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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria accuses US of launching lethal raids over its borders
2005-10-30
Syria has accused the United States of launching lethal military raids into its territory from Iraq, escalating the diplomatic crisis between the two countries as the Bush administration seeks to step up pressure on President Bashar Assad's regime.

Major General Amid Suleiman, a Syrian officer, said that American cross-border attacks into Syria had killed at least two border guards, wounded several more and prompted an official complaint to the American embassy in Damascus.

He made the allegations during an official press tour of Syrian security forces on the Iraqi border, which the US claims is a barely guarded passage into Iraq for hardcore foreign jihadis.

While showing off what he said were beefed-up Syrian border measures designed to blunt those criticisms, including new police stations and checkpoints, Maj Gen Suleiman alleged that his own border forces had come under repeated American attack.

"Incidents have taken place with casualties on my surveillance troops," he said, near the Euphrates river border crossing between Syria and Iraq. "Many US projectiles have landed here. In this area alone, two soldiers and two civilians have been killed by the American attacks."

The charge follows leaks in Washington that the US has already engaged in military raids into Syria and is contemplating launching special forces operations on Syrian soil to eliminate insurgent networks before they reach Iraq.

"No one in the administration has any problem with acting tough on Syria; it is the one thing they all agree on," said Edward Walker, a former US ambassador to Egypt and Israel, who is now head of the Middle East Institute think-tank. "I've heard there have been some cross-border activities, and it certainly makes sense as a warning to Syria that if they don't take care of the problem the US will step up itself."

But he warned that the increased blurring of battle lines between Iraq and Syria could turn a diplomatic stand-off between the two nations, playing out at the UN, into a fully fledged military confrontation. "It could escalate. With Syrian border guards getting shot, it could turn into a major issue."

In the Euphrates valley, however, the alleged cross-border fire fights are already a major issue. The Syrian military said that in May, in the divided village of Baghouz, which straddles the Syria-Iraq border about 350 miles north east of Damascus, Abdullah al-Hassake was manning a rundown concrete frontier outpost when he and fellow soldiers heard US helicopters.

He went on to the police station roof to survey the impending battle between US troops and Iraqi insurgents, who flee to the border when under attack, and was killed by fire from the US helicopters.

Syrian officials said that US charges that they were not doing enough to prevent insurgents crossing into Iraq are unfair. They pointed to new barbed wire and reinforced sand barriers across the 400-mile border, which cost £1.5 million, and claimed that they had deported or arrested about 1,500 foreign fighters heading to Iraq.

Much of the border is impossible to seal. Across the divide, the continuing violence in Iraq is all too evident. Both sides have strong ties with the regime of the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. "The people here are happy to help fighters go to face the Americans," said one local. But reinforced security on the Syrian side had made life harder, he added. That view is supported by some Western diplomats in Damascus, although US defence officials remain sceptical.

"The Syrians have stopped actively encouraging jihadis to go," said one diplomat. "In fact recently they've tried quite hard to stop it."

Across the Euphrates, the border appears to be the likely stage for a future showdown between the US and Syria.

"Sometimes the US soldiers fire at us every day," said Ibrahim Brahim, a Syrian security official. "Sometimes it's simply a mistake, but sometimes it's not. Mostly the US army wants to show us its power."
Posted by:Ebbuse Spomong1356

#14  "It could become a Syrian bloodbath."

I read a book once, "72 Hours on the Golan Heights" about the Yom Kippur War, and there was a quote in there that the Syrians would do well to remember. Noting that the Israelis fight in the American style, a Syrian colonel asked their Vietmanese advisor how Americans fought in the Jungle. To which the advisor replied:

"Americans don't fight in the jungle. They mow it down."
Posted by: Silentbrick   2005-10-30 22:16  

#13  General Suleiman's pissing and moaning reminds me very little of what flash928 was saying the other night:

It's like he's talking about having an appendectomy, but is really going to get an enema.

I knew I'd find a use for that little gem soon enough.
Posted by: Zenster   2005-10-30 19:54  

#12  "It could escalate. With Syrian border guards getting shot, it could turn into a major issue."
It could become a Syrian bloodbath.
Posted by: wxjames   2005-10-30 19:48  

#11  Only four Syrians dead? Somebody needs to work on marksmanship.
Posted by: Sluling Omeresing8297   2005-10-30 16:44  

#10  wtf are they gonna do about it?
Posted by: Jerelet Thineling2988   2005-10-30 15:31  

#9  What do you want to bet any Syrians that have got it were active in support of feeding foreigners into Iraq? When a repressive dictatorship like Syria claims it can't control it's borders it is pure bullshit. You would almost think they were arabs.
Posted by: Sock Puppet O´ Doom   2005-10-30 14:38  

#8  Syria accuses US of launching lethal raids over its borders

Pentagon Spokesman replies: "Uh, yup!...next question."
Posted by: Justrand   2005-10-30 13:30  

#7  "Mostly the US army wants to show us its power."

Well, no. Mostly what they want is to kill you.
Posted by: Matt   2005-10-30 13:15  

#6  Syria accuses US !
THIS IS FUNNY !
What next ?
"Syria threatens the USA" ???
Bring them on !
Posted by: Poitiers-Lepanto   2005-10-30 12:00  

#5  The more lethal the better!
Posted by: FeralCat   2005-10-30 11:10  

#4  Where is that quote reported, LHR? It sounds like a declaration of war to me.
Posted by: Jake-the-Peg   2005-10-30 10:58  

#3  GWB said today that the Syrian - Iraqi border is a "living breathing changing border", in his attempt to show US Senator Barbara Boxer that two can play at that game. This in reference to her and most US Dimorats thoughts on the US Constitution. Look for B2's over Damascus soon.....I hope
Posted by: Long Hair Republican   2005-10-30 10:49  

#2  The Hague Convention of 1907 states "a neutral country has the obligation not to allow its territory to be used by a belligerent. If the neutral country is unwilling or unable to prevent this, the other belligerent has the right to take appropriate actions."

The Syrians shouldn't sweat the US forces. The should be worried about the Iraqi which are getting the best training that any arab army has ever had in modern times. They're going to cut their way through the Syrians like the proverbal 'crap through a goose' on their way to Demascus. Payback is a mother.
Posted by: Grereng Hupavirt7442   2005-10-30 08:33  

#1  If true, good. If not true, STFU.
Posted by: AlanC   2005-10-30 08:24  

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