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November 11, 2005 Friday Shawwal 8, 1426


West intent on action against Syria: Assad


DAMASCUS, Nov 10: Presi-dent Bashar al-Assad promised on Thursday to cooperate with a UN inquiry into the killing of a former Lebanese prime minister, but said Syria would not sacrifice its own national interests in the process.

The young leader, in a defiant speech carried live on Syrian television, made clear he believed the UN mission was part of a wider international effort to force Damascus to its knees.

“No matter what we do and how much we cooperate, the result after a month will be that ‘Syria did not cooperate’... but we have to do our duty,” he said at Damascus University.

Soon after Assad’s speech, French President Jacques Chirac urged Syria to cooperate with the inquiry and said France would support imposing sanctions on Damascus unless it did so.

Asked about Assad’s remarks, US Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton told reporters: “It’s not a question about what kind of speech he gives, it’s a question of what the government of Syria does. That’s what we are still waiting for.

“The clock is ticking.”

Reiterating that Syria had no hand in the Feb. 14 killing of Rafik al-Hariri, Assad said he would not let cooperation with the UN investigation damage Syria’s security and stability.

“The issue is not criminal any more, let’s not waste time thinking about this. Syria is not involved either on a state level or on an individual one,” he said in a 75-minute speech delivered largely without notes.

He did not refer directly to a request by chief UN investigator Detlev Mehlis to question six Syrian officials in Lebanon. They include Assef Shawkat, the president’s powerful brother-in-law and military intelligence chief.

Assad said Syria had done its best to secure its border with Iraq, not just in response to US requests but in its own interests. He invited Iraq’s president and prime minister to Syria, saying Damascus was committed to helping stabilize its neighbour.

The United States accuses Syria of allowing ‘foreign insurgents’ to cross its border into Iraq, supporting Palestinian and Lebanese militants, and continued meddling in Lebanon.

Mehlis has until Dec. 15 to complete his inquiry and report to the Security Council. In an interim report last month he criticized Syria for not cooperating properly with his mission.

That report spoke of evidence pointing to Syrian and Lebanese involvement in Hariri’s killing and said it would be hard to imagine how such a plot could have gone ahead without the knowledge of Syrian and Lebanese intelligence services.

Assad dismissed the report as politically motivated and spoke bitterly about last month’s Security Council resolution, which threatened Syria with unspecified action unless it cooperated fully with the Mehlis investigation.

“We are ready to cooperate within a framework that will lead to uncovering the crime,” he said. But any cooperation would stop short of ‘killing ourselves under pressure’, he added.

“We support international legitimacy but not at the expense of our national interests.”

Assad said Mehlis had rejected a recent invitation to visit Damascus to discuss cooperation. Syria issued the invitation after Mehlis demanded to interview the six officials in Lebanon.—Reuters



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