China Daily

Iran included in internatio­nal peace talks

Teheran’s new status follows nuclear deal with world powers

-

Iran is taking part in internatio­nal talks on Syria for the first time this week, giving it a voice in the effort to find a resolution to the more than 4-year-old civil war that has so far defied even the slightest progress toward peace.

A backer of Syrian government, Teheran has been shunned from all previous talks on Syria. Its inclusion now marks recognitio­n by the United States that no discussion on Syria’s future can succeed without Iran at the table.

News of Iran’s attendance outraged Syrian rebels, who said its participat­ion will only prolong the conflict.

The gathering on Thursday and Friday in Vienna will also put Iran in the same room with its most bitter regional rival, Saudi Arabia, raising the potential for tensions. The kingdom, along with other Gulf countries, has been funneling weapons to rebel factions, while Iran has sent financing, weapons and military advisers to ensure President Bash aral-Assad’ s survival.

Iran’s participat­ion reflects its newfound place in the internatio­nal community following the nuclear deal reached with world powers earlier this year. It also shows the seismic shift brought about by Russia’s direct military involvemen­t in Syria since launching a campaign of airstrikes on behalf of Assad last month. That interventi­on has emboldened Assad’s supporters.

Russia’s interventi­on — and its insistence that it seeks a political solution — have created a new dynamic. While no one expects a breakthrou­gh, the Vienna talks are the most serious attempt yet to put an end to a conflict that has killed a quarter of a million people and displaced millions of others, touching off a humanitari­an crisis of spectacula­r proportion­s and unleashing Islamic extremists across the Middle East.

Defeating the Islamic State group, which controls about a third of the country and precipitat­ed last year’s creation of a US-led military coalition to fight them, also appears to be a common and potentiall­y unifying goal of all those attending. There is no question among the participan­ts of including the extremist entity in any future Syria may have.

The core power players at the talks are Russia and Iran, the two top supporters of Assad, and the US, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, the top backers of the opposition. Those countries, with the exception of Iran, attended a first round of talks in Vienna last week.

Who’s not there? Assad’s government and the Syrian opposition.

That reflects the intent of the gathering. It’s not a negotiatio­n between combatants, it’s an attempt by the outside powers with a hand in the conflict to reach common ground on a solution. If the track eventually leads to progress, the parties would then have to persuade— or, more likely, strong-arm — their allies in Syria to go along.

The conference has also been widened from last week’s round to include countries from around the region and Europe. The expansion from a huddle of the key players to an internatio­nal conference appears aimed at ensuring that all those who could influencet­he conflict are roped into backing any results.

Among those invited are Jordan, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, all backers of the rebels, as well as the Iranian-allied Iraqi government and Lebanon, home to the Shiite Hezbollah guerrilla force that has also sent fighters to shore up Assad.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong