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Home arrow News arrow Daily news from Lebanon arrow Three Years after Pullout, Syria still Accused of Pulling Strings in Lebanon
Three Years after Pullout, Syria still Accused of Pulling Strings in Lebanon PDF Print E-mail

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Written by News Editor   
Saturday, 26 April 2008
Three years after Syria ended its near 30-year military presence in Lebanon, Damascus stands accused of still pulling strings there and leaving its tiny neighbor paralyzed by political deadlock. On April 26, 2005, Syria withdrew the last of its officials who had reigned as the true powerbrokers in Beirut, as the final 14,000 troops of a force which had once numbered 40,000 were sent home.

The pullout was the result of international pressure and angry street demonstrations in Lebanon sparked by the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, an attack that many blamed on Syria.

Damascus denied all involvement in Hariri's death.

Syrian forces swept into Lebanon in 1976, a year after the outbreak of a bloody civil war which raged for 15 years until 1990 and left more than 150,000 people dead and thousands more missing.

But despite withdrawing in 2005, Syria remains a powerful force in Lebanon, which is now struggling with a political vacuum left after former pro-Syrian president Emile Lahoud stepped down when his term ended last November.

Rival political factions remain deadlocked over the election of a successor, with 18 previous parliamentary sessions to find a replacement postponed amid claims Syria is blocking consensus candidate and army chief Michel Suleiman.

The latest attempt to try to elect a new head of state was set on Saturday for May 13 by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, his spokesman said.

The row has pitted the anti-Syrian ruling coalition against the Hizbullah-led opposition.

The crisis has set Prime Minister Fouad Saniora's government against Hizbullah.

The opposition considers the government illegitimate, parliament has not convened for 16 months, and Suleiman is also set to leave office as head of the army at the end of August, risking a void in the military leadership.

"Lebanon has regained its sovereignty and built an independent state, but the current crisis, the closure of parliament, the attacks and the inability to elect a new president proves that Syrian influence has taken on a new form," according to Fares Said, a member of the ruling anti-Syrian coalition.

There has been a series of deadly attacks in Lebanon since 2004, usually against anti-Syrian figures.

Parliament, led by Berri who is also one of the opposition leaders, has not been able to meet to pass legislation for more than a year.

"Syria no longer manages Lebanon's affairs but it does maintain a very important influence through its allies and perhaps through its intelligence services," said Paul Salem, Middle East analyst at the Carnegie Centre Paul.

"The presumed presence of the intelligence services is less important in terms of effectiveness, but it is no less dangerous."

According to majority MP Elias Atallah, Syrian interference "translates into the sending of funds, missiles and intelligence agents" to its allies.

Hizbullah, the principal opposition group and the only Lebanese militia to have kept its weapons, is regularly accused of receiving arms supplies from Syria.

Atallah added that the "absence of a sovereign state" in Lebanon prevents the application of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah and ordered the disarming of militias.

Salem added: "Until there is a sovereign state, Lebanon will continue to be used as a battlefield for foreign powers."

He said that for a sovereign state to be established, "the Syrian-Israeli peace track must advance because Damascus has used Lebanon as a theatre to confront Israel and the Jewish state has done the same" in its conflict with Syria.

"Syria wants to use Lebanon as a hostage to be used like money to be traded for political, security and economic favors, particularly the dismissal of the international tribunal" charged with probing Hariri's death, Atallah charged.

But Damascus's allies within Lebanon reject such claims.

"Without a Syrian presence Lebanon will be transformed into an American or Israeli base because of Mr Saniora and his allies," pro-Syrian former environment minister Wiam Wahhab said.

"Some Lebanese people portray themselves as hostile to Damascus on Saudi-American orders, but most want good relations with Syria," he added.(AFP)
 



 

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