IMAD MOUSTAPHA, Ph.D. -
syrembas@syrembassy.net
Ambassador of Syria to the U.S.A.
The Embassy of Syria
2215Wyoming Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C.20008
(Consular Affairs, passport, Visa..): (202)265 -4585
(Culture, Trips, Certifications..): (202)232 -4357
Email :
info@syrembassy.net
Syria Wants to Talk, But Bush Won't Answer the Phone
Damascus has effectively cooperated with Washington on
terrorism, says Syria's ambassador.
By Imad Moustapha, IMAD MOUSTAPHA is the Syrian
ambassador to the United States.
August 4, 2006
LATE LAST MONTH, a number of congressmen called me and
asked for an urgent, unscheduled meeting. There, at the
Rayburn House Office Building, we spent a couple of
hours discussing in-depth the crisis in the Middle East.
The paramount concern of these legislators was not the
typical Capitol Hill rhetoric (offering unconditional
support for Israel, or delivering the routine
condemnation and demonization of Syria). Instead, they
simply wanted to know what they could do to stop the
ongoing massacre in Lebanon.
Their frustration and exasperation about the total
nonchalance of the U.S. administration was overwhelming.
The very first question they had for me was to clarify
the confusion about whether the White House is talking
to Syria or not. Although the media have reported that
no contacts have been made between the two countries
over the last three weeks, administration officials have
sent vague signals that this might be happening through
back channels.
But no communication whatsoever has taken place. U.S.
policy remains to ignore the Syrian government. And it
remains fundamentally wrong.
It hasn't always been this way. When President George
H.W. Bush faced Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait in
1990, he realized the strategic need for Syria and knew
how to lure us into the American-led alliance: by
inviting Syria to the Madrid peace conference.
As a result, and within a short period of time, the
Clinton administration engaged Syria and Israel in
serious peace talks that, had they succeeded, would have
created a very different paradigm in this troubled area.
In Syria, we consider the assassination of Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin as the fatal blow that felled the
peace efforts, and since that tragic event, Israel has
had no leader with the courage or vision required to
accept the inevitable "land for peace" compromise
enshrined in U.N. Security Council resolutions 224 and
338.
In sharp contrast, the current U.S. administration has
publicly dissuaded Israel from responding to the
repeated Syrian invitations to revive the peace process.
Syria still hopes that this position might change, as
there exists a growing alienation against the U.S. and
its policies in the Arab and Islamic world, which is
undoubtedly creating fertile breeding conditions for
terrorism.
Syria thought that the atrocious events of Sept. 11,
2001, would be a much-needed wake-up call for the Bush
administration.
After Sept. 11, we cooperated with the U.S. in fighting
terrorism. Syria had been fighting extreme
fundamentalist movements in the region for the previous
three decades, so we promptly initiated intelligence and
security cooperation with the U.S., providing a wealth
of information about Al Qaeda, some of which was
described in a letter to Congress by former Secretary of
State Colin Powell as "actionable information" that led
to "saving American lives." Consequently, bilateral
relations improved dramatically at the time, much to the
chagrin of the neoconservative cabal that doggedly
opposed any engagement with Syria, no matter how
productive.
This effective cooperation ended when Syria and the U.S.
found themselves at odds over how to address the Iraqi
problem. Syria fiercely opposed the U.S. invasion and
occupation of Iraq and continues to do so. The fact that
Hussein was Syria's archenemy did not blind our eyes to
the grave consequences such an occupation would bear on
our region: bloodshed, destruction, instability,
extremism and the ugly face of sectarianism.
The Bush administration never forgave Syria for its
opposition to the war. Despite the fact that Syrian-U.S.
intelligence and security cooperation continued, even
after the fallout on Iraq, well up to January 2005,
heavyweights in the White House continued to engage in a
rhetorical campaign against Syria. Members of Congress,
influenced by the powerful pro-Israel lobby,
overwhelmingly passed the Syria Accountability Act in
November 2003, enacting trade sanctions on Damascus
without serious debate or reference to the crucial
intelligence support provided by Syria.
Concurrently, administration officials devised a new
"policy" toward my country: Don't talk to Syria at all,
and maybe its regime will collapse.
That is why the U.S. decided to change its 20-year
position toward Syrian involvement in Lebanon. Suddenly,
Syria's "stabilizing and necessary presence" in Lebanon
became, overnight and without any change in Syria's
behavior, "an evil occupation that should immediately be
ended."
The underlying idea behind demanding Syrian withdrawal
was simple: It would precipitate the fall of the Syrian
regime, and the U.S. would end up with a new government
in Damascus that is both Israel-friendly and an ally of
the U.S. Does that have any resemblance to the
neoconservative justification for the war on Iraq?
To the dismay of U.S. policymakers, this belligerent
attitude only rallied Syrians behind their own
government.
Ultimately, the Bush administration has to realize that
by trying to isolate Syria politically and
diplomatically, the U.S. continues to lose ability to
influence a major player in the Middle East. In the wake
of the ongoing instability in Iraq and violence in
Palestine and Lebanon, it begs the larger question: Has
isolating Syria made the region more secure?
Currently, the White House doesn't talk to the
democratically elected government of Palestine. It does
not talk to Hezbollah, which has democratically elected
members in the Lebanese parliament and is a member of
the Lebanese coalition government. It does not talk to
Iran, and it certainly does not talk to Syria.
Gone are the days when U.S. special envoys to the Middle
East would spend hours, if not days, with Syrian
officials brainstorming, discussing, negotiating and
looking for creative solutions leading to a compromise
or settlement. Instead, this administration follows the
Bolton Doctrine: There is no need to talk to Syria,
because Syria knows what it needs to do. End of the
matter.
When the United States realizes that it is high time to
reconsider its policies toward Syria, Syria will be more
than willing to engage. However, the rules of the game
should be clear. As President Bashar Assad has said,
Syria is not a charity. If the U.S. wants something from
Syria, then Syria requires something in return from the
U.S.: Let us address the root cause of instability in
the Middle East.
The current crisis in Lebanon needs an urgent solution
because of the disastrous human toll. Moreover, the
whole Middle East deserves a comprehensive deal that
would put an end to occupation and allow all countries
to equally prosper and live in dignity and peace.
===========================
INTERVIEW: (VERY IMPORTANT) IMAD MOUSTAPHA, Ph.D.
Ambassador of Syria to the U.S.A.
http://www.apfn.org/APFN/WWiii.HTM
INTERVIEW:IMAD MOUSTAPHA, Ph.D. Ambassador of Syria —
"The Charles Goyette Show"
CLICK:>>
8/3/06 "The Charles Goyette Show" KNFX 1100 AM RADIO 6-9
am
INTERVIEW:IMAD MOUSTAPHA, Ph.D. Ambassador of Syria to
the U.S.A.
"Isreal has to listen to a voice of reason!"
AUDIO:
http://www.apfn.net/pogo/A001I060803-goyette-1.MP3
Senate Armed Services Cmte.
Hearing on Iraq & Afghanistan
CLICK:
============================
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=================================
(Congressional Record - House. 152 Cong Rec H 4024.
Retrieved June 20, 2006, from
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/C?r109:./temp/~r109m4Mt1F.)
MESSAGE FROM THE SENATE -- (House of Representatives -
June 15, 2006)
[Page: H4024]
Whereas by early 2003 Saddam Hussein and his criminal,
Ba'athist regime in Iraq, which had supported
terrorists, constituted a threat against global peace
and security and was in violation of mandatory United
Nations Security Council Resolutions;