November 14, 2015

Syrian talks open in Vienna amid divisions over Assad’s fate

Saturday 14 Nov 2015 - 14:53 Makkah mean time-2-2-1437

Vienna (IINA) - Some 20 countries and international bodies meet in Vienna again Saturday groping for a way out of Syria’s horrific civil war, with deep divisions over President Bashar al-Assad’s future and which rebel groups to back.
The second such gathering in two weeks comes as Syrian rebels suffer a number of setbacks in Syria and Iraq at the hands of Assad’s army helped by Russian air strikes, and Kurdish forces backed by the U.S.  Before leaving for Vienna, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry warned that a quick breakthrough was unlikely in the talks which bring together key players like Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and U.N. special envoy Steffan de Mistura. “I cannot say... that we are on the threshold of a comprehensive agreement, no,” said Kerry, who arrived in the Austrian capital on Friday afternoon for preliminary talks with his Saudi, Turkish and UN counterparts. “The walls of mistrust within Syria, within the region, within the international community are thick and they are high.”
In over four years, fighting between Assad’s regime and rebel groups as well as ISIS militants has killed over 250,000 people and forced millions into exile, leaving many of them stranded in neighboring states. At the last talks on October 30, the participants urged the U.N. to broker a peace deal between the regime and opposition to clear the way for a new constitution and U.N.-supervised elections. Building on that, this round of talks in the Austrian capital will try to agree on a roadmap for peace that would include a ceasefire between Assad’s forces and some opposition groups.
But a key issue - which was absent from the last meeting’s declaration - remains Assad’s future. Western and Arab countries want him out of the way in order to allow a transitional government to unite the country behind a reconciliation process and to defeat ISIS. British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said on Friday that Assad “has to go”. He added, however, that Western powers “recognize that if there will be a transition he may play a part, up to a point, in that transition”.
But Russia, carrying out air strikes against Syrian rebels since late September, is together with Iran sticking with Assad, seeing him as the best bulwark against ISIS. “Syria is a sovereign country, Bashar al-Assad is a president elected by the people,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said in an interview released Friday. That aside, the talks will focus on deciding which of the Syrian government, rebel and opposition factions - none of whom will be represented at the talks - will shape the country’s future. But deciding which of the many opposition groups are moderate enough to be acceptable and which to sideline as “terrorists” is likely to be no easy task. “It will require deep breaths on several sides, including the U.S. side,” Hammond said on Tuesday.
On the ground, widespread fighting was raging in Syria and Iraq and further afield, with ISIS claiming a twin bomb attack in Beirut on Thursday that killed 44 and wounded least 239. The attack, the biggest ever attributed to ISIS in Lebanon, harked back to a campaign against the Shiite movement Hezbollah between 2013 and 2014, ostensibly in revenge for its military support to Assad.
HA/IINA

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