Druze leader Walid
Jumblatt if they opposed the policies of Damascus, the former
powerbroker in their country.
Khaddam
praised the work of Detlev Mehlis who has led a UN probe into the bomb
blast on the Beirut seafront that killed Hariri and 20 other people.
Mehlis
was a "professional and well-known magistrate, and his report was
good", he said. The chief investigator had "avoided
politicizing his report (to the UN Security Council) even though the
crime was political".
The
outgoing chief of the probe said in an interview with an Arab
newspaper published in mid-December that he was convinced that Syria
was responsible for the murder.
Khaddam
also pointed a finger of blame for the tension in Lebanon before the
murder at Rustom Ghazaleh, Syria's military intelligence chief and
vice consul in Lebanon before its troop withdrawal in April after a
29-year deployment.
"Rustom
Ghazaleh behaved as if he had absolute power" in Lebanon, said
the former vice president, adding that he had failed to convince Assad
to have him replaced.
In
an interview with CNN in October, Assad vehemently rejected any notion
he had played a personal role in the assassination.
Assad,
whose country has repeatedly denied any involvement in the murder,
said he had only found out about Hariri's assassination "from the
news ... in my office" and that any Syrian found guilty should be
punished.
Reasons
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"I will destroy anyone who tries to hinder our decisions," Assad, right, told Hariri, according to Khaddam. (Reuters).
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According
to political analysts, the statements of Khaddam indicate serious
cracks within the Syrian regime and draw a bleak picture on the future
of the Arab country.
It
is only natural for already mounting foreign pressure on Damascus to
gain huge momentum, that believe, adding the timing and motives behind
Khaddam's explosive interview are to open the door wide open for any
consequences.
In
the Al-Arabiyah interview, Khaddam, 73, widely regarded as the
architect of his government's Lebanon policy before its troop pullout,
also announced the reasons for his resignation in June and his break
with the regime.
He
said he was "convinced that the process of development and
reforms, be they political, economic or administrative, will not
succeed" and preferred to choose "the motherland" over
"the regime".
"I
have many things to say, serious things, when the time is right,"
he said, adding however that his relationship with Assad remained
"amicable".
The
vice president first asked to resign at a congress of Syria's ruling
Baath party in June.
At
the time, he criticized Syrian foreign policy leading up to the
withdrawal from Lebanon under international pressure over the Hariri
assassination.
Khaddam,
who long served Bashar's father Hafez before his death in 2000, was
also close to former interior minister Ghazi Kanaan, for 20 years
Syria's intelligence chief in Lebanon, who committed suicide in
October.
Lebanese
media speculated at the time that Kanaan, who held the post before
being replaced by Ghazaleh, had been killed because he was about to
spill the beans on Hariri's killing.
Khaddam
now lives in Paris, where he said he was writing a book and had
received no threats since leaving Syria in the summer. Like Kanaan, he
was also close to the pro-Western Hariri.
Kanaan
and Khaddam were reportedly stripped of responsibility for the Lebanon
file by Assad, in keeping with an agreement with pro-Syrian Lebanese
President Emile Lahoud who accused the two men of being in Hariri's
pay.