Syria war: We’ll continue to back Assad, Russia tells
US
MOSCOW (AFP) – Russian diplomats told a top visiting US dignitary on Friday that Moscow would continue backing Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad’s campaign against rebel forces despite peace talks due later this
month.
US Under Secretary of State Wendy Sherman’s visit
came ahead of a crunch meeting in Paris on Monday between her boss John Kerry
and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that will focus on Moscow’s push to
give Syrian ally Iran a formal seat at the so-called Geneva 2 conference.
Russian officials said Lavrov and Kerry would also
hold a joint meeting in Paris
on Monday with UN-Arab League peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi.
Sherman did not address reporters after her meeting with
Russian Deputy Foreign Ministers Mikhail Bogdanov and Gennady Gatilov. The two
diplomats will represent Moscow
at the Syria negotiations that are scheduled to begin on
January 22 in Switzerland.
But the Russian foreign ministry said Sherman was told that Assad’s campaign against “terrorist
groups” deserved comprehensive support.
“The Russian representatives stressed the
importance of uniting efforts by the Syrian government and the
patriotically-inclined opposition to fight terrorist groups whose activities
are threatening not only the future of Syria, but also regional stability,” the Russian foreign
ministry said in a statement.
Moscow uses the phrase “patriotically-inclined
opposition” to refer to Syrian groups that are not part of Assad’s ruling Baath
party but which are sanctioned by the regime and do not include the opposition
National Coalition umbrella body or rebels fighting on the ground.
The Russian statement said Moscow and Washington
agreed that the Geneva 2 conference — a follow-up to July 2012 consultations
that failed to put an end to the fighting — must focus on engaging regime and
opposition members in their first direct contact.
“The forum must give the start to direct Syrian
talks based on the Geneva
communique, whose frameworks call on the Syrians themselves to decide the issue
of how their future government works,” the Russian statement said.
The first Geneva meeting — involving world powers but no Syrian
regime or rebel officials — concluded with an agreement that Assad and his
opponents should decide on a transitional government whose representatives
suited all sides.
US officials interpreted the wording to mean that the
deal excluded the possibility of Assad remaining in power.
But Russia — its ties to Syria stretching back
decades and involving weapons sales worth billions of dollars a year — insists
that Assad cannot be forced to step down through outside pressure because he
retains strong domestic support.
No decision on Iran
Russia has been one of the principal backers of Iran’s inclusion in the Syria peace negotiations because of its sway over
Assad’s regime — a positioned backed by Germany but opposed most vocally by France and the United States.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said he told Russia’s Vladimir Putin in a telephone conversation on
Thursday that the peace conference would fail without Tehran’s involvement.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon did not include Iran in his invitations to 30 countries to the
gathering.
And the Islamic republic had earlier brushed aside
a US suggestion that it play a “sideline” role at the
negotiations as insulting.
Russian diplomats said no conclusive decision was
reached on Iran’s role in Switzerland during Sherman’s visit.
“This issue was pushed back until the meeting
between Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and US Secretary of State John Kerry in
Paris,” Interfax quoted Gatilov as saying.
Moscow said Lavrov would further hold rare consultations
with National Coalition chief Ahmad Jarba in Paris on either Sunday or Monday.
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