LONDON ø The European Union appears to have resolved a year-long
dispute with Syria over its weapons of mass destruction program.
Officials said Brussels and Damascus have agreed on a clause that
addresses Syria's WMD programs. They said the clause does not stipulate that
Syria must dismantle its programs, rather that Damascus would not
proliferate biological, chemical or nuclear weapons.
"It [association agreement] includes essential provisions on respect for
the democratic principles and fundamental human rights, cooperation to
counter the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their means of
delivery, and anti-terrorism," the EU statement said.
In September, U.S. officials said the intelligence community determined
that Syria transferred chemical bombs and rockets to Sudan, Middle East Newsline reported. The officials
said the Syrian nonconventional weapons appeared to have been tested in
battle in the rebel-torn Darfour province.
The resolution of the dispute facilitated the conclusion of an EU
association agreement with Damascus. On Tuesday, Syrian Foreign Minister
Farouk A-Shaara initialed the trade and political accord in Brussels in a
move meant to grant Damascus equal status to that of other members of the
Euro-Mediterranean Partnership.
"The European Commission and Syria today formally mark the end of
negotiations for an EU-Syria Association Agreement by initialing the text,"
an EU statement said on Tuesday. "The agreement will now be submitted for
approval to the decision-making bodies on both sides and will later be
ratified by parliaments."
The other members of the partnership are Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan,
Lebanon, Morocco, Palestinian Authority, Tunisia and Turkey. The EU has also
been negotiating free trade agreements with the six-member Gulf Cooperation
Council.
The EU-Syrian accord was completed in December 2003. At that point,
Britain, Denmark and Germany demanded a Syrian commitment to dismantle its
biological and chemical weapons programs.
The EU-Syrian accord would require approval of 25 EU foreign ministers.
The ministers were scheduled to review the pact in their meeting in December
2004.
Officials said the EU and Syria negotiated an association agreement for
four years. In 2002, the effort was accelerated, and in December 2003 an
understanding was reached on all issues except a Syrian commitment not to
proliferate WMD.
In September 2004, Syria agreed to the text of the WMD nonproliferation
provision. The EU statement, however, did not disclose the wording of the
commitment.
The EU Association Agreement provides a framework for political dialogue
between Brussels and Damascus on such issues as WMD, missiles,
counter-terrorism and human rights, officials said. They said the agreement
also envisions the creation of a free trade area between the EU and Syria.
The agreement was concluded as the United States has threatened to
impose additional sanctions on Damascus. The Bush administration has
determined that Syria failed to fulfill U.S. demands for a military
withdrawal from
Lebanon and the expulsion of groups deemed terrorists.