The horror of terrorism again shook the world this week, as the Beslan
slaughter of innocents revealed another nation under siege by
cold-blooded killers. Russian President
Vladimir Putin
immediately linked the Beslan attack to 'the worldwide network of terrorism'
and demanded a more determined response to the threat: 'We showed weakness,
and the weak are beaten.'

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Hamas rally |
How must the free world now exhibit strength? Though
news reports generally fail to convey
just how, political and intelligence leaders acknowledge that a key
requirement is uprooting that worldwide
terror network ― which uses the nation of Syria as a central hub of activity.
Syria, since 1979 a
perpetual member of the U.S. State Department's list of
nations
sponsoring terrorism, continues 'to provide
political and material support' to Hamas and 'to permit Iran to use Damascus
as a trans-shipment point for resupplying Hizballah in Lebanon.'
Earlier this year, a leading
Syrian dissident
and the
former head of the coalition's hunt for Iraq's WMDs claimed that part of
Saddam Hussein's chemical and biological weapons were hidden in Syria.
Additionally, a number of Iraqi officials ― including members of
Saddam's family ― were granted
refuge in Damascus after the collapse of the Iraqi dictator's regime, and
many of the
foreign fighters responsible for attacks against coalition troops are
believed to have entered Iraq through Syria.
In a
comprehensive report on Syrian support of Hamas in Israel,
Gary Gambill, editor of
the Middle East Intelligence Bulletin, summarized:
Since the mid-1990's Damascus has been the
operational headquarters of the Hamas military wing and a nexus for the
transfer of external funds to Hamas operatives in the territories. Syria
and Syrian-occupied Lebanon have become major conduits for funneling weapons
and explosives to Hamas and safe havens for training hundreds of its
operatives... most of the deadly Hamas suicide attacks [of 2001-2] have been
linked to Damascus.
And the Syria-Hamas link remains in place. In the aftermath of last week's double suicide bombing in Be'er
Sheva, Israeli Army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
Moshe Yaalon pointed an accusatory finger at the Hamas leadership in Damascus, which
most likely directed the attack: 'Anyone responsible for terror against us
shouldn't sleep soundly at night.'
ANTI-ISRAEL CAMPAIGN
Syria has long made opposition to Israel and the democratic West a top
priority. When the U.N. Security
Council overwhelmingly voted in favor of a
December 2002
resolution condemning the al Qaeda-led hotel bombing in Kenya and the
attempted missile attack on an Arkia Israeli Airlines flight, Syria voted
against the resolution. Why? The Syrians 'could not accept the repeated
mention of Israel in the text.'
Syria has waged three wars against Israel, invaded Israel's borders,
supported Hizballah terrorists in southern Lebanon for nearly three decades,
and ― as documented by
Gambill, Eyal Zisser,
Amos Gilad and others ― actively enabled ongoing terror
against Israeli civilians via Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Hamas's top
political leader, Khaled Mashaal,
lives in Damascus under the protection of the Syrian regime.
The Syrians have a stockpile
of ballistic missiles about ten times that of the Iraqi arsenal under Saddam
Hussein, and have proximity and geography on their side. Former Israeli
defense minister Moshe Arens
concluded in 2002 that in the immediate future, 'the [missile] threat that
Israel most likely will have to contend with' is that of Syria.
OCCUPIED LEBANON
But Syria ― a totalitarian, Stalinist regime since 1963 ― is not
just a neighborhood bully toward Israel. The Syrians have maintained over
17,000 troops within Lebanon since 1976, when Syria shuffled its military
across the border to help quell a year-old Lebanese civil war (which continued
for another 15 years). Since then, Syria has dominated Lebanon's politics and
controlled that nation's official structures, all the while claiming its
presence was necessary to ward off 'radical action emanating from Israel.'
But this rationale is clearly absurd. In 2000, Israel withdrew its forces from southern Lebanon, in fulfillment
of its obligations under U.N. Resolution 520 to respect 'the sovereignty,
territorial integrity, unity and political independence of Lebanon under
the sole and exclusive authority of the Government of Lebanon through the
Lebanese Army throughout Lebanon.'
Unshaken in its resolve to control Lebanon, Syria has remained
the power broker there. Just last week, Syria won a political victory as
Lebanon's puppet parliament put off real elections, and instead pushed through a
constitutional amendment that extends the expiring presidential tenure of Syrian lackey
Emile Lahoud by a full three years. As
Boston Globe editors wrote, 'Syrian bosses made a mockery of Lebanese
independence.'
Finally, the United Nations has said 'enough.'
By a vote of 9-0 with six abstentions, the
U.N. Security Council moved on Thursday (Sept. 2) to block Lahoud's false
appointment, and once again called for 'free and fair presidential elections'
to restore Lebanese sovereignty. The precursor of this determined expression of
international discontent was the United States' own
'Syria Accountability
Act,' passed in May of last year, which placed sanctions on the Syrian
regime for failing to fulfill its obligation to cease occupying Lebanon.

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Bashar Assad |
But Syrian leader Bashar Assad's cronies in the Lebanese Parliament ignored
the U.N. motion on Friday (Sept.3), and as
The
New York Times reported, 'rubber-stamped Syria's order to keep its
handpicked president in office.'
The implications of this matter reach far beyond Lebanon's shores. The
Jerusalem Post commented that the U.N.―Syria conflict is 'a microcosm of
the broader issue':
With Western resolve, Lebanon can be turned into a test case for the
introduction of new rules of the game in a region contaminated by the kind of
terror activity that Syria habitually condones, encourages, and harbors.
In the wake of this week's Russian school massacre, the
Russian foreign minister visited Israel and expressed his
solidarity with those fighting against the terrorist bands and nations that support them:
Terrorism has no nationality ― it is an international evil. We will do
everything in our power to strengthen the global coalition against terror, in
which Israel and Russia are very active.
Given recent developments, HonestReporting encourages subscribers to promote greater
awareness of the Syrian menace ― using the key points above ― to urge your
news outlets, community and elected leaders to keep the pressure on Syria,
lest more terror strike the Mideast and the world.
HonestReporting