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U.S. tries to seal Iraqi border with Syria

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2dogs

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"Alright, who's next in line- Syria, come on up. Libya, end of the line. N Korea- STOP SHOVING- you'll get your turn. Iran, control yourself!"






http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/Co...0&call_pageid=1045739058633&col=1045739057805


U.S. tries to seal Iraqi border with Syria
Long frontier in barren desert is mostly unfenced



CAMP AS SAYLIYAH, Qatar (AP) - U.S. air strikes pounded Iraqi positions near Syria today, as special forces troops monitored the porous frontier to prevent Iraqi troops from escaping and more fighters from entering Iraq, U.S. officials said.
The focus on al-Qaim in far-western Iraq highlights its strategic importance to Iraq.

Most Iraqi surface-to-surface missiles fired during the 1991 Persian Gulf War were launched from the area and U.S. officials said some Iraqi officials have already fled the country through the shortest western route out of Baghdad.

In addition, Syrian fighters have turned up on the Iraqi battlefield and other Arab fighters have crossed into Iraq via Syria to attack U.S. and British forces.

On Thursday, it appeared some were returning the way they came: a correspondent for the al-Jazeera satellite television station at the Syrian-Iraq border said he had met Palestinian and Syrian volunteer fighters at the border who had abandoned their positions in Mosul and were returning home.

The fighters said they left the northern city after their Iraqi commanders left them alone in the streets.

U.S. air force Maj.-Gen. Gene Renuart, operations director at U.S. Central Command, drew attention Thursday to coalition activity in the al-Qaim region, a day after U.S. Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld again accused Syria of "notably unhelpful" behaviour.

Rumsfeld has accused Syria of providing Iraq with night-vision goggles and other military equipment and said Wednesday the Syrian government had provided members of Saddam's family and government with safe haven or passage through Syria.

Renuart said U.S. special forces were now in a position to monitor and "control" the flow of traffic into and out of Iraq through the al-Qaim crossing.

"We believe we're in a position where we can begin to control that area more freely," he said.

"We continue to have some discussions with leaders in that area and we believe we're making good progress."

But Iraqi forces remain, including Special Republican Guard units, paramilitary forces and some regular-army forces, who are putting up sporadic but fierce resistance, said U.S. navy Lieut. Mark Kitchens, a Central Command spokesman.

"Obviously, we're running into fierce firefights and we're going to continue to go after that," he said.

Renuart said the air strikes were pounding Iraqi forces and "we believe that those forces have been significantly reduced over the last week or two."

U.S. forces were also striking at surface-to-surface missile launching sites, since the al-Qaim area was the launch pad of most surface-to-surface missiles against Saudi Arabia and Israel during the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

"We clearly are interested in protecting the neighbours in that region," Renuart said.

"And so, it's in our strategic interest to ensure that we preclude any capability of surface-to-surface missiles, especially those that are long range, to be launched from that area," Renuart said.

He called the strikes "preventive medicine," to ensure no missiles strike Iraq's neighbours. So far, only a few Iraqi missiles have reached Kuwait in the current conflict.

Monitoring the 500-kilometre Iraqi-Syrian frontier may be more difficult, however. The border is easy to cross since only areas close to official crossing points are fenced for a few kilometres in either direction.

Beyond the official crossing points and the Tigris River, which forms the frontier in the north, the terrain is wide open and people cross on foot, by donkeys or four-wheel-drive vehicles.

Syrian border guards patrol in search of possible infiltrators or smugglers, who are most often sheep smugglers from Iraq into Syria but they can't be everywhere.

Border points were open as usual Thursday but no Syrians or Palestinians living in Syria have been allowed to cross into Iraq for the last four days to prevent any volunteer fighters from crossing into Iraq. Only Iraqis are allowed to cross into Iraq, as well as foreigners with valid Iraqi visas.
 
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=31976

The job's not finished

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted: April 11, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern


Why are we in Iraq today?

Because we didn't finish the job we started in 1991.

The objectives of the first Persian Gulf War were limited by the first President Bush's desire to bring together a large coalition of forces committed solely to chasing Iraqi forces from Kuwait.

Once that goal was accomplished, the U.S. didn't have the stomach, the will nor the support of its Arab allies to remove from power the man who ordered the invasion of Kuwait – Saddam Hussein.

It's important we don't call it quits in the region 12 years later until the job is finished.

What is the job?

The job should be destroying the terrorist infrastructure in the Middle East.

That means toppling regimes in Syria and Iraq – by any means necessary.

The logical next phase of this war should be to shift attention to Syria. Damascus not only supports terrorism, it is still at this very moment supporting Saddam Hussein's falling regime. It has been the No. 1 conduit of illegal weapons to Iraq.

Further, Syria is the only country in the Middle East actively occupying a neighboring country – just like Saddam Hussein did in 1991. That little neighbor is Lebanon – one of the few countries in the region that actually has a history of constitutional, republican-style government.

Why Syria and not Iran? Because Iran has domestic problems that could lead to the fall of the mullah regime at any moment. An invasion may not be necessary. But Syria is a second-generation, totalitarian police state. Uprisings are brutally crushed, and there is no chance of a popular rebellion. Thus, it will take outside force – the kind we are now employing in Iraq – to take down Damascus.

My G2 Bulletin was the first publication in the world to report Bush administration officials were actively considering such a plan. Now it's an open secret. The London Telegraph reported Syria was among the topics discussed by President Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair during their summit in Belfast this week.

"There's got to be a change in Syria," Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz said Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press."

His remark followed the March 29 threat by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld during a Pentagon briefing.

"And to Iraq's neighbor, Syria: We have information that shipments of military supplies have been crossing the border from Syria into Iraq, including night-vision goggles. These deliveries pose a direct threat to the lives of coalition forces. We consider such trafficking as hostile acts and will hold the Syrian government accountable for such shipments," Rumsfeld said.

Although left out of Bush's "axis-of-evil" illustration of countries harboring or sponsoring terrorists, Syria has gained increased scrutiny amid suspicions it allowed Hussein to transfer weapons of mass destruction across its border, allegations it supplied Iraq with illegal arms which are currently being used against coalition forces, and charges it and Iran have dispatched thousands of terrorists and suicide bombers into Iraq for attacks against coalition forces.

Syria was recently fingered as the middle man that provided GPS-jamming equipment made by a Russian firm in cooperation with the Russian military. In addition, Syria allowed the transfer of night-vision glasses to be used by Iraqi soldiers targeting American troops.

Another report suggests Syria recently also facilitated Baghdad's acquisition of 500 laser-guided anti-tank missiles from Russia.

There are also reports of Syria harboring Hussein's wife, Sajida – mother of Uday and Qusay.

Is it crazy to talk about extending the war in the Middle East? Recent history has shown us it may be crazy not to do so. Our troops are there now. We have made a huge commitment to one regime change. It won't be easy to do this again a year from now or 10 years from now.

There is no chance Syria will change its stripes without force. There is no chance Lebanon will be free without a regime change in Damascus. There is no chance we will wipe out the world's biggest terrorist base – in Lebanon – without targeting Syria.

Let's not leave the job unfinished again.
 
The EX Iraqi UN ambassador left NYC today. He's going back to Iraq via FRANCE and SYRIA.

The itinerary is questionable and provocative as hell to begin with but this guy can't possibly expect his countrymen to welcome him with open arms.

I'll bet money that he doesn't make it past Syria.
 
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