Bush Tells Syria to Shut the **** Up or Get Bombed

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Bush Warns Syria Against Interfering With Lebanese Democracy
Thursday, October 04, 2007

WASHINGTON - President Bush warned Syria on Thursday against interfering in
Lebanon's presidential election and said he is sending a top military
commander to Beirut to find more ways to help Lebanon fight extremists.

"The United States strongly supports the success of democracy in Lebanon,"
Bush said after meeting with Saad Hariri, leader of the anti-Syrian majority
in Lebanon's parliament. "The United States is more than just an admirer. We
want to help as best as we possibly can."

The Lebanese parliament failed last week to elect a president because of a
boycott by the Syrian-backed opposition. Lawmakers have been unsuccessful so
far in efforts to reach agreement on a consensus candidate between the
pro-government camp and the opposition. The anti-Syrian coalition is led by
U.S.-backed Prime Minister Fuad Saniora, also a close ally of Hariri, and
the opposition is led by the Syria-backed Shiite Muslim militant group
Hezbollah.

"I am deeply concerned about foreign interference in your elections," Bush
told Hariri, adding that many nations have called on Syria to stay out. "We
expect Syria to honor that demand," he said.

The parliament put off until Oct. 23 another session on the issue of
choosing a successor to President Emile Lahoud, who steps down Nov. 24. More
than 15 declared or undeclared candidates are vying for the post, three of
them from the pro-government camp and one from the opposition.

If the deadlock persists, some fear the country could end up with two rival
governments battling for primacy, much like in the last two years of the
country's 1975-1990 civil war.

The United States has provided military assistance to Saniora's government
to help it fight radicals. Bush said Adm. William Fallon, commander of U.S.
forces in the Middle East, would travel to Lebanon to see what more could be
done.

"We respect your country and we understand the obstacles that you face,"
Bush told Hariri.

Hariri, a billionaire businessman who is close to the Saudi royal family,
leads the largest bloc in Parliament and is tapped to possibly be the next
prime minister under a new president. He has in recent days repeatedly
stressed the need to reach agreement to elect a president to avoid a power
vacuum.

Syria is routinely accused by the U.S. and others of being Lebanon's proxy
ruler and of fomenting instability in the country. It also has been accused
by many in a series of assassinations of top Lebanese officials, including
Hariri's father, former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, slain in a massive 2005
truck bombing.

"We've had members of our parliament being killed," Hariri said, sitting at
Bush's side in the Oval Office after their 45-minute meeting. "This action
is taken by terrorists that want to finish our democracy. We will stay
resolved, we will stay focused on our democracy. We will not let those who
want to destroy our democracy succeed."

Damascus has denied involvement in the assassinations. It was the Hariri
killing which ignited the huge protests that forced Syria to withdraw its
troops from Lebanon after a three-decade occupation.

Bush said an international tribunal looking into the Hariri and other
assassinations needs to move more quickly.

"That tribunal is taking too long to get started," he said. "The
international community must work more quickly to stand up this tribunal so
people will be held to account."
 
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