Nearing the Outskirts of Damascus?
Michael Young | October 12, 2005, 3:40am
According to an "Arab diplomatic official" cited today by the Arabic daily Al-Hayat, the Mehlis report on the assassination of former Lebanese PM Rafik Hariri will be quite powerful, even if it may not be the final word on what happened (link in Arabic).
The report of the international investigator Detlev Mehlis ... which will be presented to the United Nations secretary general on October 21, and will be discussed in the Security Council on October 25, 'will not include final results that are 100% conclusive', but [the source] expected the report to reveal that the attack against ... Hariri and his assassination were planned months ahead of its execution, and that this plan 'was institutional not the act of an individual.' He indicated that the report would direct accusations against members of the Syrian intelligence services, and it is expected that [Mehlis] will conclude that 'the orders came from a high level.'
This is the most explicit statement yet of what the UN investigators might say, and while reports suggest that Mehlis will be asking for an extension of his mandate until December 15, even a document that does not name all names but does mention Syrian involvement will be particularly grave for the regime of President Bashar Assad, which is behaving increasingly, and probably legitimately, as if it were mortally threatened.
R C Dean | October 12, 2005, 5:20pm | #
gaius, there are any number of reports from a variety of sources circulating that point to the pipeline of men (and to a lesser extent materiel) from Syria down the river valleys as an essential prop to the Iraqi 'insurgency.' Most of them tie back to the US military in one way or another because we are the ones on the ground, true, but that doesn't mean that the reports aren't accurate.
Do you have any evidence to the contrary? I haven't seen anyone even trying to deny that Syria is trying to destabilize Iraq and channel support to its fellow Baathists.
I'm not saying or even recommending that we go into Syria in any big way, to occupy or engage in regime change. No need. We have legitimate military objectives across their border, because then cannot or will not shut off the flow of support for the anti-Iraqi forces operating in Iraq. We can address those objectives with current deployments, so crossing the border to deny a safe haven will not contribute to overstretch, and in the long run will help by reducing the long-term effectiveness of the insurgency.
gaius, I simply cannot accept the moral equivalence of the US and the USSR that you posit, or that the US is sponsoring an "empire" in any strong sense of the term. Where are our vassal states? Not the Germans, who we conquered barely a generation ago. Not the Japanese, either. Neither made a meaningful contribution to this war, and Germany is notably uncooperative on a wide range of issues.
Where are the gurkhas? Where is the tribute flowing into our coffers? Where are the enclaves where US law runs, not "native" law? Where are the countries where the leadership serves at our pleasure? Not Russia, our most recently defeated enemy.
We have a position of economic and military dominance, sure. But in my book, that falls short of empire.