| US dismisses Hezbollah
criticism WASHINGTON - The United States on
Friday shrugged off pro-Syria Hezbollahs criticisms of the deployment of a US
warship to waters off Lebanon and insisted the show of force meant to promote stability.
"On Hezbollahs concerns, I would express some of our own concerns with
Hezbollahs actions. So Ill just leave it at that," White House national
security spokesman Gordon Johndroe told reporters.
Johndroe sidestepped questions about comments from Lebanese
Prime Minister Fuad Siniora, who said Friday that his Western-backed government did not
ask Washington to send the USS Cole guided-missile destroyer to the area.
"We have regular consultations with Prime Minister Siniora and his government, as
well as our allies, both in the immediate region, as well as in Europe on the situation in
Lebanon," said the spokesman.
"Theres constant communication at various levels. But lets be clear: The
purpose of the US Navy ships in the eastern Mediterranean is a show of support for
regional stability," amid Lebanons political crisis, he emphasized.
"I know we share with Prime Minister Siniora a desire for the situation in Lebanon to
be resolved, and resolved by the Lebanese people," said Johndroe. "We did not
ask anyone to send warships," Siniora said in a speech during a meeting with Arab
ambassadors that was broadcast live on television, adding that no US warship was in
"Lebanese waters."
Before Fridays speech Siniora also summoned the US
charge daffaires to ask her for "clarifications" about the dispatch of the
USS Cole, a government source told AFP.
Lebanon has been without a president since last November
amid political feuding between the Western-backed ruling parliamentary majority and the
opposition, backed by Syria and Iran. -AFP |