Oman Daily Observer

US studying Moscow’s Syria deal

RELIEF AT LAST: First evacuation­s from Damascus rebel district begin

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COPENHAGEN: The United States is closely examining whether a Russiabrok­ered deal to establish safe zones in Syria can work in the long term, Pentagon chief Jim Mattis said.

“All wars eventually come to an end and we have been looking for a long time how to bring this one to an end,” Mattis told reporters ahead of his arrival in Denmark on Monday.

“So we will look at the proposal, see if it can work,” Mattis added.

Experts are sceptical about last Thursday’s deal because neither the Syrian government nor the rebels were direct signatorie­s and the opposition offered only a lukewarm reaction.

Washington has given the deal an extremely cautious welcome, citing concerns about a guarantor even as it expressed hope the agreement could set the stage for a later settlement.

“Does this proposal have a hope for ending this war — we’ll have to look at it. The devil is always in the details, so we are going to have to look at the details, see if we can work them out, see if we think they are going to be effective,” Mattis said.

Mattis is in Copenhagen for a meeting of the main members of the coalition fighting the IS group in Iraq and Syria. He added that “we owe it” to the people of Syria to carefully study the proposals.

The United States was not part of the deal by government backers Russia and Iran, and rebel supporter Turkey.

However, a US assistant secretary of state monitored the talks in the Kazakh capital Astana, Mattis said.

The United States takes part in separate peace talks under a UN mandate in Geneva, where the rivals have been deadlocked on key issues.

Several ceasefires have been agreed since Syria’s conflict broke out in 2011, but they have failed to permanentl­y stem the fighting. The new deal would initially last six months but could be extended by the guarantors.

It does not specify that the safe zones take effect immediatel­y, but gives the three guarantor states two weeks to form working groups to delineate them and then until June 4 to come up with definitive boundaries.

Meanwhile, Syrian rebels and their families begin evacuating from a district of the capital Damascus for the first time on Monday, bringing the government closer to recapturin­g all of the city.

The deal to evacuate Barzeh district mirrors similar agreements for opposition-held territory elsewhere in the country, allowing fighters safe passage in exchange for surrender. “Armed men and some of their families have begun leaving Barzeh on 40 buses heading towards northern Syria,” state television said.

 ?? — AFP ?? A Syrian girl looks on upon arriving at a staging point in the Barzeh neighbourh­ood of the capital Damascus on Monday as they wait to be evacuated.
— AFP A Syrian girl looks on upon arriving at a staging point in the Barzeh neighbourh­ood of the capital Damascus on Monday as they wait to be evacuated.

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