US weighed military strikes in Syria
AFP
| October 10 2005
The United States recently debated launching military
strikes inside Syria against camps used by insurgents operating in neighboring
Iraq, a US magazine reported.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice successfully
opposed the idea at a meeting of senior American officials held on October
1, Newsweek reported, citing unnamed US government sources.
Rice reportedly argued that diplomatic isolation
was a more effective approach, with a UN report pending that may blame
Syria for the assassination of former Lebanese premier Rafiq Hariri.
The United States has accused Damascus of allowing
insurgents to move arms and fighters across the Syrian border into Iraq
and of destabilizing the region.
US troops in Iraq have been waging an offensive
in recent weeks against insurgents in western towns near the Syrian
border.
The US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, said
last month that "our patience is running out" with Syria.
The same article also reported that Syria had
ended all security and intelligence cooperation with the United States
several months ago after growing frustrated with persistent public criticism
from Washington.
Syria's ambassador to the United States, Imad
Moustapha, told Newsweek that his government continued to detain Islamic
extremists and remained willing to resume cooperation if the public
bashing stopped.
"We are willing to re-engage the moment you
want but one condition," the magazine quotes Moustapha as saying.
"You have to acknowledge that we are helping."
Moustapha also confirmed an account from a US
intelligence official that Damascus had been angered when Washington
exposed one of its operatives.
While criticizing Syria in public statements,
the United States had privately praised Damascus for handing over the
half brother of Saddam Hussein, Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hassan, earlier in
the year, the magazine reported.
Moustapha said Syria could do more to assist the
United States if intelligence was shared as in the past.
The magazine reported that some US intelligence
officials believed Washington now was losing out on vital information.
Syrian cooperation in the last few years allegedly had helped avert
two possible attacks against US targets, including a Navy base in Bahrain.
One unnamed intelligence official told the magazine
that US pressure on the Syrian leadership could prove counter-productive
and that Washington may be "radicalizing the country."