UNITED
NATIONS, June 22 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Syria has given
the United States information in the fight against terrorism that
helped save American lives, Foreign Minister Faruq al-Shara said
Friday, June 21, 2002.
"I
am not going to confirm anything related to security, but I can
confirm the substance of reports that we have helped save American
lives," Shara said when asked at a news conference about the
reported arrest in Syria of a man suspected of helping to plan
September 11 attacks on the United States, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
said.
"We
are against terrorism," he added.
Heading
off U.S. charges that Syria sponsors what the U.S. calls terrorist
groups opposed to Israel, Shara said: "The Americans know very
well that we distinguish between terrorists such as Al-Qaeda and
resistance groups in Israeli-occupied territory."
A
senior State Department official said Tuesday at a congressional
hearing in Washington that Syria had provided information about
Al-Qaeda, led by the Saudi-born militant Osama bin Laden, alleged
mastermind of the September 11 attacks, AFP reported.
"It
is true that the cooperation the Syrians have provided, in their own
self-interest, on Al-Qaeda, has saved American lives," U.S.
Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs William Burns said.
Neither
Burns nor Shara made any comment on a German television report that
Mohammed Zammar, 41, a German citizen of Syrian origin, has been held
in a Syrian prison for months.
Zammar
is believed to have recruited Mohammed Atta, the alleged ringleader of
19 men who hijacked four planes and crashed them into the World Trade
Center in New York, the Pentagon near Washington and a field in
Pennsylvania.
Shara
was in New York to chair a meeting of the United Nations Security
Council. Syria, one of the 10 countries elected to a two-year council
seat, holds the presidency this month.
Last
week, the deputy U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, James
Cunningham, warned during a session on the Middle East that Syria
would be in breach of council resolutions unless it took action
against terrorist groups.
Cunningham
noted that Islamic Jihad, which has its headquarters in Damascus,
claimed credit for a June 5 car bomb attack on a public bus in Israel
that killed 17 and wounded 30.
But
Shara said Islamic Jihad and other Palestinian groups had only
"press offices" inside Syria. All their operations were
planned and executed in Israeli-held lands, he said.
As
for the Islamic resistance movement Hezbollah, based in south Lebanon,
"it enjoys popular support not only in Syria and Lebanon, but
also among Arabs living in Israel," Shara said. "It is a
Lebanese resistance group and can be called by no other name."
The
Middle East crisis could not be solved until Israeli occupation of
Arab land ended, he said.
Shara
recalled that the Arab summit held in Beirut in March had endorsed a
plan offering to normalize relations in exchange for Israel's
withdrawal from all territories captured in 1967.
Asked
how he envisaged normal relations with Israel, Shara replied: "I
think the other side knows very well what we mean," but said the
details would have to be decided by a committee.