Arab News

Astana peace process for Syria moves into overdrive

- MENEKSE TOKYAY

ANKARA: Syrian peace efforts by Russia, Turkey and Iran moved into overdrive on Sunday with a foreign ministers’ meeting to be followed by a summit this week involving the three countries’ presidents.

Sergei Lavrov, Mevlut Cavosoglu and Javad Zarif met in the Turkish city of Antalya to discuss progress toward a political settlement and access to humanitari­an aid. On Wednesday, Vladimir Putin, Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Hassan Rouhani will meet in the Black Sea resort of Sochi in Russia.

The three countries are sponsors and guarantors of the Astana peace process, a series of talks in Kazakhstan that have led to the establishm­ent of cease-fire and de-escalation zones in four areas of Syria. The process runs in tandem with UN-sponsored peace talks in Geneva.

Although Ankara initially differed with Tehran and Moscow over the Syrian conflict, over the years they have found common ground. Turkey has recently increased its criticism of US policy on Syria, blaming Washington for not keeping promises about a withdrawal by the SyrianKurd­ish People’s Protection Units (YPG) from areas liberated from Daesh.

Ankara sees the YPG as the Syrian offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which is considered a terrorist organizati­on by Turkey, the EU and the US.

“There is a growing assessment” that the US is using Daesh and the Syrian Kurds “as an excuse to remain in eastern Syria as a potential counterwei­ghing force against the Russian-Iranian presence,” Turkish presidenti­al spokesman Ibrahim Kalin wrote in the Daily Sabah newspaper.

He said Wednesday’s summit in Sochi was “an extension of the Astana process and complement­s rather than replaces the Geneva process.

“For both platforms to produce concrete and sustainabl­e results, however, all stakeholde­rs should contribute with a view toward protecting Syria’s territoria­l integrity and providing freedom and safety for all Syrians within the parameters of UN Security Council Resolution 2254.”

The resolution, unanimousl­y adopted in December 2015, calls for an end to violence, a political settlement and elections within 18 months.

Gulriz Sen, an Iran expert at TOBB University in Ankara, said the fundamenta­l divergence between Turkey and Iran over the fate of the Assad regime seems to have dissipated with the start of the Astana talks in January.

“The Astana talks strengthen­ed diplomatic contacts and ties between Turkey and Iran on the Syrian issue,” Sen told Arab News.

“Turkey’s interests in Syria are more concentrat­ed in the north of the country, with particular sensitivit­y over the fate of the main SyrianKurd­ish political party, the PYD (Democratic Union Party), and the Kurdish cantons.”

Sen said Syria’s borders with Iraq, Israel and Lebanon held strategic significan­ce for Iran.

“Albeit on the same diplomatic table and in cooperatio­n, Iran and Turkey are still competitor­s for further influence on the future of Syria,” she said. “But both states are aligned in keeping Russia as a counterwei­ght to the US presence and strategies in Syria.”

The PYD/YPG issue is a red line for Turkey, which is against their participat­ion in a conference sponsored by Russia to discuss reconcilia­tion and a political settlement in Syria, planned for next month.

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