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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria ending cooperation with the US
2005-05-24
Syria has halted military and intelligence cooperation with the United States, its ambassador to Washington said in an interview, in a sign of growing strains between the two nations over the insurgency in Iraq.

The ambassador, Imad Moustapha, said in the interview on Friday at the Syrian Embassy here that his country had, in the last 10 days, "severed all links" with the United States military and Central Intelligence Agency because of what he called unjust American allegations. The Bush administration has complained bitterly that Syria is not doing enough to halt the flow of men and money to the insurgency in Iraq.

"We thought, why should we continue to cooperate?" he said.

Bush administration officials said Syria's stance has prompted intense debate at high levels in the administration about new steps that might be taken against the Syrian government. The officials said the options included possible military, diplomatic or economic action. But senior Pentagon and military officials cautioned Monday that if any military action was eventually ordered, it was likely to be limited to insurgent movements along the border.

"There's a lot of discussion about what to do about Syria and what a problem it is," said the administration official, who works for a government agency that has been involved in the debate.

Relations between Syria and the United States have been souring for months, and some Bush administration officials said Syria's level of cooperation had been dwindling even before the latest move.

Lawrence Di Rita, the Pentagon spokesman, said there have been occasional low-level military-to-military communications along the border. He said the Defense Department had received no official notification of a change in that status, nor that the status of American military attachés in Damascus had been altered.

The American officials declined to provide an on-the-record response to Mr. Moustapha's statements on halting intelligence cooperation, citing the delicacy of the issue.

American intelligence officials have said Syria has provided important assistance in the campaign against Al Qaeda since the Sept. 11 attacks. In recent months, senior Pentagon officials and military officers say, cooperation between the two nations has included low-level communications across the border between captains and field-grade officers of the American-led alliance and their Syrian counterparts.

One senior military officer said those communications had been helpful in mitigating a number of "cross-border firings" of artillery that have occurred between Syrian forces and the American-led military in Iraq. Any further scaling back of cooperation there or between Syria and the C.I.A. could have a tangible impact, officials said.

American military officers in Baghdad and intelligence analysts in Washington say militant cells inside Iraq draw on "unlimited money" from an underground financial network run by former Baath Party leaders and relatives of Mr. Hussein, many of whom they say found safe haven to live and operate in Syria.

Those officials say Damascus has done very little in its banking system to stop the financing, nor has it seized former Iraqi Baathists identified by the United States as organizing and financing the insurgency.

In presenting Syria's case, Mr. Moustapha said his government had done all it could to respond to American complaints, including taking steps to build barriers and add to border patrols.

He declined to comment on any role Syria might have played in the capture of Mr. Hussein's half-brother, Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hassan al-Tikriti, No. 36 on the American list of 55 most-wanted Iraqis. But the ambassador said Syria had jailed some 1,200 foreign fighters who sought to enter Iraq from Syria, and had returned scores of others to their home countries.

On the day of the interview with Mr. Moustapha, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Syria was "allowing its territory to be used to organize terrorist attacks against innocent Iraqis."

A senior American military officer acknowledged that "the Syrian government has in some cases been helpful" in building border berms and otherwise taking action against people involved in providing support to the insurgency. But the officer added: "Our sense is that they protest a bit too much and that they are capable of doing more. We expect them to do more."

The United States ambassador to Damascus, Margaret Scobey, has been in Washington for several months, having been recalled for consultations after the assassination in Lebanon on Feb. 14 of Rafik Hariri, a former prime minister.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#18  I advise cooperation with the IRS.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-05-24 16:48  

#17  2b cooperating or not 2b, that is the question. Whether tis nobler to audit now or just send him a big bill.
Posted by: IRS cooperation Dept   2005-05-24 16:25  

#16  i have decided to stop cooperating with the irs.
Posted by: 2b   2005-05-24 14:00  

#15  "We thought, why should we continue to cooperate?" he said.

Well, well, well. Someone's trying out for Baghdad Bob's old job, aren't they?
Posted by: BA   2005-05-24 13:34  

#14  I agree with Frank G. If they are publicly not
cooperating, then we can not cooperate on crossing the border by aircraft.
Posted by: plainslow   2005-05-24 13:06  

#13  The question is... is Syria only pretending that they will no longer pretend to cooperate, or are they serious about no longer pretending?
Posted by: Sobiesky   2005-05-24 13:04  

#12  All hope in the WOT, in the Middle East, heck, in everything is lost...the Syrians are not cooperating!!

First Constantine got voted off "American Idol", and now THIS!!! Why do I even get out of bed anymore??
Posted by: Justrand   2005-05-24 12:30  

#11  Should have rendered them instead of renditioning them.
Posted by: RWV   2005-05-24 12:10  

#10  seal and mine the border. Hot pursuit by air authorized?
Posted by: Frank G   2005-05-24 11:32  

#9  Ending cooperation?

When the hell did they ever start?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-05-24 11:19  

#8  And I think we can all agree that renditioning people to SYRIA was a stain on the WOT.

Why? Were the Syrians letting them go? Because that's the only wrong thing I can think of doing to a terrorist.
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-05-24 10:52  

#7  renditioning people to SYRIA was a stain on the WOT.

I'll wait to make that judgement till I have all the evidence, which may not happen in my lifetime. So, I'll remain undecided.
Posted by: Mrs. Davis   2005-05-24 10:38  

#6  AP - seriously, we have been sharing intell on AQ, and yes, we have renditioned some guys there.

Clearly, however, what we've gotten from them is less important than the problems we've had with them. And I think we can all agree that renditioning people to SYRIA was a stain on the WOT.
Posted by: Liberalhawk   2005-05-24 09:42  

#5  The Bush administration has complained bitterly that Syria is not doing enough to halt the flow of men and money to the insurgency in Iraq.

"We thought, why should we continue to cooperate?" he said.


"You're not doing enough."

"Then I won't do ANYTHING!"

Two-year-old logic, or Arab diplomacy? Who can tell the difference?
Posted by: Robert Crawford   2005-05-24 09:41  

#4  Didn't ya know? Syria is where we send all those Syrian-Canadians (or is it Canadian-Syrians?) to be tortured. It's been in all the Canuck papers.
Posted by: Steve   2005-05-24 09:36  

#3  Me too, AP. Must've been one of those "deep cover" things. So deep, you never knew it was happening...
Posted by: tu3031   2005-05-24 09:16  

#2   "Our sense is that they protest a bit too much and that they are capable of doing more. We expect them to do more."

The lady doth protest too much methinks.
Posted by: mmurray821   2005-05-24 09:15  

#1  I didn't know that we were cooperating with the Syranians. Sure had me fooled for a while.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2005-05-24 09:09  

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