Arab Times

Sides split on fate of Assad

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ANKARA/ISTANBUL, April 3, (Agencies): Three foreign powers who have shaped Syria’s civil war — Iran, Russia and Turkey — will discuss ways to wind down the fighting on Wednesday despite their involvemen­t in rival military campaigns on the ground.

The leaders of the three countries will meet in Ankara for talks on a new constituti­on for Syria and increasing security in “de-escalation” zones across the country, Turkish officials say.

The Syria summit brings together two powers which have been President Bashar al-Assad’s most forceful supporters, Iran and Russia, with one of his strongest opponents, Turkey.

Cooperatio­n between the rival camps raised hopes of stabilisin­g Syria after seven years of conflict in which 500,000 people have been killed and half the population displaced.

But the violence has raged on, highlighti­ng strategic rifts between the three countries who, in the absence of decisive Western interventi­on, hold Syria’s fate largely in their hands.

Syria’s army and Iranbacked militias, with Russian air power, have crushed insurgents near Damascus in eastern Ghouta — one of the four mooted “de-escalation zones”.

Turkey, which sharply criticised the Ghouta offensive, waged its own military operation to drive Kurdish YPG fighters from the northweste­rn Syrian region of Afrin. It has pledged to take the town of Tel Rifaat and push further east, angering Iran.

“Whatever the intentions are,

Turkey’s moves in Syria, whether in Afrin, Tel Rifaat or any other part of Syria, should be halted as soon as possible,” a senior Iranian official said.

Iran has been Assad’s most supportive ally throughout the conflict. Iran-backed militias first helped his army stem rebel advances and, following Russia’s entry into the war in 2015, turn the tide decisively in Assad’s favour.

A Turkish official said Ankara will ask Moscow to press Assad to grant more humanitari­an access in Ghouta, and to rein in air strikes on rebel-held areas. “We expect ... Russia to control the regime more,” the official told reporters this week.

Ankara’s relations with Moscow collapsed in 2015 when Turkey shot down a Russian warplane but have recovered since then — to the concern of Turkey’s Western allies.

Turkey was one of the few NATO partners not to expel Russian diplomats in response to a nerve agent attack on a former Russian agent which Britain blamed on Moscow — an allegation which Turkey said was not proven.

Improved political ties have been reflected in Turkey’s agreement to buy a Russian missile defence system and plans for Russia’s ROSATOM to build Turkey’s first nuclear power plant.

Turkey has also expanded relations with Iran, exchanging visits by military chiefs of staff, although its deepening ties with Tehran and Moscow have not translated into broader agreement on Syria’s future.

Iran remains determined that Assad stay in power, while Russia is less committed to keeping him in office, a regional diplomat said. Turkey says Assad has lost legitimacy, although it no longer demands his immediate departure.

At a meeting in Russia two months ago, boycotted by the leadership of Syria’s opposition, delegates agreed to set up a committee to rewrite Syria’s constituti­on and called for democratic elections.

Turkey says Wednesday’s meeting will discuss setting up the constituti­onal committee, humanitari­an issues and developmen­ts in Syria’s northern Idlib region, which is under the control of rival rebel factions and jihadi groups, and where Turkey has set up seven military observatio­n posts.

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