The Manila Times

Fears of Syrian war expanding may trigger peace deal

- AFP AFP

UNITED NATIONS, United States: Syria’s civil war is in danger of flaring into a regional or even global conflict, but some diplomats hope the high stakes could, paradoxica­lly, pave the way for a peace accord.

- ly killed in a US-led coalition bomb the Russian government said.

A few days later, Israel lost an F-16 warplane in reprisal attacks against Syrian and Iranian military targets after intercepti­ng an alleged Iranian drone.

These serious and unpreceden­ted events were discussed in an urgent mid-week UN Security Council meeting.

“The ingredient­s for a regional or potentiall­y major global confrontat­ion have come together now, and the risk must be taken seriously,” France’s UN ambassador Francois Delattre told Agence France- Presse.

Since the destructio­n of the Iranian drone “there has been no escalation,” said a colleague of Delattre’s on the UN Security Council, speaking on condition of anonymity.

But there is now a risk of direct confrontat­ion between the United States and Russia, possibly with new deaths, another diplomat countered.

Russia cooling on Syria?

On Wednesday, a Security Council meeting on Syria that was initially slated to be public but was ultimately held behind closed doors, suggested a turning point had been reached.

The language that emerged was a mix of tension and caution that converged on one point: the need for unity to calm things down.

UN ambassador Nikki Haley said peace “is urgent” in Syria, then blamed Iran for its role in the violence.

- stan,” she said.

Haley described it as “a dangerous game of pushing boundaries, instead of behaving responsibl­y and committing to peace.”

Russian ambassador Vassily country is “doing everything to prevent any major internatio­nal confrontat­ion in Syria. We are working on that hard.”

- try has “delivered more than us on the political process in Syria.”

He cited Moscow’s ties with the Damascus regime and the opposition, its support for so-called talks in Astana and Sochi which Russia says are aimed at facilitati­ng other talks in Geneva.

A diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that Russia is losing ground even after all it has invested militarily in Syria.

- cus remains tentative, as seen in a recent warning from the Syrian

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres gives a speech during the 54th Munich Security Conference on February 16, 2018 in Munich, southern Germany. Global security chiefs and top diplomats attended the annual Munich Security Conference discuss Syria, Ukraine and other internatio­nal conflicts and crises. regime on the results of talks in Sochi aimed at forming a committee to amend the Syrian constituti­on.

Syria does not want its makeup to be dictated by the United Nations, nor does Moscow seem keen on seeing Iran making inroads in Syria and risk regular clashes with Israel.

‘ Dark hours’

In closed door meetings, Russia, which may be at the end of its military and financial commitment in Syria, speaks of its will to get out of the conflict, insists it has no hidden agenda, and even goes so far as seeking Western help to persuade Damascus, according to this diplomat.

This is a new position after the series of Russian vetoes in late 2017 of Western resolution­s that went against Syria.

“The road to peace will come when all of the parties stop provoking each other, and choose the responsibl­e path,” Haley said.

In that sense, the risk of a major internatio­nal clash in Syria might open the doors for a breakthrou­gh.

This can serve as “leverage to obtain a peace accord in Syria at a time when lines are beginning to move,” said Delattre.

After seven years of a complex and devastatin­g war that has brought in many regional and internatio­nal actors, “we are back to the darkest hours,” diplomats say.

They point out a list of be- sieged areas such as eastern Ghouta, Idlib and Afrin, the target of a Turkish military operation against Kurdish militia forces allied with the United States.

The operation has created tension between the United States and Turkey, two key members of NATO, a military alliance dominated by Washington.

Due to this tension, NATO strategic interests are now affected by how the balance of power in the Syrian war evolves.

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