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| A push for regime change
in Syria Jay Solomon, Wall Street Journal WASHINGTON - Lebanons Walid Jumblatt, a key figure in the political movement that forced Syrias withdrawal from Lebanon nearly two years ago, urged the Bush administration to aid opposition groups fighting the rule of President Bashar Assad in Damascus. Many people say there wont be a stable Lebanon without regime change in Syria, Jumblatt told a gathering at the American Enterprise Institute after visiting the White House today. The Druze leader said the world needs to change Syrian behavior. Jumblatt met Bush in a bid to gain more political and military aid for Lebanese Prime Minister Fuad Sinioras government, but he stressed that any efforts to underpin Beiruts democracy should also involve the support for forces opposing Baath Party rule in Syria. Jumblatt and other members of Sinioras government
blame Syria for a rash of political assassinations in Lebanon, including the murder of
former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri on Feb. 14, 2005. That drew a round of applause from the AEI audience. The neoconservative think tank has been among the strongest supporters of the Iraq war and U.S. attempts to promote regime change in Middle East countries like Iran and Syria. Jumblatt said he pressed American officials to increase
political and military aid beyond the roughly $1 billion the U.S. pledged last month at a
donors conference in Paris. |