US
sends warship near Lebanon
WASHINGTON
Petroleumworld.com, Feb 29, 2008
Deeply concerned about Lebanon's political strife,
the United States has sped its USS Cole warship off the country's coast in a "show
of support for regional stability," a top US official said Thursday.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed the deployment of
the guided-missile destroyer but declined to say that the show of force was meant
for Syria or Iran, which Washington considers foes of Lebanese democracy.
It is "a show of support for regional stability" because of "concern
about the situation in Lebanon," the official said.
The guided missile destroyer USS Cole was the target of a bombing by Al-Qaeda
extremists in October 2000 in the Yemeni port of Aden that killed 17 US sailors.
Asked whether US President George W. Bush had given the order, White House spokesman
Gordon Johndroe said: "The president is concerned about the situation in
Lebanon and discusses the issue regularly with his national security team."
Lebanon's presidential vacuum has entered its fourth month with no resolution
in sight, fueling fears that a deepening sectarian rift could stoke civil strife.
Arab leaders have stepped up efforts to bridge the divide between the Western-backed
ruling coalition and the opposition supported by Syria and Iran, but analysts
said they do not hold out much hope of a deal ahead of an Arab summit next month.
Recent street clashes between supporters of rival factions have further raised
tensions and prompted several Gulf nations and Western states to advise their
citizens against traveling to Lebanon.
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal even warned earlier this month that
the country was "on the verge of civil war."
Adding to the tension, Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah has vowed "open
war" against Israel, blaming it for the February 12 car-bombing death in
Damascus of Hezbollah top commander Imad Mughnieh, which Israel welcomed but
denied any involvement in.
Lebanon has been without a president since November 24 when Damascus protege
Emile Lahoud stepped down in the midst of the worst political crisis since the
country's 1975-1990 civil war.
Analysts say plans for an international tribunal to try the assassins of former
prime minister Rafiq Hariri, who was close to Saudi Arabia, is another source
of the tension.
Syria is widely blamed for the February 2005 killing of Hariri in a massive Beirut
car bombing but Damascus has denied any involvement.
However, two months after the murder, Syria pulled out its troops from Lebanon
under domestic and international pressure, ending a 29-year military domination
of its neighbor.
Story
from AFP
AFP 28 2154 GMT 02 08
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