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U.S.: Syrian forces still in Lebanon

Associated Press
Published June 11, 2005


WASHINGTON - Syria has not fully withdrawn its intelligence forces from neighboring Lebanon and is interfering with elections there, perhaps even organizing political assassinations, the Bush administration alleged Friday.

U.S. officials stopped short, however, of accusing the Syrians of carrying out either of two recent political killings.

"There are reports that we have been hearing about for some time about Syrian hit lists, targeting key Lebanese public figures of various political and religious persuasion, for assassination," White House spokesman Scott McClellan said.

A Syrian official denied the allegations of intelligence agents in Lebanon, saying they were "nonobjective and untrue."

"All Syrian troops, of all their different divisions, have withdrawn from Lebanon, and this was verified by the United Nations," Information Minister Mahdi Dakhlallah told Syria's official SANA news agency. "Lebanon is an independent and sovereign state and it alone specifies its relations with other countries."

The Bush administration offered no specifics but said Syria has continued a pattern of intimidation born of nearly two decades of de facto political and military control in Lebanon. The salvo appeared aimed at asserting international disapproval of Syrian influence as Lebanese elections continue this weekend.

"We do see a pattern of the use of threat and violence to create an atmosphere of intimidation inside Lebanon," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said. "And we believe that that pattern of threat and intimidation is designed to try to influence the Lebanese people, as they continue their voting."

Syria's ambassador to the United Nations accused Washington of a smear campaign and repeated his country's contention that all its forces left Lebanon weeks ago, in compliance with a United Nations demand.

U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan is sending inspectors back to Lebanon to check reports that Syrian intelligence officials may still be operating in the country, a U.N. official said Friday.

[Last modified June 11, 2005, 00:26:12]


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