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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (168159)4/21/2003 12:56:35 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1577183
 
If Syria really is changing its perspective, then Bush has pulled off an major win.

________________________________________________________

Syria Showing Positive Signs

CRAWFORD, Texas (April 20) - President Bush applauded signs Sunday that Syria is beginning to heed American demands for cooperation against Saddam Hussein's defunct regime.

Lowering U.S. rhetoric that had led to speculation that Syria could become Bush's next military target, the president focused on diplomacy as a way to contain Syria.

''There's some positive signs,'' Bush said, after attending Easter services at the Army's Fort Hood not far from his ranch outside this central Texas town. ''They're getting the message that they should not harbor Baath Party officials, high ranking Iraqi officials.''

Hours after Bush spoke, a spokesman in London for the Iraqi National Congress said Saddam's son-in-law, Jamal Mustafa Abdallah Sultan al-Tikriti, had surrendered to INC forces in Baghdad after previously leaving Syria.

The spokesman said one of Saddam's top bodyguards, who also had been in Syria, also arrested Sunday in Baghdad.

Al-Tikriti was being questioned by free Iraqi forces intelligence officers in Baghdad and would be turned over to the U.S. military ''in a matter of hours, not days,'' said the spokesman, Haider Ahmed.

He offered no details on the pair's stay in Syria, nor the circumstances of their departure.

Tensions between the United States and Syria escalated after reports surfaced that members of Saddam's deposed government had crossed the border to flee the U.S.-led war.

U.S. officials have exerted intense pressure, demanding there be no haven in Syria for Saddam loyalists and telling Damascus that diplomatic or economic sanctions could result unless Syria cooperated.

Syria has denied taking in senior Iraqis or providing other aid.

Two senators agreed Sunday there have been positive developments but said the jury remains out on Syria.

''I think the military success in Iraq has had a profound effect everywhere,'' Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., told CNN's ''Late Edition.'' ''Whether, at this point, Syria will take the next step really remains to be seen. But it's the best climate, the best opportunity in modern times.''

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., credited Syria with helping in the antiterror war against al-Qaida in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

''There's been some evidence that they're moving toward a more cooperative position with the United States,'' Durbin said. ''But ... you look at the history of Syria, its history of harboring international terrorist organizations in Damascus, of sending its army to occupy southern Lebanon and harass Israel. It's really not the kind of conduct which we can countenance as part of a peaceful future for the Middle East.''

Bush used the past tense Sunday when asked for details on Iraqi leaders believed to be in Syria.

''We felt some were there; otherwise, we wouldn't have spoken out,'' he said.

Syrian President Bashar Assad told two U.S. congressmen Sunday that the country will not give asylum to war crimes suspects from Iraq and will expel any Iraqi who should cross the border. Reps. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., and Darrell Issa, R-Calif., visiting Damascus, described the Syrian president as eager to deal with U.S. concerns.

Bush said other countries, which he did not name, have helped press the U.S. message with the Syrians.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak visited Damascus on Sunday for a meeting with Assad. At a meeting Friday in the Saudi capital, the foreign ministers of Iraq's neighbors - Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Syria, Jordan, Turkey and Iran - along with Egypt and Bahrain condemned U.S. threats against Syria.

Senior U.S. officials, including Bush, had accused Syria of providing Iraq with war materiel, giving haven to senior Iraqi officials and permitting foreign fighters to pass through Syria to join the war against the U.S.-led coalition.

Syria has been for years on the State Department's list of countries that sponsor terrorism, hosting offices of Palestinian factions - Hamas, Islamic Jihad and others - that Washington lists as terrorist groups. The United States also considers the Lebanese Hezbollah group, which Syria has used as a proxy in its conflict with Israel, to be a terror organization.

But U.S. officials said last week that Syria appeared to be turning away some Iraqi officials at the border and possibly preparing quietly to expel others.

Secretary of State Colin Powell plans a trip to the region soon, with a stop planned in Syria.

''I'm confident the Syrian government has heard us,'' Bush said. ''I believe it when they say they want to cooperate with us.''

AP-NY-04-20-03 1946EDT

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.



To: i-node who wrote (168159)4/21/2003 12:59:35 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1577183
 
If Syria really is changing its perspective, then Bush has pulled off an major win.

________________________________________________________

Syria Showing Positive Signs

CRAWFORD, Texas (April 20) - President Bush applauded signs Sunday that Syria is beginning to heed American demands for cooperation against Saddam Hussein's defunct regime.

Lowering U.S. rhetoric that had led to speculation that Syria could become Bush's next military target, the president focused on diplomacy as a way to contain Syria.

''There's some positive signs,'' Bush said, after attending Easter services at the Army's Fort Hood not far from his ranch outside this central Texas town. ''They're getting the message that they should not harbor Baath Party officials, high ranking Iraqi officials.''

Hours after Bush spoke, a spokesman in London for the Iraqi National Congress said Saddam's son-in-law, Jamal Mustafa Abdallah Sultan al-Tikriti, had surrendered to INC forces in Baghdad after previously leaving Syria.

The spokesman said one of Saddam's top bodyguards, who also had been in Syria, also arrested Sunday in Baghdad.

Al-Tikriti was being questioned by free Iraqi forces intelligence officers in Baghdad and would be turned over to the U.S. military ''in a matter of hours, not days,'' said the spokesman, Haider Ahmed.

He offered no details on the pair's stay in Syria, nor the circumstances of their departure.

Tensions between the United States and Syria escalated after reports surfaced that members of Saddam's deposed government had crossed the border to flee the U.S.-led war.

U.S. officials have exerted intense pressure, demanding there be no haven in Syria for Saddam loyalists and telling Damascus that diplomatic or economic sanctions could result unless Syria cooperated.

Syria has denied taking in senior Iraqis or providing other aid.

Two senators agreed Sunday there have been positive developments but said the jury remains out on Syria.

''I think the military success in Iraq has had a profound effect everywhere,'' Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., told CNN's ''Late Edition.'' ''Whether, at this point, Syria will take the next step really remains to be seen. But it's the best climate, the best opportunity in modern times.''

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., credited Syria with helping in the antiterror war against al-Qaida in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

''There's been some evidence that they're moving toward a more cooperative position with the United States,'' Durbin said. ''But ... you look at the history of Syria, its history of harboring international terrorist organizations in Damascus, of sending its army to occupy southern Lebanon and harass Israel. It's really not the kind of conduct which we can countenance as part of a peaceful future for the Middle East.''

Bush used the past tense Sunday when asked for details on Iraqi leaders believed to be in Syria.

''We felt some were there; otherwise, we wouldn't have spoken out,'' he said.

Syrian President Bashar Assad told two U.S. congressmen Sunday that the country will not give asylum to war crimes suspects from Iraq and will expel any Iraqi who should cross the border. Reps. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., and Darrell Issa, R-Calif., visiting Damascus, described the Syrian president as eager to deal with U.S. concerns.

Bush said other countries, which he did not name, have helped press the U.S. message with the Syrians.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak visited Damascus on Sunday for a meeting with Assad. At a meeting Friday in the Saudi capital, the foreign ministers of Iraq's neighbors - Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Syria, Jordan, Turkey and Iran - along with Egypt and Bahrain condemned U.S. threats against Syria.

Senior U.S. officials, including Bush, had accused Syria of providing Iraq with war materiel, giving haven to senior Iraqi officials and permitting foreign fighters to pass through Syria to join the war against the U.S.-led coalition.

Syria has been for years on the State Department's list of countries that sponsor terrorism, hosting offices of Palestinian factions - Hamas, Islamic Jihad and others - that Washington lists as terrorist groups. The United States also considers the Lebanese Hezbollah group, which Syria has used as a proxy in its conflict with Israel, to be a terror organization.

But U.S. officials said last week that Syria appeared to be turning away some Iraqi officials at the border and possibly preparing quietly to expel others.

Secretary of State Colin Powell plans a trip to the region soon, with a stop planned in Syria.

''I'm confident the Syrian government has heard us,'' Bush said. ''I believe it when they say they want to cooperate with us.''

AP-NY-04-20-03 1946EDT

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.



To: i-node who wrote (168159)4/21/2003 1:46:10 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1577183
 
I believe w'll be, for the most part, out in 24 months.

Apparently, others do not agree with your assessment.

___________________________________________________________

Lugar: Slow Road to Iraq Democracy

WASHINGTON (April 20) - The United States should not expect to create a functioning democracy in Iraq for at least five years, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said Sunday.

``The institution-building process in Iraq is a huge endeavor,'' said Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind. ``There's not much to work with at the moment.''

Lugar said the Bush administration started to work very late on a system to replace the rule of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, ousted with an invasion and war.

The military plan's ``tactics and execution have been brilliant,'' Lugar said on NBC's ``Meet the Press.'' Similar preparations should have been made for what was to come afterward, he said.

``I would think at least we ought to be thinking of a period of at least five years' time'' to develop democracy, Lugar said. Some are talking of four months to five months, he said, which would amount to ``trying to do it on the fly'' and would not work.

Democratic Sen. Evan Bayh agreed that an extended American military presence in Iraq will be necessary. ``We're going to have to be there for a while - not permanently, but for a while, because we don't want to win the war and then lose the peace,'' he told ``Fox News Sunday.''

Nevertheless, Bayh said he sees movement. ``We'll have to maintain a significant presence here early on until things truly get settled down,'' said Bayh, a member of the Senate Intelligence and Armed Forces committees. ``There's some momentum toward a civil society in Iraq. And then hopefully we can begin to ratchet that back.''

Iraq's pro-U.S. opposition leader Ahmad Chalabi said a U.S. military presence in Iraq ``is a necessity until at least the first democratic election is held. And I think this process should take two years.'' He told ABC's ``This Week'' that he views a strategic alliance between the two countries as ``a very good thing.''

Lugar spoke of the sensitivity of molding a system of governance for the Iraqis that would be dramatically different from what they have known.

The first task is to learn whether ``there are groups of Iraqis prepared to work together,'' he said. ``It may very well be that Kurds and other parts of the country might want a great deal of autonomy.''

Non-Arab Kurds form the majority in northern Iraq and neighboring Turkey and have exercised autonomy guaranteed by the United States and Britain for years. Iraq's majority Shiite Muslims, in the South, have been kept out of power by Sunnis like Saddam for decades.

In trying to bring the parts together, Lugar said, the United States must have specific goals and work with Iraqis who understand them.

``When it finally comes to elections,'' he said, ``the result might not be totally gratifying.'' As in Turkey, which has a new government formed by an Islamic-rooted party and refused to let the anti-Saddam coalition invade through Turkey, America generally would have to live with it, he said.

Lugar would draw the line at accepting an elected theocracy similar to that in neighboring Iran.

``I just think we cannot,'' he said. He agreed with James Woolsey, former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, who was a fellow guest on NBC, that such an election would be ``almost a one-vote, last-vote situation.''

04/20/03 10:52 EDT

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.