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U.S. urges restraint in Mideast
Washington -
Responding to the latest cycle of attack and retribution in the Middle
East, the United States on Sunday cautioned Israelis, Palestinians and
Syrians to refrain from further violence and "keep in mind the
consequences of their actions."
The State Department issued its
appeal after the destruction that began Saturday when a Palestinian
woman blew herself up in a beachfront restaurant in Haifa, killing 19
others, some of them children. Hours later, Israel responded by
sending several warplanes to Syria, hitting what it said was a
terrorist training camp. No one was killed.
"We have consistently told Syria that
it must cease harboring terrorists and make a clean break from those
responsible for planning and directing terrorist action from Syrian
soil," spokeswoman Joanne Moore said. "We urge both Israel and Syria
to avoid actions that could lead to an escalation of tension."
The hostilities come at a
particularly awkward moment for the United States, which has been
working to enlist Syria's help in bringing stability to the region and
to restore momentum to the deadlocked "road map" — the U.S.-brokered
peace plan that calls for the creation of a temporary Palestinian
state by year's end and a final state by the end of 2005.
In addition, the State Department is
negotiating with Syria on providing electricity for the reconstruction
of Iraq. It also has been pressing Damascus for months to crack down
on Islamic Jihad, Hamas and Hezbollah, the three main extremist groups
in the region.
Arab leaders warned that a "circle of
violence" could envelop the region in the wake of the strike. Several
Middle East experts agreed that Israel appeared to be signaling its
willingness to escalate the fighting to stop deadly attacks like the
Haifa restaurant bombing, which came on the day before the beginning
of Yom Kippur, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar.
"This was a very deliberate attempt
by the Israeli government to raise the ante so people in the region,
the U.S. and the U.N. will take notice," said Henri J. Barkey, a
professor of international relations at Lehigh University in
Pennsylvania and a former member of the State Department's policy
planning staff. "Clearly this is an attempt by Israel to say [that]
the people engaged in [suicide bombings] and who support them pay no
price. Now there is going to be a real price — enough is enough."
In Washington, President Bush called
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on Sunday to express his
condolences over the deaths in Haifa, to condemn the suicide bombing
and to discuss the attack in Syria. A White House spokesman, Ken
Lisaius, declined to discuss details about the conversation, other
than saying that Bush emphasized to Sharon "the need to avoid
heightened tension in the region at this time."
The State Department has described
Syria as a state sponsor of terrorism.
In May, Syrian President Bashar Assad
indicated after meeting in Damascus with Secretary of State Colin L.
Powell that his government had closed several offices of Islamic and
Palestinian extremist groups, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
But Assad, who came to power in 2000
after the death of his father, longtime strongman Hafez Assad, has a
tenuous hold on power. Most of his father's hard-line cronies remain,
and the younger Assad has been either unwilling or unable to enact the
sorts of reforms he has promised.
"We have repeatedly told the
government of Syria that it is on the wrong side in the war on
terrorism and that it must stop harboring terrorists," a senior
administration official said. "And that is still our view."
The State Department was careful to
note in its brief official reaction to the violence that it was not
informed of the Israeli action until "several hours after the attack."
Still, the U.S. may find itself in a
bind. Coming down too hard on Syria could jeopardize three key
elements of Bush's foreign policy: Syrian cooperation on a Middle East
peace plan, stability in the reconstruction of Iraq and an end to
outside support of militant extremist groups.
At the same time, condemning Israel
for reacting to an attack on its soil by retaliating against a nation
believed to support militants might seem inconsistent, in light of the
American war in Afghanistan in response to the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks.
"What the Israelis appear to have
done in attacking Syria is not unlike what we did after Sept. 11 in
attacking training camps of Al Qaeda in Afghanistan," Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut, a Democratic candidate for president, told
"Fox News Sunday." "Unfortunately, the Syrians have continued to
refuse American demands that they break up terrorist bases and
headquarters in their country."
A test of U.S. support for Israel is
expected to come at the United Nations this week. In an emergency
session Sunday, Syria called on the Security Council to condemn the
Israeli attack as "military aggression." Washington is expected to
veto any resolution criticizing the Israelis unless it is perceived to
be balanced.
The U.S. vetoed a Syrian-backed
measure Sept. 16 that called for protection of Palestinian Authority
President Yasser Arafat after the Israeli Cabinet decided he should be
"removed," even though Washington agreed Arafat should not be deported
or harmed. U.S. Ambassador John D. Negroponte declared the resolution
flawed because it did not specifically condemn Palestinian terrorist
groups.
Israel's apparent willingness to
broaden its operations against Palestinian militants could pose
"dangerous consequences" for the international community and
underscore a need to restart U.S. diplomacy that has sputtered since
the Iraq war, said Shibley Telhami, a Mideast specialist who holds the
Anwar Sadat Chair of Peace and Development at the University of
Maryland.
"There has been a bit of a hands-off
policy following the Iraq war, and if anything is to be learned here,
it's that the parties are not going to resolve this on their own. Just
when you think it can't get any worse, you wake up the next morning
and it gets worse," Telhami said.
If the violence is contained — a "big
if," Telhami noted — U.S. negotiations with Syria will probably not be
greatly impaired.
If it escalates, however, there could
be consequences at the United Nations, where the United States is seen
by most of the international community as too protective of Israel.
"The Arab-Israel issue always serves
to drive a wedge between America and the U.N.," Telhami said, "and
that could come at a time when the U.S. desperately needs to have
international cooperation in order to get success in Iraq. In that
sense, that is where the price will be paid."
-- Los Angeles Times
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