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  背景閱讀:又一反敘高官遇刺震驚世界 
 黎政局雪上加霜
  When a key cabinet official in 
 Lebanon was gunned down in a Beirut street Tuesday, many were quick to 
 blame the killing on Syria. Syria has sharply denied involvement. As VOA 
 correspondent Gary Thomas reports, Syria may be the prime suspect, but 
 there are other, less obvious suspects as well. 
  Syria may have had the motive to kill Industry Minister Pierre Gemayel. 
 He was opposed to Syria, and backed efforts for a U.N.-sanctioned tribunal 
 on the killing last year of Rafiq Hariri, another anti-Syrian politician. 
  Syria denies involvement in either the Gemayel or Hariri killings. 
  Middle East analysts say the motive may be to destabilize the Lebanese 
 government. Prime Minister Fouad Siniora - who has blamed Syria - heads a 
 fragile coalition government made up of Sunni Muslims, Druze, and Maronite 
 Christians. Last week, six pro-Syrian and pro-Hezbollah ministers 
 resigned. David Schenker, senior fellow in Arab politics at the Washington 
 Near East Institute, points out that the resignations, coupled with the 
 Gemayel assassination, put the government close to collapse. 
  "It's the primary motivation," Schenker says. "The constitution says 
 that if more than a third of the cabinet ministers resign or leave, and, 
 by implication, or if they're killed, then the government falls. And right 
 now with the Hezbollah resignations, you have six ministers gone. With the 
 killing of Gemayel you had seven. Eight is a third, and nine is more than 
 a third. So they're two away. I would expect that more people will be 
 killed, that there will be more attempts on the lives of cabinet 
 ministers." 
  Some analysts say the timing of the killing leads them to question 
 whether Syria was behind Gemayel's death. Gemayel was killed just as Syria 
 restored relations with Iraq, a major diplomatic breakthrough for 
 Damascus. So, these analysts say, there is no shortage of other suspects. 
 
  Pierre Gemayel was a member of a prominent Maronite Christian 
 family. Wayne White, a former senior State Department Middle East analyst, 
 points out that he was killed in broad 
 daylight in a Christian neighborhood of Beirut, which he 
 says could indicate a possible internal Maronite feud. 
  "Do we think that the Syrians are so flat-footed that they are knocking 
 these people off willy-nilly in the face of an angry world community? Or 
 could it be, for example, the much-fractured Maronite with a lot of its 
 own little scores to settle? The Gemayels [family] are not immensely 
 popular among certain quarters of the Christian community. They could be 
 bumping off their enemies within their own community knowing full well 
 that the world will rush and blame the Syrians. There could be little 
 plots within plots here," White says. 
  There is a political divide in the Maronite community. Some support 
 Michel Aoun in his alliance with Hezbollah, which is backed by Syria and 
 Iran. Others side with Saad al-Hariri, son of the slain former prime 
 minister. Fares Braizat, visiting fellow at the Center for Strategic and 
 International Studies, says the split could have escalated. 
  "So there is definitely a split within the Maronite community in 
 Lebanon. And whether there has been an internal struggle that has evolved 
 to be a violent one, we are not sure. But we cannot rule out any 
 possibility," Braizat says. 
  Joshua Landis, a Syria expert and co-director of the Center for Peace 
 Studies at the University of Oklahoma, says Gemayel's killing could have 
 been done by Hezbollah itself, acting as a proxy for Syria or Iran. But he 
 does not rule out that an outside group, perhaps from al-Qaida, could be 
 responsible, seeing the killing as a way to derail any possible U.S. 
 effort to seek Syrian and Iranian help in stabilizing Iraq. 
  "There are these al-Qaida groups of various kinds. And some of them are 
 anti-Hezbollah, and they have been making threats about this government as 
 well," Landis says. "They're the kind of people who in this super-heated 
 environment, this giant tug of 
 war and this delicate game, could easily try to profit 
 from this by freelancing." 
  Still, most analysts believe Syria is the prime suspect in the killing 
 of Pierre Gemayel, having, as detectives like to say, motive, means, and 
 opportunity. But, Fares Braizat points out, without any proof or claim of 
 responsibility, speculation remains the name of the game.   |