U.S. academic believes Syria still influential in Lebanon
Washington has its own plans, says Michael Hudson
By Clancy Chassay
BEIRUT: Renowned Middle East expert Michael Hudson said Syria continues to hold influence over Lebanon despite its recent withdrawal, and that the U.S. has its own plans regarding future Syrian – Lebanese relations.
Speaking at the American University in Beirut’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Hudson – who is director of the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies at Georgetown University in Washington – cited a recent statement by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice suggesting America believes that now Syria is officially out of Lebanon it should play a role helping its neighbor manage on its own.
“One of the demands Condoleezza Rice is making on the Syrians is … ‘It’s not enough that you got out of Lebanon. We want you to be proactively helpful in keeping the Lebanese from falling apart now that they’re on their own,'” said Hudson.
participate in the upcoming parliamentary elections to reform Lebanon and help it realize its sovereignty, freedom and independence.
BEIRUT, Lebanon – In a sign of the dramatic changes in a Lebanon free of Syrian control, Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun visited his former arch foe in jail Wednesday and called for his release after 11 years in prison, mostly in solitary confinement in an underground cell.
May 18, 2005
Art students paint on fabric covering a 5-meter-high wall of sandbags, surrounding the United Nations offices in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, May 18, 2005. The sense of security built up over years of Lebanon’s postwar calm was shattered when a series of bomb blasts hit the capital over the past three months. A U.N. mission is scheduled to arrive in Beirut later this week to conduct an inquiry on the bomb blast that killed former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. (AP Photo / Hussein Malla)
Christian civil war foe in his prison cell near Beirut on Wednesday, drawing a line under a bloody rift that tore their community apart 15 years ago.


