Syria’s most powerful ally, Russia, said yesterday that the Damascus regime had agreed “in principle” to attend an international peace conference on the crisis that world powers hope will take place in Geneva in next month.
However, Moscow also criticized Syria’s various opposition groups for presenting tough demands that in some cases included the exclusion of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s representatives from the negotiations.
Russian foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said Russia had received the Damascus government’s agreement to take part in the Geneva conference during a visit to Moscow by Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Muqdad.
“We note with satisfaction that we have received an agreement in principle from Damascus to attend the international conference in the interest of the Syrians themselves finding a political path to resolve the conflict,” Lukashevich told reporters.
Russia is seen as the nation exercising the strongest influence over the Syrian regime thanks to years of military and other cooperation that stretches back decades.
Moscow has in recent weeks also been keen to show its diplomatic influence in the region by ensuring that al-Assad’s representatives attended a conference agreed this month by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and his US counterpart, John Kerry.
Some European media have reported that the meeting has been already tentatively scheduled for June 10, with the focus on ending 26 months of bloodshed that a Syrian observer group says has claimed more than 90,000 lives.
However, Lukashevich said reports of a specific date for the conference “cannot be taken seriously” because the ranks of al-Assad’s foes remained so split.
“Demands to immediately name a specific date for the conference without having clarity about who — and with what authority — will speak in the name of the opposition, cannot be taken seriously,” he said.
Syria’s main opposition group entered a second day of talks in Istanbul yesterday aimed at finding a joint approach to what has already been been dubbed as the “Geneva 2” conference.
The first Geneva meeting in June last year ended in a broad agreement aimed at forming a transition government in Syria and introducing a long-lasting truce.
However, the deal was never implemented because of disagreements over al-Assad’s role in the new government and neither side’s decision to lay down their arms.
Lukashevich yesterday condemned some opposition leaders for declaring that no talks were possible with al-Assad still in power.
Moscow has insisted that the talks be held without preconditions — a demand that appears to clash with the Damascus regime’s own insistence that al-Assad’s future not be addressed at the conference.
Lukashevich scorned the attempts by the opposition to find a common voice, saying the reports he has seen thus far coming out of Istanbul “have not been encouraging.”
“We are again hearing about the precondition that Bashar al-Assad leaves power, and that a government be formed under the auspices of the United Nations,” he said.
He said that “everything is being done” by the opposition and their regional allies to make sure that the Geneva conference either does not take place or fails.
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