News As Bush zeros in on Syria, Israel voices own agenda Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | April 18, 2003 WASHINGTON — For months, analysts and pundits have wondered what would be the next item on the Bush administration agenda after war in Iraq. Suddenly, it seems the White House is tackling most of its agenda items at once. In the hours after Iraq's major cities fell last week, U.S. attention began shifting to the Middle East's numerous other trouble spots. Among the priorities is the presentation of the "road map" toward Israeli-Palestinian peace, rebuilding Iraq and, unexpectedly, pressuring Syria to change its belligerent policies. All have major implications for Israel. The American Jewish community and other pro-Israel activists have been closely monitoring developments in the region, seeing both opportunities and concerns in the reshaping of the Middle East. It long was expected that the administration would focus on rebuilding Iraq and resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict immediately after the war. But the pressure on Syria seemingly came out of nowhere last week. Bush administration officials began blasting Syria for sending shipments of military supplies to Iraq, harboring terrorist organizations and alleged Iraqi war criminals, and allowing combatants to infiltrate Iraq to fight U.S. forces. "In recent days, the Syrians have been shipping killers into Iraq to try to kill Americans," Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz told Congress on April 10. "I think it is important that Iraq's neighbors not meddle with Iraq." Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon joined the chorus, reviving allegations he made last winter that Iraq had moved military equipment to Syria, either to hide it from the United States or to transfer the equipment to Hezbollah, the Lebanon-based terrorist organization supported by the Syrian and Iranian governments. Sharon labeled young Syrian leader Bashar Assad "dangerous," arguing that he is inexperienced and capable of misjudging the strategic landscape. "During the war in Iraq he proved he does not have the ability to reach the right conclusions from relatively obvious facts," Sharon told the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot on Tuesday. "All those who considered the facts could have known that Iraq would lose. But Assad thought the United States was going to lose." Syrian officials reportedly have said they want to turn Iraq into "America's Lebanon," a reference to the insurgency that Syrian-supported guerrillas waged for years against Israeli troops occupying southern Lebanon. The slow but steady bloodletting ultimately forced Israel to withdraw in 2000. A similar situation would teach the United States not to meddle in Arab affairs, Syrian officials reportedly believe. Meanwhile, Israeli officials were in Washington for talks with administration officials on modifying the road map. But they faced resistance from a White House committed to the plan it drafted with its partners in the diplomatic "Quartet" — the United Nations, European Union and Russia. A day after meeting with Sharon's chief of staff, Dov Weisglass, Secretary of State Colin Powell said Tuesday that the "finalized" road map would be released to the parties after the Cabinet of new Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas is confirmed. Powell said he expects to receive comments from both parties. "These are comments that will come in; they'll be considered by the Quartet," Powell said in a briefing at the Washington Foreign Press Center. "But, really, these are comments that both sides have to begin to discuss with each other and share with each other." The current confluence of events likely will mean increased Israeli engagement with the United States. Israel will try to echo Washington's warnings to Syria, while pressing the White House not to push the road map faster than Israel is willing to go. Israel has much to gain from increased pressure on Damascus. Syria essentially controls Israel's northern neighbor, Lebanon, and harbors and supports terrorist organizations such as Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah. U.S.-led pressure on Syria is likely to be more productive than anything Israel could bring to bear on its own. Jon Alterman, director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the Syrian government is a mix of ideologues and realists — and that opportunities for change exist. "The question ultimately becomes, 'Can you build a coalition inside Syria for Syria to reorient the way it deals with the world?'" he said. Among the possible carrots the United States can use is the drafting of a road map for Syria to get off the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism, the creation of new economic opportunities for Syria, giving Syria a role in regional discussions, and inviting the country to participate in rebuilding Iraq. "You need to make sure there is not a reward for Syria for being the non-U.S. ally in the Arab world," Alterman said. "To the extent that most Arab states have friendly relations with Washington, Syria may be casting for support by playing itself as the non-U.S. ally in the Arab world." J. Correspondent Also On J. 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