Syria rejects Iraq's accusations (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-17 09:27
Syria on Thursday rejected Iraqi accusations that it and Iran were supporting
al-Qaida-linked insurgents in Iraq.
The comments from the Syrian Foreign Ministry came a day after Iraqi Defense
Minister Hazem Shaalan said that Iranian and Syrian intelligence agents, plus
former operatives from Saddam Hussein's security forces, were cooperating with
the al-Qaida-linked group in Iraq that is led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
US President Bush also warned Iran and Syria, saying that "meddling in the
internal affairs of Iraq is not in their interest."
![Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Shara. Syria rejected as groundless charges by US President George W. Bush and some Iraqi officials accusing Damascus of interfering in neighbouring war-wracked Iraq. [AFP/file]](xin_401201170932648239224.jpg) Syrian Foreign
Minister Farouk al-Shara. Syria rejected as groundless charges by US
President George W. Bush and some Iraqi officials accusing Damascus of
interfering in neighbouring war-wracked Iraq.
[AFP/file] | The Syrian Foreign Ministry dismissed Shaalan's accusations as "baseless." It
did not refer to Bush's remarks.
"Syria sees the repeat of fabricated accusations as reflecting the wish of
some people to hide the real reasons behind the deterioration of the situation
in Iraq, and to mislead the public opinion," the ministry said in a statement
faxed to The Associated Press office in Damascus.
Gen. George Casey, the chief of the multinational force in Iraq, told
reporters at the Pentagon later Thursday that he regards Syria as a greater
short-term threat to Iraq's stability and national elections than Iran.
A group of senior members of Iraq's regime, based in Syria, are sending money
and support to insurgents, he said. The Syrian government, although it has taken
some steps to clamp down on low-level fighters, has done nothing against the
senior officials, who call themselves the "New Regional Command," Casey said.
"They are not going after the big fish, which is really the people that we're
interested in," Casey said.
The Syrian Foreign Ministry statement said that Syria "supports Iraq's
security and stability and the upcoming election process" — a reference to the
Iraqi elections scheduled for Jan. 30.
The ministry said Syria wanted "to work within our capabilities to control
the (Syrian-Iraqi) borders" against militants trying to infiltrate into Iraq.
"We have already declared our readiness to cooperate and coordinate with the
interim Iraqi government in this regard and in other security aspects," it said.
Iraq's stability is not only in Iraq's interest, "but also in the interest of
Syria and the entire region," it said.
Iran did not respond Thursday to the Iraqi defense minister's comment.
Shaalan has previously accused Tehran of interfering in Iraq's affairs, and Iran
has denied the charge.
Syria, a staunch opponent of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq last year,
repeatedly has rejected Iraqi and U.S. accusations that it is not doing enough
to control its long desert border with Iraq.
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