Assad to Arab MKs: Syria ready for peace, but Israel unwilling

Keit

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Here the article, then take a look at the several replies I'll post below:
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/761899.html

Syrian President Bashar Assad on Tuesday told three Israeli Arab MKs visiting Damascus that Syria is ready to establish peace with Israel based on the Arab League's 2002 plan, saying it was Israel who was not willing to accept the initiative.

Balad MKs Jamal Zahalka, Azmi Bishara, and Wassel Taha met with Assad Tuesday night for nearly two hours to discuss the peace process, developments in the Palestinian government and the war with Lebanon.

Speaking to Haaretz from the presidential palace in Damascus, Zahalka said that Assad was firmly opposed to any attempt to change the clauses in the Arab League's plan and urged Israel to accept it according to its exact wording when it was drafted.

The Arab League's plan calls on Israel to retreat to 1967 borders and for a multi-lateral agreement on a solution for the refugee plan. In return, all Arab countries would be required to recognize Israel and maintain diplomatic ties with it.

During the meeting, Assad reaffirmed his opposition to the deployment of international forces along the border between Syria and Lebanon, but expressed a willingness to accept what he defined as "help" from the Europeans in inspecting the border.

Zahalka said Assad reacted positively to the establishment of a Palestinian unity government. He also said that a number of Palestinian officials are scheduled to visit Damascus in coming days in order to update the Syrian leadership on recent developments.

The three MKs left the presidential palace shortly after an attempted car bomb attack on the U.S. embassy in Damascus.

Interior Minister Roni Bar-On earlier this week called on Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni to recall the passports of the three Arabs lawmakers, who visited Syria without seeking permission from the government.

At Bar-On's request, Attorney General Menachem Mazuz ordered a criminal investigation be opened against Balad MKs Azmi Bashara, Jamal Zahalka and Wassel Taha over their recent visit to Syria.
Here several replies on this article from haarets site:

Title: Assad could be right

Name: Mendel the Mean

City: Lublin State: near Poland

so is to be criminal investigation and trouble with passports maybe for those who go to discuss peace ?

Mendel remember this Arab League peace plan. He never understood what was wrong - when happen Mendel discuss it with friend (well, not friend really: neighbour Aaron). "If Israels not want this, then what they want ?" (Mendel asks). "More !" says Aaron. "More what ? (asks Mendel). "Just more," says Aaron.

Much as it pain Mendel to admit, maybe this time Aaron was right.

Mendel tell you Israels something: this not just best peace offer you get: this only peace offer you get
Title: You people ARE HIPOCRITS

Name: Anthony Azzi

City: State:

ARE YOU KIDDING ME, do you people expect the arabs to recognise you while you come and steal our land and kill our people?
And you accuse Us of terrorising you when we try to fight Back. There is something wrong here. is this world Blind or What?
Im quite suprised that The Arab nations still want to have peace with Israel.
No peace without Israel's terms??? is this a joke. Israel has no terms, its the attacker, its the occupier, its the terrorist.
Title: Yet again Israel shows who is in the way of peace

Name: Canadian

City: Canada State:

All of these responses once more show why there is no peace in the middle east. Israel loves war. If Israel wanted peace it could have it at any time of its choosing merely by returning the goods it stole, namely land. and in exchange for that cursed land that brings nothing but rockets you'd have peace, and the respect of the world.

To those that ask what the arabs give in exchange, they give the rest of Israel, which was Arab land, and which Israel is in danger of losing at any time as long as there is no peace.

If Israel ever does cease to exist it will be for this love of war. You only need to lose once.
 
Not only do they not want peace, they want everyone to be at war with each other. I viewed the attack on the American embassy in Syria as an attempt to distract Assad so that he spends time fighting "internal enemies." It would neutralize one of the few powers involved in the peace process, in effect allowing Israel and US to continue to plundering and waging war against arabs with very little resistance. It's not as if any arab power have been able to stop the murder and plunder as soon as they begin to voice opposition a neutralization force pops up.

While I don't think Syria is completely innocent or necessarily the greatest defender of lebanon and palestine, it has been one a thorn in the side of these psychopaths. The attack looks like a mossad operation being staged especially in light of the following article.


http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1533954,00.html

Coming a day after the fifth anniversary of 9/11 and following another videotaped al-Qaeda vow to stage new attacks, Tuesday morning's foiled terrorist raid on the American embassy in Damascus is certainly cause for U.S. concern. A Syrian interrogation of one surviving attacker will seek to determine whether the incident was in fact the work of al-Qaeda or that of other individuals seeking to add to the carnage. Anti-American feelings are high throughout the Middle East, which in recent months has been gripped not only by the war in Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but the ferocious summer battles between Israel and Hizballah in Lebanon. With radicals blaming the U.S. in all three wars, it is prudent to assume that some of them may seize this opportunity to strike.
But the Syrian regime itself may have more to worry about in this particular attack than the U.S. That's because as it may have been intended as a riposte to Washington, the raid was a bold challenge to the rule of President Bashar Assad. The attack was carried out by as many as four Islamic militants shouting Muslim slogans in the heart of Damascus's diplomatic quarter not far from Assad's own residence - in short, one of the most heavily protected neighborhoods in Syria, if not the Middle East. The attackers failed to kill any American diplomats, and Syrian security guards apparently managed to slay three of the assailants. But that doesn't mean the terrorists were bumbling amateurs.
Bitterly at odds with Washington, Assad's regime has sometimes allowed militants to get too close to the U.S. embassy. During an anti-American demonstration in 2000, security forces looked the other way as a mob stormed the grounds and ransacked the American mission. Amid last winter's protests over Danish cartoons viewed as mocking the Prophet Mohammed, demonstrators burned the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus.
But allowing terrorists to hit a foreign embassy is a different matter altogether. For one thing, Assad's regime knows that could be a casus belli for a U.S. military strike on Syria. Relations have been tense for years. The U.S. recalled its ambassador in Damascus after Syria, despite its denials, was implicated in the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri in February 2005. Mobs are one thing, but terrorism tells the Syrian people something that no dictator wishes to show: that the regime does not have as tight a grip on the country as it would like its citizens to believe.
What the attack shows, in fact, is that the Syrian regime's own long war with Islamic extremists is heating up again. In 1982, the regime of Assad's late father, Hafez, obliterated sections of the Syrian city of Hama, killing an estimated 20,000 people, to quell an uprising by the fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood. The Assad dynasty's iron rule has kept the lid on discontent for most of the time since. But during the last few years, new attacks seem to herald the return of violent extremists. Just three months ago, in one of the Syrian capital's most prominent public squares, four gunmen were killed trying to attack the building housing Syrian state television. In 2004, the government blamed terrorists for setting off a car bomb in West Damascus near several ministries and embassies.
Another way to look at it is that the Syrian regime may be reaping what it sows. Among Arab leaders, Assad is alone in his outspoken support for Islamic militant groups like Hizballah in Lebanon, and the Palestinan factions, Hamas and Islamic Jihad. U.S. officials believe that the Assad regime has secretly aided the three-year-old Sunni insurgency in Iraq, providing passage for jihad volunteers and funds, and safe haven for insurgency leaders. At the start of the war in 2003, Arab jihadists who poured into Damascus en route to Baghdad were allowed to openly line up outside the Iraqi embassy just down the road from the American embassy.
Assad, whose regime is officially secular despite its close alliance with the Islamic Republic of Iran, often casts himself as the champion of radical Islamic movements. Last month, in a speech openly ridiculing moderate Arab leaders, he hailed Hizballah's war in Lebanon as a stinging defeat for Israel that undercut American plans for the region. But it is beginning to look like at least some of the Islamists consider his regime the enemy, too.

It's like a warning to Assad: You have Arab enemies and if you didn't America and Israel would create them by staging attacks on their own embassies on your watch and make sure the enemies get closer and closer to your home. Remember Hariri...

Ingrid
 
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