Open Syria thread
I’ve been remiss in not posting about the UN report blasting Syrian officials for their role in the assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. In the New York Times, John Kifner provided a nice one-paragraph summary: In chilling detail, often reading like a paperback thriller, the United Nations report traces months of plotting by ...
I've been remiss in not posting about the UN report blasting Syrian officials for their role in the assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. In the New York Times, John Kifner provided a nice one-paragraph summary:
I’ve been remiss in not posting about the UN report blasting Syrian officials for their role in the assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. In the New York Times, John Kifner provided a nice one-paragraph summary:
In chilling detail, often reading like a paperback thriller, the United Nations report traces months of plotting by top Syrian intelligence officials – including President Bashar al-Assad’s powerful brother-in-law – and their Lebanese proxies that included constant surveillance of Mr. Hariri’s movements and the forced recruitment of a fake assassin to make a “suicide tape” to hide the real hands behind the bombing that killed Mr. Hariri in February.
So, the question is, what now? Some surprising people are talking tough. In the Financial Times, Former Kerry advisor Martin Indyk urges the Bush administration to resist a Libya-style deal with Syrian leader Bashir Assad:
Mr Assad has already sought a middle way out of this dilemma, sending emissaries to Washington to offer a Libyan-style ?package deal?, involving the surrender of lesser officials and an end to Syria?s rogue activities. But his offer comes far too late. President George W. Bush has already taken the measure of the man and found him unreliable. Mr Assad?s commitment to stop Syrian support for the Iraqi insurgency was honoured in the breach. His withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon was followed by a bombing campaign that has forced many of the Lebanese political class to flee. Even people in Washington (like me), who once advocated a ?carrots and sticks? approach to the Syrian ing?nue, have given up on him.
The Arab press reaction has also been interesting:
A political cartoon in Jordan’s independent al-Ghad expressed the choices for Syrian President Bashar Assad after the Mehlis report. It showed a sweating and confused-looking Assad sitting at a table as he holds two cards in his hand, clearly trying to choose one of them. One of the cards is the ace of spades with a picture of a bearded and scruffy Saddam Hussein. The other card is a two of diamonds with a picture of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi dressed as a joker.
Developing….
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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