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U.S. says will be "substantial" donor to Lebanon
22 Jan 2007 21:21:23 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Sue Pleming and Arshad Mohammed

WASHINGTON, Jan 22 (Reuters) - The United States plans to make a "substantial" aid contribution to Lebanon at a foreign donors meeting in Paris this week, said senior U.S. government officials on Monday.

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is set to make an announcement at the conference in Paris, where donors such as France and Saudi Arabia are also expected to give aid that could yield billions of dollars for Lebanon.

"It will be substantial," said State Department spokesman Sean McCormack, when asked how much Washington would give to help rescue the debt-laden country's finances and to recover from last year's war between Israel and Hezbollah guerrillas.

McCormack declined to provide figures and another senior official also said he did not want to "take Secretary Rice's thunder" at Thursday's conference.

"The United States will have a substantial and leadership position on this. We expect the support from the international community will be very good," said a senior Bush administration official, who spoke on condition he was not named.

Any new aid will be on top of about $900 million that donors pledged last August for postwar reconstruction in Lebanon, as well as $1.5 billion deposited with Lebanon's central bank by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait to keep the Lebanese pound stable.

Lebanese Prime Minister Fouad Siniora has not released any target for what the conference will raise. In November, a Lebanese minister said Lebanon hoped to receive over $4 billion and a Lebanese economist has cited a figure of $7 billion.

OPPOSITION TACTICS

U.S. officials, including McCormack, accused the opposition in Lebanon of trying to create false expectations ahead of the Paris meeting and of giving inflated numbers so that it would appear that Siniora had failed in his bid to raise funds.

In addition, he said a strike was planned for Tuesday in Lebanon as well as other demonstrations.

"This is a tactic that they are using to try and distract people from the fact that they themselves have not met any of the promises they made to quote/unquote, 'rebuild' the south of Lebanon," he added of the Hezbollah opposition.

The senior Bush administration official said an opposition suggestion that the conference would raise $7 billion to $9 billion was incorrect.

"Everyone is out there trying to create expectations -- to cause them to be exceeded or cause them to fail. Neither of those would be right," said the official.

He said "it would be responsible" for some U.S. aid to be tied to economic reforms by Lebanon. While acknowledging Lebanon had not made promised reforms in the past he suggested there were reasons to believe it would do so this time.

The United States wants to support Siniora's government both politically and militarily and earlier this month, Washington delivered the first shipment of military vehicles to Lebanon as part of a $40 million military package.

The State Department said the White House would ask Congress for more funds for military support in its next budget.

Last year, after the Lebanon war, the United States promised Lebanon about $250 million in humanitarian aid and about half of that has been delivered.
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Israel's Prime Minister Ehud Olmert (R) arrives at the office of a governmental inquiry committee in Tel Aviv in this picture taken and released by the Israeli Government Press Office (GPO) February 1, 2007. Olmert is due to testify on the recent conflict with Lebanon. ISRAEL OUT FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY