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Syrian agents withdraw as protesters march on U.S. Embassy in Beirut By ZEINA KARAM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BEIRUT, Lebanon — The symbols of Syrian power crumbled in parts of Lebanon on Tuesday as Syrian military intelligence agents emptied their offices in Beirut and Tripoli and workers took down an imposing portrait of Syria’s president in the capital’s seaside boulevard. Lebanese citizens quickly hoisted their national flag - red and i white with a green cedar tree in the ' middle - outside one of the vacated offices and at the site of the massive Bashar Assad portrait. The retreat of Syrian intelligence, the arm through which Damascus controlled many aspects of Lebanese life, followed strong demands from the United States and an anti-Syrian rally Monday that drew an estimated 1 million people - the biggest crowd ever seen in central Beirut. rremier-aesignaie umar Karami said he would send emissaries to opposition leaders to try to form a national unity government, but acknowledged it would be difficult. Opposition lawmakers have told Karami they will not join a Cabinet until all Syrian troops have left Lebanon, I Syrian-allied security chiefs have been dismissed and an international inquiry has been appointed into the Feb. 14 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. President Bush said the militant Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah could be part of the political mainstream in Lebanon despite its terrorist past. “We view Hezbollah as a terrorist organization,” Bush said Tuesday after a meeting with Jordan’s King Abdullah II. “I would hope that Hezbollah would prove that they are not, by laying down arms and not threatening peace.” Hezbollah, whose officials declined to comment Tuesday on Bush’s remarks, had organized a pro-Syrian rally of 500,000 people in central Beirut last week. Monday’s demonstration was seen as a reply from the anti-Syrian apposition. Bush spoke after several :housand pro-Syrian demonstrators, shouting “Death to \merica” and “ambassador get aut,” had denounced U.S. nterference in Lebanon during a narch toward the American embassy. Lebanese police, troops ind coils of barbed wire stopped :he march just over a half-mile fom the fortified embassy ;ompound. “We do not want your false democracy,5 said Sobhi Yaghi, a student speaker in the march, which was organized by pro government student groups. Syrian intelligence agents packed up their files and furniture at their offices at Ramlet el-Baida on the edge of Beirut. Their goods were loaded into three trucks. In the city’s commercial Hamra district, about two dozen Syrian agents left their office in a car and a van loaded furniture and belongings. They were escorted by Lebanese police. A short time later, a doorman hoisted two Lebanese flags at the entrance. The intelligence offices in Beirut were the only remnants of Syria’s military presence in the capital after the withdrawal ,of troops in 2000. Since then, the headquarters of Syrian military intelligence in Lebanon have been in the town of Anjar, a few miles from the Lebanese-Syrian border. Syrian military intelligence has been the main instrument of Damascus’ control in Lebanon. Its agents deal direcdy with the Lebanese, supervising checkpoints, detaining people, and granting permits and licenses. They have even resolved disputes among Lebanese politicians. In the northern city of Tripoli, men were loading trucks outside the two main offices of Syrian intelligence. In Beirut, workers removed and folded a giant portrait of Assad that used to hang on the city’s seafront corniche. About two dozen Lebanese arrived later at the scene waving flags and carried placards that read “the truth” - an opposition demand to unmask information about the assassination of Hariri. With the closure of the Tripoli offices and two others, Syria now has just three offices in northern Lebanon, in the remote Akkar district. The U.N. team appointed to investigate Hariri’s killing ended its mission Tuesday. Its chief, Peter Fitzgerald, has said he hoped to report to U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan within four weeks. A Lebanese anti-US protester chants in front of a police barricade during a protest near the U.S. Embassy in Aukar, east of Beirut, Lebanon, on Tuesday. Several thousand anti-American protesters were blocked by police and razor-wire from entering the area of the embassy. Your Neighborhood Restaurant and Tavern - Since 1977 - • After the Game, Show or Concert • Free P.M. Delivery to USC Housing • Late Night Menu • Fresh Home Cooking • Daily Blue Plate Specials • Located in the Heart of Five Points • Trolley Stop at Front Door • Free Parking in Lot • Designated To-Go Parking • Large Parties Welcome (please can ahead) • Catering for Meetings or Events Saturday night TWO FOR ONE APPETIZERS with USC Basketball ticket stub! Sunday - Thursday 11:15 a.m.-midnight Friday - Saturday 11:15 a.m.-1:00 a.m. 2030 Devine Street 799*0196 (ToGo) 799*0049 (Catering) ©five points www.yesterdayssc.com # I Breaking News from the MILL! 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