CAIRO,
November 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Syrian Foreign Minister
Faruq al-Shara roundly rejected U.S. pressure to shut down the Damascus
office of Islamic Jihad, saying the Palestinian resistance group did not
use it as a base for planning attacks, in an interview to appear this
week.
"The
Islamic Jihad office in Damascus is uniquely an information bureau and
those who work there have no links to military activities or planning
operations," Shara told the Egyptian weekly Al-Osbou newspaper.
In
the interview, a copy of which was obtained by Agence France-Presse
(AFP), Shara underlined that "those who are on Syrian territory,
far from the terrain, cannot plan operations that take place in
Palestinian territory."
The
U.S. State Department said Tuesday, November 19, it would keep up
pressure on Syria to close down the office, a few days after the
resistance group claimed responsibility for an ambush in the West Bank
town of al-Khalil (Hebron) that killed 12 Israeli soldiers.
The
message was conveyed to Syrian leaders through U.S. Ambassador to Syria
Theodore Qattouf.
"We
can only accept the American request on one condition: that Palestinian
refugees return to Palestine ... in accordance with (UN General
Assembly) Resolution 194," Shara added.
Deputy
State Department spokesman Philip Reeker said Washington would not
relent in its long-standing demand for the closure of the office.
Qattouf
"conveyed our strong position that the Syrian authorities needed to
close down this office," Reeker told reporters.
"In
terms of their particular response ... I would leave that to the Syrian
government," he said. "We'll continue to make our point, as we
have for some time, that there is no place for support for this type of
organization."
Earlier
Tuesday, November 19, Syria rebuffed the demand, saying Washington and
not Islamic Jihad was ultimately responsible for the attack and ensuing
firefight battle in which three of the Palestinian activists were also
killed.
"The
United States is responsible for this bloodbath, since it supports the
Israeli occupation and provides aid to Israel, which is violating more
than 28 resolutions adopted by the UN Security Council," the
foreign ministry said in an open letter to Qattouf.
Reeker
would not address the Syrian accusation but noted that the country has
been designated a "state sponsor of terrorism" by the United
States for its support of Islamic Jihad and other anti-Israel groups.
He
would not comment on whether Washington had threatened punitive measures
against Damascus if it failed to close the Islamic Jihad office, but he
indicated that Syria's standing with the United States would rise if it
does close the office.
"It
is in the Syrians' best interests to get with the mainstream of the
international community and reject this type of organization that
conducts the type of violence that doesn't produce anything except more
pain and suffering for people on all sides,"
Reeker
said.
"The
Syrian government is certainly well aware of our long-standing
concerns," he said.
Qattouf
delivered the U.S. message to Syrian officials after Secretary of State
Colin Powell took aim at Damascus on Saturday, November 23, saying in
the wake of the attacks that "it is impossible to understand how
any country that claims a genuine commitment to peace can harbor such
groups."
In
the letter to Qatouf, the Syrian Foreign Ministry questioned the U.S.
commitment to Middle East peace.
"The
establishment of a just and comprehensive peace in the region based on
the implementation of UN resolutions and the end of the Israeli
occupation is not a priority for the United States," it said.
Islamic
Jihad says it maintains only a press office in Damascus that "has
no military functions.
"The
operational planners are in the occupied territories," a leading
member of the group, Ziad al-Nakhala, told AFP on Monday