Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen and Congressman Eliot Engel
introduced a resolution calling Lebanon a Captive nation and demands the release of all
Lebanese detained by Syria in the Syrian and Lebanese Jails.
Expressing the grave concern of Congress regarding the occupation of the Republic of
Lebanon by the Syrian Arab Republic.
January 26, 2004 Congress
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN (for herself and Mr. ENGEL) submitted the following resolution;
Expressing the grave concern of Congress regarding the occupation of the Republic of
Lebanon by the Syrian Arab Republic.
Whereas the Syrian Arab Republic is the only country currently occupying another country
that is a full member of the United Nations, in violation of all international laws and
norms, including Untied Nations Security Council Resolutions 425, 426, 520, and 1559;
Whereas since its invasion of the Republic of Lebanon in 1976, the Syrian regime has
implemented a systematic policy of occupation over Lebanon that has transformed the
political, social, and economic character of Lebanon;
Whereas on July 20, 1976, President Hafez al-Assad of Syria stated that, Syria
and Lebanon were one state and one people. . .;
Whereas the total Syrian occupation was complete on October 13, 1990, when the Syrian
troops launched aerial and ground attacks and occupied the Lebanese presidential palace
and the ministry of defense, ousting the constitutional government of Prime Minister
Michel Aoun of Lebanon;
Whereas the Syrian regime appointed their own proxy government and president in occupied
Lebanon and started a large-scale persecution operation against the Lebanese people by
arresting, abducting, torturing, and killing opponents to the occupation;
Whereas, on May 22, 1991, following the occupation of Beirut, Lebanon, Syria concluded the
Brotherhood Treaty for Coordination and Cooperation with Lebanon;
Whereas this treaty solidified the integration of the two countries in matters of security
and intelligence, finance and trade, and industry and agriculture, by establishing the
mechanism for Syrian command under the cover of joint
decision-making;
Whereas the Syrian regime has continued to employ a wide range of policy means to
transform Lebanon into a client state and a Syrian political
satellite;
Whereas Syria clearly tampered with the Lebanese parliamentary elections of 1992, 1996,
and 2000, amending electoral laws in all instances, which delineated voting districts and
laid down intricate procedures for the elections, which were rigged in a way to guarantee
results favorable to Syria;
Whereas Syrian-backed ad-hoc modifications to the Lebanese constitution extended the
presidential tenure of the Lebanese president Elias Harawi by three years, allowed Emile
Lahoud, commander of the Lebanese army, to become president, and extended Lahouds
term in contravention of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1559;
Whereas Lebanese judicial institutions have been utilized and mobilized to impose Syrian
control, including the routine issuance of death sentences in abstentia against patriots
and oppositionists;
Whereas Lebanese Broadcasting Law No. 382 of 1994 provided the legislative framework for
controlling and restricting Lebanese radio and television;
Whereas the muzzle on the free flow of information and opinion in Lebanon is in sharp
contrast to the legacy of journalism in that country;
Whereas Syria has reportedly widely utilized the practices of kidnapping and arresting
Lebanese citizens, using torture against them, and causing their virtual disappearance;
Whereas Human Rights Watch reported that in November 1999 Syrian authorities in Damascus,
Syria, offering no explanation whatsoever, returned the dead body of Lebanese citizen Adel
Khalaf Ajouri, aged 52, who had disappeared in 1990;
Whereas within Lebanon itself, Syria reportedly operated detention facilities in Tripoli,
Beirut, Shtaura in the Bekka Valley, and Anjar on the Lebanese-Syrian border;
Whereas Syrian order in Lebanon was institutionalized when
Damascus led the process of disarming the Lebanese militias except for retaining Hezbollah
as a terrorist force engaged against the State of Israel;
Whereas Lebanon, under the control of Syria, continues to serve as a major training center
for terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and the
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Command;
Whereas Lebanese Government officials have actively facilitated and contributed to the
Syrian occupation and its activities, threatening regional and global security; and
Whereas United Nations Security Council Resolution 1559 calls for the strict
respect of the sovereignty, territorial integrity, unity, and political independence of
Lebanon under the sole and exclusive authority of the Government of Lebanon throughout
Lebanon, the withdrawal from Lebanon of all remaining foreign
forces, the disbanding and disarmament of all Lebanese and
non-Lebanese militias, and the extension of the control of the
Government of Lebanon over all Lebanese territory:
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
That it is the sense of Congress that
(1) the Republic of Lebanon is a captive country;
(2) the occupation of Lebanon represents a long-term threat to the security of the Middle
East and United States efforts to promote political and economic liberalization in the
region, and this issue should be raised by the President and the Secretary of State in all
appropriate bilateral and multilateral forums;
(3) the President should direct the United States Permanent Representative to the United
Nations to present and secure support for a United Nations Security Council Resolution
classifying Lebanon as a captive country and calling for the
immediate release of all Lebanese detainees in Syria and Lebanon;
(4) the President should freeze all assets in the United States belonging to Lebanese
Government officials who are found to support and aid the occupation of Lebanon by the
Syrian Arab Republic;
(5) all countries should fully and immediately implement United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1559;
(6) it should be the policy of the United States to
(A) support independent human rights and pro-democracy advocates in Lebanon; and
(B) seek the full restoration of sovereign democratic rule in Lebanon; and
(7) the United States should provide assistance through the Middle East Partnership
Initiative and the Broader Middle East and North Africa Initiative for broadcasts and
civil society efforts to assist individuals, organizations, and entities that support
Lebanese sovereignty and the promotion of democracy in Lebanon.