Tuesday, August 31, 2004

Berri May Advance Parliament's Voting Session to Preempt U.N. Security Council

Naharnet
Beirut, Updated 30 Aug 04, 23:20
Speaker Berri has said he might advance the date of Parliament's session to extend president Lahoud's term to Friday instead of Monday to preempt a U.N. Security Council resolution sponsored by the United States and France, which is designed to break Syria's unrelenting hold on Lebanon.
However, the Speaker said the final date of the voting session would be made after consultations with Premier Hariri, who is vacationing in Sardinia but maintaining constant contacts with Beirut. Hariri is due back on Friday.

Lahoud's supporters contend around 100 legislators of the 128-member parliament are certain to vote 'yes' to the extension amid media reports of suffocating Syrian pressure on reluctant deputies, many of whom struggled to invent convincing alibis for reneging on previous public vows to vote 'no.'

One target of Syrian pressure was Tripoli deputy Musbah Ahdab, who told An Nahar in an interview published Tuesday that he and his wife had lately been receiving "telephone threats of all kinds and calibers to coerce me into backing President Lahoud's extension."

Ahdab said he lodged a complaint with the judicial authorities against the threatening callers, "whose background is quite well known," and gave the mobile telephone numbers that were registered in the memory of his own cellular. "I am definitely going to vote no," a defiant Ahdab said.


Government Pleads with U.N. not to Oust Syria from Lebanon

Naharnet
Beirut, Updated 30 Aug 04, 23:00
The U.N. Security Council is expected to convene late this week to endorse a U.S.-French draft resolution calling on Syria to withdraw its army and intelligence apparatus from Lebanon, allow a free election of a new Lebanese president and discontinue its support of Hizbullah. The Beirut government launched a diplomatic counteroffensive, the Beirut media reported on Tuesday.
The U.S.-French initiative was conveyed to Lebanon last Friday by the Russian ambassador Andrey Denisov, who headed the Security Council in August. He told Lebanon's deputy mission chief Ibrahim Assaf that the initiative has not been presented as a resolution, yet. But this could happen once Spain takes over the Council's Chairmanship Sept. 1, As Safir reported.

On Saturday, Lebanese ambassador Sylvie Fadlallah was summoned to the Foreign Ministry in Paris and told that the United States was preparing a draft resolution on Lebanon at the Security Council and that France will back it. Britain, Germany and Spain also were backing the draft.

Reacting to the international pressure, President Lahoud reportedly sent an urgent message to Russian President Vladimir Putin on Monday, seeking support to Lebanon against the projected resolution.

Foreign Minister Jean Obeid also messaged U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, seeking his intervention to stop the U.S.-French move. Similar messages were addressed to the chairman and all other 14 members of the Security Council. But if the resolution is finally introduced, the chances of veto by Russia or China are virtually zero.



Monday, August 30, 2004

U.S., France Seek Security Council Resolution to Break Syria's Stranglehold on Lebanon

Lebanon's outrage against Syria's coercive dictation of Gen. Lahoud as president for 3 additional years is gathering unstoppable momentum. Patriarch Sfeir lamented the 'overnight betrayal,' Gen. Aoun called for nationwide civil disobedience and Druze leader Walid Jumblat angled for a rebellious 'no' in parliament.
The domestic turmoil coincided with a report by An Nahar Monday that the U.N. Security Council scheduled closed-doors consultations for later in the day on a joint U.S.-French draft resolution scolding Syria and calling for an end to its 28-year-old stranglehold on Lebanon.

But national and international resentment failed so far to stop the process in Lebanon's Syrian-controlled parliament to amend article 49 of the constitution and vote in Lahoud for an extra half-term in power. Speaker Berri said he would on Wednesday decide the date of the voting session. An Nahar said it would be next Monday.

Jumblat was reported by An Nahar to have decided to instruct his 16-man bloc in parliament in a meeting scheduled for later Monday to attend parliament's voting sitting and cast 'no' votes in defiance of Syrian pressure.

He is also reportedly engaged in talks with Qornet Shahwan coalition of center-right Christian politicians functioning under Sfeir's wing to team up in a bid to muster 43 members of the 128-seat parliament to sabotage Lahoud's extension, which needs a two-thirds 'yes' vote.

Qornet Shahwan has nine members in parliament and a few other allies. The defiance drive needs the support of Premier Hariri's 26-member bloc to stop Lahoud's installment for 3 more years.

Hariri is scheduled to return from vacation in Sardinia Sept. 4. As Safir said he would tender the resignation of his current government at the regular weekly session of the cabinet scheduled for Sept. 9, unless he decides to go along with the extension in parliament and stay on as prime minister until the general elections in spring next year.

http://web.naharnet.com


Saturday, August 28, 2004

Cabinet Drafts 3-Year Extension Bill for Lahoud at Syria's Behest

The cabinet drafted a bill Saturday that set the stage for a 3-year extension of President Lahoud's term in power at Syria's behest in defiance of widespread domestic rejection and international opposition spearheaded by the United States and the European Union.
The bill was drafted in an hour-long extraordinary session held at 10 a.m. Beirut time. President Lahoud was in the chair for the first 20 minutes, during which he thanked government ministers for the confidence they have given him for a new 3-year term that stretches until Nov. 23, 2007.
Lahoud then asked Premier Hariri to head the rest of the session and left. The cabinet then drafted a request for an extraordinary sitting of the Parliament to amend article 49 of the constitution for a "single, exceptional once" and give a 'yes' vote to the extension.
Only Druze leader Walid Jumblat's three cabinet members dared to register opposition to the bill – Marwan Hamadeh, Ghazi Aridi and Abdullah Farhat. Four other members of the 30-man cabinet were absent.
The move reflected Syria's defiance of an international campaign to stop its intervention in selecting Lebanon's president and a near unanimous Lebanese rejection of a Lahoud extension.
The U.S. White House, French President Jacques Chirac, Britain and Germany, have all called for the election of a new president in conformity with the Lebanese constitution free of any intervention by foreign powers.
Hariri, a dead-set Lahoud foe, was reported by the local media Saturday of having been coerced into attending the cabinet meeting and signing the amendment bill in a stormy meeting Friday night with Syria's military intelligence chief in Lebanon, Brig. Gen. Rustom Ghazaleh, in Anjar.
Media reports said Hariri simply could not risk a clash with Syria. So he had to steer the Lahoud extension bill to parliament and then "goes home" once the legislators give their unquestionable yes.
The reports spoke of enormous Syrian pressure being brought on bloc members of Hariri and Jumblat in parliament to go along with the extension drive.
But An Nahar said Jumblat's 16-man bloc had pledged to support his stance no matter what. Jumblat left his Beirut residence to his ancestral mansion in the Chouf town of Moukhtara late night Friday for the marriage of his elder son Timour on Saturday.
Naharnet News Desk

Friday, August 27, 2004

White House On The Lebanese Presidential Elections

STATEMENT BY THE PRESS SECRETARY
August 27, 2004

The United States believes in a democratic future for the Middle East, and a future for Lebanon that is independent, fully sovereign, and free of all foreign forces.
The United States believes strongly that the best interests of both Lebanon and Syria are served by a positive and constructive relationship, based upon principles of mutual respect and non-intervention, between two neighboring sovereign and independent states. This includes respect for the freedom of the Lebanese people to decide the fate of their nation and its leadership, without pressure or interference from any outside party. We note the recent statements by senior religious, political, and civil society leaders in Lebanon calling for respect of the Lebanese constitution.
The United States looks forward to elections in Lebanon that respect Lebanese institutions, including Lebanon's existing constitution, and that are free of any foreign interference.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/08/20040827.html

It's Final. Syria Wants Lahoud to Stay on for 3 or 4 More Years

Naharnet
Beirut, Updated 26 Aug 04, 22:20
 
Syria has made it final. It wants Lahoud to stay on as president of Lebanon for 3 or 4 extra years and wants parliament in Beirut to take the necessary constitutional moves to bring the extension about.
This is the gist of President Assad's talks in Damascus Thursday with Premier Hariri and Speaker Berri, which brought Syria's consultations on Lebanon's presidential election to an unpopular end, the Beirut media reported Friday.

Berri is reported to have immediately fallen in line. But Hariri, who has no love lost for Lahoud, told Assad he would give his answer to Syria's requests in 48 hours and media reports said he might promptly resign.

Berri returned from Damascus to his Mosseileh countryside residence in south Lebanon while Hariri returned to his summer residence in Faqra. He stopped in Anjar for a meeting with Syria's military intelligence chief in Lebanon Brig. Gen. Rustom Ghazaleh and then in Beirut to brief ally Walid Jumblat on Syria's position.

Jumblat, whose appointment with Assad was cancelled in an apparent snub because the Druze leader said he would "'argue' everything on the table," declined to speak to the press after the briefing.

However, close aides said Jumblat was unflinchingly sticking to his opposition to a Lahoud extension, and has scheduled a meeting of his 16-man bloc in parliament for Monday to make a final decision on the presidential event.

Hariri also refused to give any comment to the press. His aides said he would not make any statement before he delivers his answer to President Assad, which is expected on Sunday.

Aides also said Hariri would be in Beirut Friday for a meeting with Germany's visiting Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer. Media reports said Germany was joining the U.S. and France in calling for electing a new president in Lebanon in line with the country's constitution.

The United States and France had both reiterated this common stance in separate statements in Washington and Paris on Thursday just as Assad was telling Berri and Hariri that Lahoud should be given 3-to-4 additional years in power.

Visitors of Maronite Patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir at his Diman summer residence said he was getting increasingly worried over Syria's support for a Lahoud extension and may make additional declarations to escalate his opposition to any meddling with Lebanon's constitution, An Nahar said.


Wednesday, August 25, 2004

State Department on Lebanese Elections

Daily Press Briefing, 
Adam Ereli, Deputy Spokesman
Washington, DC,  August 25, 2004

 

QUESTION: From Lebanon, General Emil Lahoud has formally announced that he's
  going to stay or willing to stay for a second term, and the Lebanon
  constitution is against that and the majority of Lebanese opposing that, but
  that seems likely to happen because Syria is backing that President Lahoud
  movement. Do you have any comment on that?

  MR. ERELI: I think there are a lot of suppositions there in the question, but
  let me try to just give you what America's policy is.

  Number one, the United States strongly supports a free and fair electoral
  process in Lebanon. That means one that is conducted according to the
  established Lebanese constitution. That constitution provides for a new
  president every six years, selected by parliament.

  The election of a president is a decision for the Lebanese people alone to
  make, consistent with their established constitution. It is our view that no
  outside country should interfere in this process. But, as a matter of policy,
  the United States does not take a position on individual candidates.

  QUESTION: But how do you think the Syrians' role on this? It's likely to make
  President Lahoud move succeed here against the Lebanese way.

  MR. ERELI: Well, again, those are suppositions. Our view is that, as I said
  before, the decision of who is the president of Lebanon is a decision for the
  Lebanese people, not for the Syrians and not for the Americans, not for anybody
  else. Lebanon is an independent sovereign country; therefore, the people of
  Lebanon should decide who their president is, consistent with the provisions of
  their constitution, which call for the selection of a new president every six
  years.

-END-

Friday, August 20, 2004

Bush Crosses Swords with Assad over Lebanon's Presidency

Naharnet
Beirut, Updated 20 Aug 04, 10:33Syria is systematically upgrading its outward support for keeping Gen. Lahoud in power for an extended or a renewed term, while the United States is escalating public insistence that a new president should be elected for Lebanon in autumn in conformity with the Lebanese constitution.
Reports in the Beirut media spoke Friday of a Syrian-inspired amendment of article 49 of the constitution that would allow presidents to stand for two consecutive 5-year terms instead of the current provision that limits the non-renewable presidential term to only six years.
An Nahar quoted a cabinet minister as saying the government would convene in a special session Sept. 2 to put forth before parliament a draft bill requesting the constitutional amendment to renew Lahoud's term.
Asked to comment on the growing renewal trend Premier Hariri just smiled and said nothing, An Nahar reported. When asked how much longer he would remain silent about the presidential issue, Hariri used a verse of the Koran in which Virgin Mary is quoted as saying she had vowed a fast and would not talk to any human.
Hariri, who has no love lost for Lahoud and visa versa, is on record that he would quit the premiership if Lahoud stays on as President for a new term.
President Bush's saber rattling with Assad over the Lebanese presidency was underscored by a new statement from Assistant Secretary of State for Middle Eastern Affairs David Satterfield that the United States still looks forward to see a new president elected in Lebanon this coming autumn.
"The U.S. respects Lebanon's sovereignty and will not interfere in such domestic affairs as the presidential election," Satterfield said in an interview aired by the U.S.-run Al Hurra Arabic satellite network.
"Lebanon has a constitution and constitutions have to be respected. This constitution provides that a new president should be elected every six years," said Satterfield, who served as ambassador to Lebanon in the 1990s.
Beirut, Updated 20 Aug 04

Thursday, August 19, 2004

The Saudi Religious Pipeline


New U.S. Ambassador Wants Hizbullah Disarmed, New President Elected

The Unites States new ambassador to Lebanon has urged Syria to let the Lebanese choose their president and elect members of their parliament without external influence, asserting that Hizbullah should voluntarily lay down arms, As Safir reported on Wednesday.

"There is a presidential election in autumn and parliamentary elections the following spring in Lebanon. We like to see both operations reflecting the will of the people of Lebanon," Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman said in an interview with As Safir's Washington correspondent Hisham Milhem.

Feltman is due in Beirut Friday to replace Vincent Battle, who has already returned to Washington. Mrs. Feltman will later join her husband in Beirut after finishing certain academic assignments. "It will be the first time since the mid-1970s that an American ambassador will be living with his family in Beirut," Milhem noted.

"The time has come for Syria to allow Lebanon to choose its elected officials without foreign influence…. Lebanon deserves to exercise full sovereignty on its entire territory after many years since the civil war had ended," Feltman said.

He reiterated the U.S. concept that the Lebanese constitution must be respected, especially the provision that a new president ought to be elected every six years.

Feltman was asked whether the Bush administration would be pushing toward disarming Hizbullah so that it would operate only as a political organization. He was also asked whether such disarmament would be enough for the U.S. to deal with the Party of God.

"In order to accept Hizbullah as a lawful political partner in the region, it has to disarm and the Lebanese government has to establish its sovereignty on its territories. The Lebanese people are aware of the dangers of the existence of armed militias not subordinate to a central authority," Feltman said.

Congressman Urges Syria to Quit Lebanon or Face Heftier Sanctions

U.S. Congressman Tom Lantos, an architect of America's sanctions against the Assad regime, has called from Damascus for a Syrian pullout from Lebanon and for a severance of alleged links with terrorism.

Lantos told reporters he made his double-barreled call during talks he held with Foreign Minister Farouk Al Sharaa in the Syrian capital on Wednesday. The call, which could herald upgraded anti-Syria sanctions, was highlighted by the Beirut press on Thursday.

"As a friend of the Syrian people I want to see the leaders of this great nation, the modern incarnation of one of the great civilizations, make the right choice," said Lantos, who is on a tour of Middle Eastern capitals. "So far the Syrian leaders have resisted those choices."

Lantos, the senior Democrat on the House International Relations Committee, added: "I urged my friend Foreign Minister Sharaa to get his nation on the right side of the 21st century. I urged him to end Syria's association finally and totally with terrorism and WMD," or weapons of mass destruction.

President Bush imposed sanctions on May 11 against Syria, which stands accused by Washington of sponsoring terrorism, seeking to produce weapons of mass destruction, trying to destabilize Iraq and occupying Lebanon. Lantos was a strong supporter of the sanctions.

"There is no change in U.S. policy, but I hope there could be change if Syria takes the appropriate steps, which I outlined privately to President Assad during my last visit when I was here in the spring of 2003," he said Wednesday.

"I recognize some small steps that have been taken to close the Syrian-Iraqi borders for the smuggling of terrorists and terrorist weapons," he said, but charged there were still not enough well-trained border guards.

Lantos added that he had urged Sharaa "to remove Syrian troops from Lebanon and let that neighboring nation determine its own fate. I urged him to open Syria's market but more importantly to open Syrian minds by allowing the full freedom of expression and association."(Naharnet-AFP)

U.S. Eyes Money Trails of Saudi-Backed Charities

By David B. Ottaway
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 19, 2004; Page A01

SAN DIEGO -- Omar Abdi Mohamed, a lanky, soft-spoken political refugee from war-ruined Somalia in East Africa, had been preaching the word of Islam in the United States for the past nine years. Two things make him unusual.

In January, U.S. immigration authorities arrested him, saying they suspected him of being a conduit for terrorist funds, federal court records show. At the time, he was on the payroll of Saudi Arabia's government.

Mohamed was one of 30 Saudi-financed preachers in this country. Each month, the Saudis paid $1,700 to the 44-year-old, who taught the Koran at a run-down Somali social center here. He worked with little supervision from Saudi religious authorities 8,000 miles away. In the late 1990s, he set up a small charity to help famine victims in Somalia, and that is how his trouble began.

The charity received $326,000 over three years from the Global Relief Foundation, a private Islamic charity based in Illinois. In October 2002, the U.S. Treasury Department designated Global Relief a terrorist-financing entity linked to al Qaeda.

The collision of Saudi missionary work and suspicions of terrorist financing in San Diego illustrates the perils and provocations of a multibillion-dollar effort by Saudi Arabia to spread its religion around the world. Mohamed worked on the front lines of that effort, a campaign to transform what outsiders call "Wahhabism," once a marginal and puritanical brand of Islam with few followers outside the Arabian Peninsula, into the dominant doctrine in the Islamic world. The campaign has created a vast infrastructure of both government-supported and private charities that at times has been exploited by violent jihadists -- among them Osama bin Laden.

Nearly three years after the devastating Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, a number of Saudi-supported Islamic preachers, centers, charities and mosques remain under intense scrutiny. U.S. investigators continue to look into the tangled money trails leading from Saudi Arabia to its embassy in Washington and into dozens of American cities.

At the end of one trail is Mohamed. Another avenue of interest involves the global finances of the al Haramain Islamic Foundation, a large Saudi-government-supported charity set up to propagate Wahhabism and sometimes referred to as "the United Way of Saudi Arabia." Al Haramain, which has an office in Ashland, Ore., sent Mohamed $5,000.

The commission investigating the Sept. 11 attacks stated in its July report that al Qaeda had relied heavily on international charities to raise money, "particularly those with lax external oversight and ineffective internal controls such as the Saudi-based al Haramain Islamic Foundation." The report added that al Qaeda found "fertile fund-raising groups" in Saudi Arabia, "where extreme religious views are common and charitable giving was both essential to the culture and subject to very limited oversight."

The Saudis say they have taken more steps than any other country to crack down on terrorist financing. They say the problem is not with their religion but with a small minority of deviants.

The Saudi government has severed ties with Mohamed, who is charged only with immigration violations, but he insists he did nothing wrong. A hearing is set for Sept. 1 in San Diego. The terrorist suspicions against Mohamed appear to rest on financial transactions that raise questions but do not provide answers, court records show. Global Relief denies it funds terrorism.

The Saudis are also shutting al Haramain offices worldwide. In June, the Treasury Department put the charity's former head in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on its list of known supporters of terrorism for providing "financial, material and logistical support to the al Qaeda network."

Wahhabism arose in the mid-18th century in central Saudi Arabia. Mohammad Ibn Abdul Wahab sought to purify Islam and return it to its 7th-century roots. He preached doctrines based on a strict adherence to the literal word of the Koran. He opposed music and adornment, insisted that women be cloaked and disdained nonbelievers, even members of other Muslim sects.

Scholars of Islam find it difficult to precisely assess the impact of 40 years of Saudi missionary work on the United States' multi-ethnic Muslim community -- estimated at 6 million to 7 million. But survey data are suggestive.

The most comprehensive study, a survey of the 1,200 U.S. mosques undertaken in 2000 by four Muslim organizations, found that 2 million Muslims were "associated" with a mosque and that 70 percent of mosque leaders were generally favorable toward fundamentalist teachings, while 21 percent followed the stricter Wahhabi practices. The survey also found that the segregation of women for prayers was spreading, from half of the mosques in 1994 to two-thirds six years later.

John L. Esposito, a religion scholar at Georgetown University, said the Saudi theological efforts have resulted in "the export of a very exclusive brand of Islam into the Muslim community in the United States" that "tends to make them more isolationist in the society in which they live."

The Export of Islam

The worldwide export of Wahhabi Islam began in 1962, when Saudi Arabia's ruling Saud family founded the Muslim World League in Mecca to promote "Islamic solidarity." The Sauds were seeking to counter the fiery pan-Arab nationalism of Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser, who was calling for the Saudi monarchy to be overthrown.

The family also saw the export of Islam, which they call "Dawah," as a sacred duty. Their land was the birthplace of Islam and their kingdom host to the religion's two holiest mosques, in Mecca and Medina.

Western diplomats stationed in Riyadh liken the Sauds' fervor to the zeal of the United States' own fundamentalist sects. "For Saudi Arabia to stop Dawah would be a negation of itself," said Sherard Cowper-Coles, the British ambassador to the kingdom. "It would be like Bush telling Evangelical Christians to stop missionary work abroad."

In the 1960s, the kingdom was sparsely populated and still relatively poor. It had no trained foot soldiers to run the Muslim league. So the royal family enlisted scores of Egyptian teachers, scholars and imams belonging to the Muslim Brotherhood, a highly secretive movement of political activists dedicated to restoring Islamic rule over secular Arab societies.

By 1982, the Saud family was feeling threatened by the Islamic revolution begun by Shiite Muslim leader Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran and the extremism of some of its own citizens, who had temporarily seized the Grand Mosque in Mecca in 1979. Again, the family turned to Dawah.

King Fahd issued a directive that "no limits be put on expenditures for the propagation of Islam," according to Nawaf Obaid, a Saudi oil and security analyst. Saudi Arabia now had the money: Its oil revenue had skyrocketed after the 1973 oil embargo. King Fahd used the cash to build mosques, Islamic centers and schools by the thousands around the world. Over the next two decades, the kingdom established 200 Islamic colleges, 210 Islamic centers, 1,500 mosques and 2,000 schools for Muslim children in non-Islamic countries, according to King Fahd's personal Web site. In 1984, the king built a $130 million printing plant in Medina devoted to producing Saudi-approved translations of the Koran. By 2000, the kingdom had distributed 138 million copies worldwide.

Exactly how much has been spent to spread Wahhabism is unclear. David D. Aufhauser, a former Treasury Department general counsel, told a Senate committee in June that estimates went "north of $75 billion." Edward L. Morse, an oil analyst at Hess Energy Trading Co. in New York, said King Fahd tapped a special oil account that set aside revenue from as much as 200,000 barrels a day -- $1.8 billion a year at 1980s oil prices. Saudi oil expert Obaid confirmed such an account existed in the 1980s and 1990s but said it was recently closed.

Ministry's Far Reach

After the Persian Gulf War in 1991, radical elements in the kingdom and in the Muslim Brotherhood excoriated the Sauds for calling in the Americans to defend them. In response, King Fahd tightened control over the missionary-and-charity campaign and tried to purge it of Brotherhood influence, setting up a new Saudi-supervised charity, al Haramain.

As part of this effort, the Saudis created an Islamic affairs ministry in 1993 that was intended to be the key institution for exporting Wahhabism. The ministry, officially known as the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Endowment, Call and Guidance, is led by Saleh Sheik, a direct descendant of Ibn Abdul Wahab.

The goal of moderating Brotherhood-like militancy was only partly successful. Saudi scholars and sources say the ministry has become a stronghold of zealots.

The Islamic affairs ministry is located in a nondescript concrete-and-glass structure in the Malaz district of Riyadh, near the city's old airport. There, in an interview at his office in March, Sheik said the ministry meets weekly to "coordinate the Islamic policies of the different ministries outside the country."

The ministry's outreach is formidable. It pays the salaries of 3,884 Wahhabi missionaries and preachers, who are six times as numerous as the 650 diplomats in Saudi Arabia's 77 embassies. Ministry officials in Africa and Asia often have had more money to dispense than Saudi ambassadors, according to several Saudi sources. The Islamic affairs officials also act as religious commissars, keeping tabs on the moral behavior of the kingdom's diplomats. In the United States, a 40-person Islamic Affairs Department established in the Saudi Embassy in Washington became something of an independent body, with little supervision from the often absent ambassador, Prince Bandar bin Sultan.

Sheik estimated the Islamic affairs ministry's budget at $530 million annually and said it goes almost entirely to pay the salaries of the more than 50,000 people on the ministry payroll . That figure does not include the hundreds of millions of dollars in personal contributions made by King Fahd and other senior Saudi princes to the cause of propagating Islam at home and abroad, according to a Saudi analyst who insisted on anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. The real total spent annually spreading Islam is between $2 billion and $2.5 billion, he said.

Sheik said his ministry "supervises" charities abroad to "make sure their funds go to the right places" and also provides religious books and scholars for Saudi-supported Islamic centers, schools and universities. But it has "no direct responsibility" for them, he said.

Sheik is the direct supervisor of one charity supported by the Saudi government, al Haramain, which added an entirely separate army of 3,000 missionaries to the 3,884 on the ministry payroll.

Al Haramain's annual budget, $40 million to $60 million, paid for mosques, schools, Korans, wells, food and Saudi-approved veils, as well as scores of health clinics and orphanages in some of the poorest corners of the world. It operated in 50 countries.

In October 1997, the charity established its first U.S. presence when it incorporated in Ashland, Ore. It listed as its board president Aqeel Abdulaziz Aqil, who had been general manager for the charity since its founding. He operated from the Riyadh headquarters.

Everything changed for al Haramain with the worldwide crackdown on terrorist funding that followed the Sept. 11 attacks. By March 2002, U.S. and Saudi authorities had designated al Haramain offices in Bosnia and Somalia as terrorist-supporting organizations that had diverted charitable money to al Qaeda and a suspected Somali terrorist group, Al Ittihad Al Islamiya.

Two years later, on Feb. 13, 2004, IRS officials raided the Ashland office, saying there was "probable cause" that two top al Haramain officers had violated U.S. currency laws and filed false tax returns to cover the transfer of money to Muslim rebels fighting in Chechnya. (U.S. authorities so far have brought no formal charges against those officers, and the Oregon office remains open.) Aqil was fired in January. Six months later, U.S. officials designated him a terrorist supporter because of his alleged contacts with the Somali group Al Ittihad, the same organization that Omar Abdi Mohamed in San Diego is suspected of aiding.

By then, 15 al Haramain branches had been shut down, including those in Indonesia, Kenya, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Albania and the Netherlands.

In his interview with a Washington Post reporter in March, Sheik defended the charity. His ministry's own investigation did not find "any major mistakes" by the charity's leadership, except by its director, Aqil.

"The mistakes of individuals should not be attributed to the whole institution," Sheik said.

In June, however, the Saudi government announced that al Haramain was being closed down and that the Islamic affairs ministry would be stripped of its role as the main overseer of missionary work. A government-run commission under the Foreign Ministry now has that responsibility.

But the commission does not oversee the three other major Saudi-based-and-financed charities -- the Muslim World League, the World Assembly of Muslim Youth and the International Islamic Relief Organization. Also independent of the commission is at least one private Saudi charity, al-Muntada al-Islami. The charity, based in London, works primarily in Africa and publishes an English-language Islamic monthly, Al-Jumuah, which is distributed in the United States.

These four Saudi charities recently formed a U.S.-based trade group, the Friends of Charities Association, and hired the Belew law firm in Washington to represent their interests.

In the United States, Saudi Arabia's infrastructure of preachers and money started as a bulwark against the spread into American mosques of radical Shiism, which surged after Khomeini deposed the shah of Iran.

"Many countries in the West asked Saudi Arabia to get involved in these [Islamic] centers because at that time Saudi Arabia was considered moderate," Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Faisal said in an interview in March. The Americans "felt comfortable with the presence of the Saudis," he said.

Backed by Saudi money, this presence grew rapidly. King Fahd's Web site now lists 16 Islamic and cultural centers that the kingdom has helped finance in California, Missouri, Michigan, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Virginia and Maryland. The largest is the King Fahd Mosque in Culver City, a suburb of Los Angeles. The mosque, built with $8 million in private donations from the king and his son, Crown Prince Abdullah ibn Abdulaziz, was officially inaugurated in 1998 for 2,000 worshipers. It includes a Koranic school, an Islamic research center and a bookstore.

The Islamic Affairs Department at the Saudi Embassy in Washington spearheaded the campaign. At its height, the department had 35 to 40 diplomats and an annual budget of $8 million, according to a Saudi official.

In 1989, the Saudis also set up a high-powered Islamic learning center, the Institute of Islamic and Arabic Sciences in America, in Fairfax. The institute is an outpost of the Imam Muhammed Ibn Saud Islamic University in Riyadh, the main citadel for Wahhabi instruction.

The Islamic affairs ministry sent imams and itinerant preachers to the United States as well: As late as last year, it had 31 on its payroll, including Omar Abdi Mohamed in San Diego.

The ministry also flooded the American Muslim community with Saudi-published Korans and publications. "The great majority of books and magazines were authored by Saudi agencies," said Maher Hathout, chairman of the Islamic Center of Southern California in Los Angeles.

Hathout, an outspoken critic of Wahhabism, said the result was the increasing isolation of women in American mosques starting in the 1980s. "Mosques became gender-segregated, which didn't make any sense at all," he said.

The commentary accompanying the Saudi-published Koran, Hathout said, was "very alien to the spirit of tolerance" in U.S. society. "This may have sense over there [in Saudi Arabia] but doesn't make any sense here," he said.

In the 1990s, a "sharp debate" raged in U.S. mosques over Saudi fundamentalism, said Ihsan Bagby, chief author of the study "The Mosque in America." Radical "nongovernmental Saudi sheiks" became very active in pushing a far more militant brand of Wahhabism than the government-appointed imams, Bagby said. These radicals cultivated American Muslims, who used Saudi money to build their own mosques, he said.

In May 2003, the State Department refused reentry to the chief imam of the King Fahd Mosque in Culver City, Fahad al Thumairy, who also was a Saudi diplomat at the consulate in Los Angeles. The Sept. 11 commission report later said the State Department had determined "he might be connected with terrorist activity."

The report also said that two of the Sept. 11 hijackers, Nawaf Alhazmi and Khalid Almihdhar, "spent time at the King Fahd mosque and made some acquaintances there." Al Thumairy, who reportedly led an "extremist faction" at the mosque, denied knowing the two hijackers. While his denial was "somewhat suspect," the report said there was no evidence connecting him to the hijackers.

Last December, the State Department ended the practice of allowing religious scholars and missionaries to work here on Saudi diplomatic passports, forcing at least 24 out. The best-known deportee was Jaafar Idris, a Sudanese scholar well known in the Islamic world and founder of the American Open University, based in Alexandria, which in 2002 had 540 registered students pursuing undergraduate and graduate degrees in Islamic studies.

Also crippled by the crackdown was the Institute for Islamic and Arabic Sciences. Eleven of its scholars on diplomatic passports were ordered to leave. In early July, dozens of FBI, customs and IRS agents raided the institute's premises and questioned its six remaining non-Saudi teachers.

Late last year, the Saudi Embassy in Washington dissolved its Islamic Affairs Department, reducing the number of diplomats dealing with religious issues to one. The embassy also stopped distributing the Koran in the United States. At the same time, the Ministry of Islamic Affairs began reviewing its 31 missionaries and preachers in the United States. As of March, six had been fired.

The only one to go to jail was Omar Abdi Mohamed, the Somali teacher in San Diego.

Suspected Ties to Terrorism

A trader in hides, livestock and incense, Mohamed regularly visited Saudi Arabia in the 1980s. During one of his trips, he said, he was recruited by the kingdom's religious authorities in Mecca after being questioned about his knowledge of the Koran. In Somalia, preaching became a sideline for him, he said.

In 1989, Mohamed was jailed and tortured by the Somali military, which suspected him of involvement with the political opposition, according to statements Mohamed later made on his immigration documents. The following year, as Somalia degenerated into civil war, he was freed and fled to Canada. Five years later, he made his way to San Diego.

He had been recruited by a San Diego mosque to teach the Koran and Arabic to Somali children, he said later. He entered the United States on a religious worker's visa and received legal permanent resident status. The U.S. government would later say he never worked at the mosque that sponsored his visa.

Instead, Mohamed founded a small Koranic "school," actually just one room inside a shabby two-story Somali civic center in a section of City Heights nicknamed "Little Mogadishu," after Somalia's capital. Mohamed also worked part time as a social counselor for Somali children at a public school, which paid him $1,000 a month.

In 1997, Mohamed set up his charity, the Western Somali Relief Agency, to send money to Somalis facing famine in the Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia. Over the next four years, the agency received $326,000 from the Global Relief Foundation, court documents show.

In April 2000, Mohamed applied for U.S. citizenship. He had an interview with U.S. immigration officials in May 2002. By then, the Sept. 11 attacks had made U.S. officials wary of any Muslims applying for citizenship. Mohamed's background was checked, and the immigration officers asked him pointed questions about his relief agency and the money that had circulated through it, court documents show.

He did not tell them initially that he was being paid by the Saudis or that he had received money from Global Relief and al Haramain, the records show.

In January, he was called in for a second interview. Afterward, he was arrested and charged with making multiple false statements.

"You've received funding well over $200,000 from Global Relief," said Steve Schultz, an immigration officer, according to a transcript of Mohamed's interview. "They were shut down because they were providing aid to terrorism. Okay, we think you're involved in that."

In October 2002, the Treasury Department designated Global Relief, based in Bridgeview, Ill., a terrorist-linked organization because it "has provided assistance to Osama Bin Laden, the al Qaeda Network and other known terrorist groups," a Treasury news release stated.

Rabih Haddad, the co-founder of Global Relief, had belonged to an organization that was a precursor to al Qaeda. Charity officials had also had multiple contacts with the Taliban government in Afghanistan and bin Laden's personal secretary, who was convicted of participating in the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

The Treasury Department release stated that photographs found in a trash bin outside Global Relief's office in Illinois depicted armed fighters and a shipment of sophisticated communications equipment worth $120,000. Videotapes stocked by Global Relief glorified armed jihad. "God equated martyrdom through JIHAD with supplying funds for the JIHAD effort," a 1995 Global Relief Foundation pamphlet stated. "All contributions should be mailed to: GRF."

U.S. investigators have been unable to track all of the money Mohamed received from Global Relief. The bulk of it went in checks written to Dahab Shil, an informal money transmitter in Chicago known among Muslims as a hawala. The 65 checks to Dahab Shil range from $370 to $60,000, according to court documents.

Mohamed said the money went to various local charities and tribal chiefs in the Ethiopian Ogaden. Transcripts of his interviews show U.S. officials suspect that some of it went to Al Ittihad Al Islamiya, the Somali terrorist group that the head of al Haramain has also been accused of dealing with.

During an interview in May at the federal prison in Otay Mesa, 15 miles south of San Diego, Mohamed insisted he was not a Wahhabi extremist, just a Muslim. He denied ever having contacts with Al Ittihad. With the loss of his $1,700 monthly stipend, his wife and six children live on a monthly welfare check of $1,178.

Research editor Margot Williams and researcher Alice Crites contributed to this report.


Tuesday, August 17, 2004

Saddam agents on Syria border helped move banned materials

By Rowan Scarborough
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published August 16, 2004

Saddam Hussein periodically removed guards on the Syrian border and replaced them with his own intelligence agents who supervised the movement of banned materials between the two countries, U.S. investigators have discovered.
The recent discovery by the Bush administration's Iraq Survey Group (ISG) is fueling speculation, but is not proof, that the Iraqi dictator moved prohibited weapons of mass destruction (WMD) into Syria before the March 2003 invasion by a U.S.-led coalition.
Two defense sources told The Washington Times that the ISG has interviewed Iraqis who told of Saddam's system of dispatching his trusted Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS) to the border, where they would send border inspectors away.
The shift was followed by the movement of trucks in and out of Syria suspected of carrying materials banned by U.N. sanctions. Once the shipments were made, the agents would leave and the regular border guards would resume their posts.
"If you leave it to border guards, then the border guards could stop the trucks and extract their 10 percent, just like the mob would do," said a Pentagon official who asked not to be named. "Saddam's family was controlling the black market, and it was a good opportunity for them to make money."
Sources said Saddam and his family grew rich from this black market and personally dispatched his dreaded intelligence service to the border to make sure the shipments got through.
The ISG is a 1,400-member team organized by the Pentagon and CIA to hunt for Saddam's suspected stockpiles of WMD, such as chemical and biological agents. So far, the search has failed to find such stockpiles, which were the main reason for President Bush ordering the invasion of Iraq to remove Saddam.
But there is evidence of unusually heavy truck traffic into Syria in the days before the attack, and with it, speculation that some of the trucks contained the banned weapons.
"Of course, it's always suspicious," the Pentagon official said.
The source said the ISG has confirmed the practice of IIS agents going to the border. Investigators also have heard from Iraqi sources that this maneuver was done days before the war at a time of brisk cross-border movements.
That particular part of the disclosures has not been positively confirmed, the officials said, although it dovetails with Saddam's system of switching guards at a time when contraband was shipped.
The United States spotted the heavy truck traffic via satellite imagery before the war. But spy cameras cannot look through truck canopies, and the ISG has not been able to determine whether any weapons were sent to Syria for hiding.
In an interview in October, retired Lt. Gen. James R. Clapper Jr., who heads the U.S. agency that processes and analyzes satellite imagery, said he thinks that Saddam's underlings hid banned weapons of mass destruction before the war.
"I think personally that those below the senior leadership saw what was coming, and I think they went to some extraordinary lengths to dispose of the evidence," said Gen. Clapper, who heads the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency. "I'll call it an 'educated hunch.' "
He added, "I think probably in the few months running up prior to the onset of combat that I think there was probably an intensive effort to disperse into private homes, move documentation and materials out of the country. I think there are any number of things that they would have done."
Of activity on the Syrian border, Gen. Clapper said, "There is no question that there was a lot of traffic, increase in traffic up to the immediate onset of combat and certainly during Iraqi Freedom. ... The obvious conclusion one draws is the sudden upturn, uptick in traffic which may have been people leaving the scene, fleeing Iraq and unquestionably, I'm sure, material as well." He also said, "Based on what we saw prior to the onset of hostilities, we certainly felt there were indications of WMD activity. ... Actually knowing what is going on inside a building is quite a different thing than, say, this facility may well be a place where there may be WMD."
The Iraq Survey Group, which periodically briefs senior officials and Congress, is due to deliver its next report in September. In addition to interviewing hundreds of Iraqis, the ISG has collected and cataloged millions of pages of documents, not all of which have been fully examined.
Although Syria and Iraq competed for influence in the region, they shared the same Ba'athist socialist ideology and maintained close ties at certain government levels. The United States accused Syria during the war of harboring some of Saddam's inner circle.

Monday, August 16, 2004

Assad Opens Process of Selecting Lebanon's New President, Premier

President Assad has begun a 2-week process of sounding out Lebanese political leaders about their choice for new president of Lebanon as well as new prime minister amid media reports in Beirut Monday that Gen. Lahoud and Premier Hariri are bowing out from power together.

Assad opened the process with two separate meetings in the People's Palace in Damascus Sunday with Ex-premier Selim Al Hoss and Public Works Minister Najib Mikati, who is tipped as front-running candidate for the premiership, An Nahar reported Monday morning.

The selection of Hoss and Mikati, both prominent Sunni Muslim politicians, was seen by An Nahar as an indication that Syria is seeking to make up its mind not only on who will be the next president but also who will be the next prime minister.

Both Hoss and Mikati are strongly against tampering with the Lebanese constitution to set the stage for Gen. Lahoud to seek a 3-year extension or a 6-year renewal of his term that expires at midnight of November 23-24, 2004.
Neither Hoss nor Mikati were willing to talk to the press about their meetings with Assad, who has lately abstained from conferring with Lebanese politicians. But An Nahar asserted that the meetings have signaled Assad's decision to come to grips with fast-approaching Lebanese presidential election.

Beirut, Updated 16 Aug 04,

US steps up calls for Syrian withdrawal from Lebanon

BEIRUT (AFP) - Two American diplomats renewed calls for Syria to pull its troops out of Lebanon, 48 hours after a US Congress delegation made a similar plea, in what analysts said could presage further sanctions by Washington against Damascus.

Vincent Battle, the US ambassador to Beirut, told the Lebanese daily An-Nahar that it "was time the Syrian army withdrew from Lebanon" so that the country "could enjoy total sovereignty".
He added that differences between Washington and Beirut were growing over the question of southern Lebanon and the Syrian-backed Shiite Hezbollah militia which holds sway there and is branded a "terrorist organisation" by the US government.

"We have begun talks with the Lebanese government with a view to deploying the Lebanese army in southern Lebanon and disarming Hezbollah, but they haven't brought about a result for the time being," Battle added.

Meanwhile, Walid Maalouf, a member of the US delegation to the United Nations (news - web sites) who is of Lebanese extraction, told An-Nahar: "Lebanese foreign policy is subjected to that of Syria.

"We have been able to observe at the United Nations that Lebanese diplomats do not take the slightest initiative but simply wait for the orders of Syrian diplomats," he said.

A US congressional delegation which met the Lebanese and Syrian presidents, Emile Lahoud and Bashar al-Assad, over the weekend also called for the withdrawal of the Syrian army from Lebanon.

Republican Representative Christopher Shays (news, bio, voting record), who headed the delegation, said that more than 10 years after the end of the Lebanese civil war and with Israeli forces no longer present in Lebanon, Syrian troops should withdraw and the Lebanese be given control over their security.

Analysts said the increasingly blunt tone indicated that George W. Bush's administration was losing patience with Syria, which had failed to fall into line after the imposition of earlier sanctions.

Political analyst Elias Harfouche said that if Syria made concessions on Lebanon, the United States would see it as a sign of willingness to cooperate on other matters, notably Iraq (news - web sites).

Pro-Syrian Lebanese Culture Minister Ghazi Aridi accused Washington of interfering in Lebanon's internal affairs, while politician Maan Bachour said the aim was to curb Syria's opposition to the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories and the US military presence in Iraq.

Damascus for its part sent Foreign Minister Faruq al-Shara to Beirut Monday carrying a message from Assad to Lahoud.

Lebanese state television gave only the vaguest idea of its content, saying it referred to "the latest developments in the region and notably Iraq."

But Shara diverted from his usual custom by failing to speak to the press, apparently in order to avoid embarrassing questions.

Bush imposed sanctions on May 11 against Syria, which stands accused by Washington of sponsoring terrorism, seeking to produce weapons of mass destruction, trying to destabilise Iraq and occupying Lebanon.

Syrian troops have been in Lebanon since they intervened in the civil war in 1976. An estimated 16,000 Syrian troops are still deployed on Lebanese soil with the approval of the government in Beirut.

Israeli forces withdrew from southern Lebanon in 2000 after a 20-year occupation, but Lebanon and Hezbollah with Damascus's consent charge that territory Israel captured from Syria in 1967 and still holds is really Lebanese.

Beirut backs Hezbollah's sporadic actions against Israeli troops on the border, without sending its own forces into the area.

Saturday, August 14, 2004

U. S. Congressmen: 'Yes' to Palestinian Settlement, 'No' to Syrian Tutelage

A U.S. Congressional delegation had tense encounters with Lebanon's leaders as visitors asserted that settling Palestinians in Lebanon was as imperative as a total withdrawal of Syrian troops and the deployment of the Lebanese army along the entire border with Israel, the Beirut media reported on Saturday.
As the five-member visiting team wound up a 24-hour stop on Beirut and left to Damascus Friday, it's leader Christopher Shays promised to bring up with President Assad the "interference of his government in Lebanon," An Nahar reported.

The visitors had rounds of talks with President Lahoud, Vice Speaker Elie Firizly because Speaker Berri refused to personally meet the delegation and with Foreign Minister Jean Obeid.

The visitors stunned the Lebanese officials by contending that the estimated 350,000 Palestinians in 12 refugee camps across Lebanon should be settled and given Lebanese passports. Their right to return should be scrapped because "it stands in the way of the peace process in the Middle East."

The Lebanese leaders took an absolutely opposite stance, asserting the Palestinians would not be settled in Lebanon under any circumstance because their right to return to their land is untouchable.

President Lahoud asserted that Syria's military presence in Lebanon was a stabilizing factor that stopped the partitioning of Lebanon into sectarian mini-states. It also helped establish security, law and order in Lebanon after 15 years of civil warfare, Lahoud added, according to the local media.

Both Lahoud and Firizly rejected the delegation's charge that Hizbullah was "very active in terrorism with Syria's help and Iran's funding." The two Lebanese officials said Hizbullah was a freedom fighter whose resistors forced Israel to end 22 years of occupation in south Lebanon, according to media reports
Naharnet News Desk

Friday, August 13, 2004

Franjieh Seen Gaining Grounds in Lebanon's Presidential Race

With Gen. Lahoud's camp reportedly beginning to despair about his chances for either a renewed or an extended term, Suleiman Franjieh seems to be making a vigorous thrust into the race as two senior cabinet ministers from north Lebanon declared for him as Lebanon's 12th post-independence president.
The declaration came from Public Works Minister Najib Mikati after a 15-minute meeting with Foreign Minister Jean Obeid at the Bustros Palace in Beirut Thursday, the local media reported on Friday.

"We have agreed to strengthen Minister Franjieh's chances to become the next president of Lebanon," Mikati was quoted as saying by the LBCI after the closed-doors meeting with Obeid, who made no statement on his own. Obeid, a northerner like Franjieh and Mikati has often been tipped as potential president for Lebanon.

Franjieh, a personal friend of Syrian President Bashar Assad and long Syria's closest Maronite ally in Lebanon, has not formally declared that he would stand in the autumn presidential election. But he often made it plain he would run if Syria won't support an extension for Lahoud.

An Nahar said Friday that Lahoud's camp was sending depression signals over the foundering extension bid, complaining about the widening opposition campaign against constitutional amendments that would keep the general in power beyond the November expiry of his current term.

Sunday, August 08, 2004

US launches major mission along Syrian border

Baghdad [MENL] -- The U.S. military, backed by Iraqi forces, has launched a major operation along the border with Syria.

U.S. officials said Operation Phantom Linebacker has comprised of thousands of U.S. and Iraqi soldiers as well as armored combat vehicles, unmanned air vehicles and helicopters in an effort to stem the flow of insurgents, funds and weapons from Syria into Iraq. The officials said the operation came in wake of a determination that the Sunni insurgency, including support for Abu Mussib Al Zarqawi, was coming mainly from Saddam Hussein loyalists who have fled to Syria.

Officials said the operation was the largest by the United States to stop weapons from Syria. Earlier missions involved mainly fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft in pursuit of Sunni insurgents along the more than 500 kilometer Iraqi-Syrian border.

The operation began on Aug. 2 and also comprised a range of Iraqi security forces. They included the Iraqi Border Police and Iraqi National Guard.