Saturday, September 22, 2007

President Bush Strongly Condemns Assassination of Lebanese Member of Parliament Antoine Ghanem

The White House, President George W. Bush

For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
September 19, 2007

President Bush Strongly Condemns Assassination of Lebanese Member of Parliament Antoine Ghanem

I strongly condemn today's horrific assassination of Lebanese Member of Parliament Antoine Ghanem. I extend my personal condolences to his family and the families of the innocent persons who were murdered alongside him in Beirut.

Since October 2004, there has been a tragic pattern of political assassinations and attempted assassinations designed to silence those Lebanese who courageously defend their vision of an independent and democratic Lebanon. Today's cowardly attack comes days before the Lebanese Parliament is scheduled to convene to elect a new president. The United States opposes any attempts to intimidate the Lebanese people as they seek to exercise their democratic right to select a president without foreign interference. We will continue to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the Lebanese people, as they resist attempts by the Syrian and Iranian regimes and their allies to destabilize Lebanon and undermine its sovereignty.

I call on the international community to support the Government of Lebanon in its efforts to bring to justice the perpetrators of these violent attacks, and to stand with the citizens of Lebanon who continue to struggle to protect their freedom.

Sunday, September 02, 2007

State Department spokesman on Human Rights Watch and Hezbollah

US Department of State
Daily Press Briefing
Tom Casey, Deputy Spokesman
Washington, DC
August 29, 2007


QUESTION: Tom, Human Rights Watch has a report
out today saying that Hezbollah engaged in indiscriminate, deliberate
attacks
on Israeli civilian areas during the war last year. They were going to
launch
this with a news conference in Beirut tomorrow, but they cancelled it, they
said, because Al Manar, their Hezbollah TV outlet, was accusing them of
conspiring with the United States, with elements in Lebanon hostile to
Hezbollah and -- you know, urging people to try to physically prevent this
news
conference. I just wonder if there's any part of that you'd like to take on.

MR. CASEY: Well, let's see. What could I start with, David? First of all,
anyone that is arguing that somehow, a very independent organization like
Human
Rights Watch is somehow doing the United States' bidding need look no
further
than most of the reactions we've had to some of their other comments. They
are
an independent organization, they set their own agenda, and they operate on
their own. And they and other human rights groups and other NGOs play an
important part in our civil society and are definitely individual
organizations
that will make their own decisions about what to say and when to say it.

In terms of the actual findings of the report, I've only seen a brief
summary
of it, but I think it's pretty clear to most of us that the policies of
Hezbollah show no regard for distinction between innocent civilians and
innocent life and those who might otherwise be considered combatants. The
indiscriminate firing of missiles into Israel during the conflict last
summer
caused numbers of deaths and injuries and certainly could not be described
in
any way, shape, or form as I understand it as following the laws of war.

As far as Hezbollah intimidation of Human Rights Watch or others, well,
unfortunately, I guess there really isn't any news there because that's just
par for the course. Hezbollah continues to be an organization that engages
in
terror, that supports the repression of activities in Lebanon that are
designed
to give everyone an opportunity to have their say and continues to take
actions
that are inherently against the interests of the Lebanese people.

Thank you.

(The briefing was concluded at 1:30 p.m.)