US: Cease-fire a setback for Iran, Syria

Associated Press, THE JERUSALEM POST Aug. 14,
2006


The UN-declared cease-fire in Lebanon, if fully
implemented, would be a strategic setback for
Iran and Syria because it strengthens democracy
in Lebanon and stabilizes the border with Israel,
the State Department said Monday.

"You will not have Hizbullah roaming freely in
the south of Lebanon," spokesman Sean McCormack
said. "Iran and Syria will not have had the
ability to rearm Hizbullah."

The militia, designated as a terrorist group by
the department, have fought for 34 days with
Israel. The guerrillas used rockets and other
weapons provided by Iran and channeled through
Syria, according to US and Israeli officials.

The UN resolution sets the stage for 15,000
Lebanese troops and 15,000 foreign troops to be
deployed in southern Lebanon, the main staging
area for decades for Hizbullah cross-border
attacks on Israel.

Two years ago, the UN Security Council required
Hizbullah to disarm, and that principle is
carried over by the new resolution approved
unanimously last week. McCormack said when the
two resolutions are implemented "that would
represent a setback for Hizbullah."

Estimates vary as to how long it might take to
assemble an international force and deploy it in
Lebanon. "We are pushing for this force to be
generated as quickly as possible," McCormack
said. The United Nations has had two preliminary
planning sessions, and a larger one is expected
later in the week.

"I would hope that very quickly we would see
countries coming forward and saying that they
will participate in the force," the spokesman
said.

McCormack said France was likely to play a
leading role.

In the meantime, Defense Minister Amir Peretz
said Sunday, "There is no situation in which
Hizbullah fires at [IDF] forces that we will not
retaliate."

Backing that position, McCormack said, "There is
nothing in this resolution that calls upon Israel
to abrogate its rights to self-defense."

Private groups that monitor Middle East
developments were cautious in their assessments.

Provisions of the resolution are "likely to be
realized in part, but none in its entirety," said
Geoff Porter, an analyst with the Eurasia group,
a private consulting firm that advises the US and
Japanese governments as well as corporations.

Hizbullah, Lebanese and Israeli positions "will
probably conspire to scuttle" the resolution, he
said.

Mark Rosenblum, founder of Americans for Peace
Now, a dovish Zionist organization, said, "We
think that this is a necessary and potentially
important piece of paper."

"But the hard work in establishing peace on the
ground has just begun, particularly for the Bush
administration," Rosenblum said.

__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com

Reply via email to