Obama nominates Damascus envoy

Career diplomat Robert Ford would be first to fill position since 2005.

obama pointing 311 (photo credit: AP)
obama pointing 311
(photo credit: AP)
US President Barack Obama said Tuesday he would nominate a career diplomat to become the United States' first ambassador to Damascus since 2005, a sign US-Syrian relations are thawing as Obama enters his second year in power.
The White House said it would send Robert Ford to the Senate for confirmation hearings. If confirmed, Ford would represent the United States' interests as it moves toward restored diplomatic relations with a nation that borders both Iraq and Israel.
"Ambassador Ford is a highly accomplished diplomat with many years of experience in the Middle East," White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said. "His appointment represents President Obama's commitment to use engagement to advance US interests by improving communication with the Syrian government and people."
Obama has made changing the United States' image in the Middle East a priority of his first year. He traveled to Cairo to deliver a speech on engaging the Muslim world. He has met with Israeli and Palestinians leaders alike at the White House; an agreement between the two, however, has been elusive.
Seeking regional partners to promote that peace, Obama foreign policy advisers last summer said the United States would fill the Damascus post that has been vacant for years. That announcement was described as an acceleration of Washington's engagement with the Arabs in the aftermath of Obama's trip to Cairo.
Syria remains a key to establishing peace with Israel, which still occupies the strategic Golan Heights, captured from Damascus in the 1967 war. The Syrians want a strong US hand in Middle East peacemaking to regain that territory.
"If confirmed by the Senate, Ambassador Ford will engage the Syrian government on how we can enhance relations, while addressing areas of ongoing concern," said Gibbs, Obama's top spokesman.
Tense relations between Syria and the United States started to improve after Obama took office in January last year.
His predecessor, former President George W. Bush, first imposed the sanctions in May 2004, citing Syrian support for terror, its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction and other activities including efforts to undermine US operations in Iraq. The economic and diplomatic sanctions were renewed by the Obama administration in May.
The United States withdrew its ambassador to Syria in 2005 to protestSyrian actions in neighboring Lebanon. Washington also has criticizedSyria and Iran for supporting Islamic militant groups such as Hamas andHizbullah.
Ford, a fluent Arabic speaker, currently is deputychief of mission in the US Embassy in Baghdad. He was also theambassador to Algeria from 2006 to 2008.