Lodi News-Sentinel

Little optimism as new round of Syria peace talks open

- By Laura King

It doesn’t usually bode well for peace talks when the attendance of one of the principals is still up in the air on the eve of the gathering.

An eighth round of United Nationsbac­ked talks aimed at finding a political solution to Syria’s grinding civil war was to convene Tuesday in Geneva, but by late Monday, the world body was still expressing hopes that the Syrian government would send representa­tives, while acknowledg­ing it had not obtained a commitment from Damascus to take part.

“This is a moment of truth for the Syria talks,” said U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric. “We obviously think the participat­ion of the Syrian government is important.”

The nearly 7-year-old war, which has left hundreds of thousands dead and seen millions driven from their homes, is at an impasse: Syrian rebel groups have been unable to dislodge President Bashar Assad, and even their internatio­nal allies are acknowledg­ing there is no prospect of an opposition military victory.

Despite having little leverage, negotiator­s from the rebel factions are demanding that Assad step down. A Syrian newspaper has suggested that the government delegation would not come to Geneva until that demand is dropped.

The tide of the war turned in 2015, when Assad’s powerful patron Russia intervened militarily in the conflict. Since then, rebel forces have lost their footholds in all major Syrian cities.

The United Nations has sought to defer decisions on Assad’s future in hopes of bringing a halt to fighting and taking the first steps toward a political transition. The U.N.’s special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, has called for U.N.-supervised elections under a blueprint backed by the Security Council.

The bitter divisions between Damascus and much of the internatio­nal community flared into the open Monday at a meeting in the Netherland­s of the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, a global monitor of the banned weaponry.

Syria’s deputy foreign minister, Faisal Mekdad, repeated angry denials that Assad’s government used a nerve agent in April to attack Syrian villagers in a rebelheld area, killing dozens. Russia has used its Security Council veto to block an extension of a joint investigat­ion by the U.N. and the monitoring organizati­on.

Even as the U.N.-backed Geneva talks appear to founder, conditions grew more desperate in Ghouta, a rebel-held Damascus suburb under government blockade. Activists reported more than a dozen deaths in weekend airstrikes by government forces, and the U.N. says shortages of food and vital supplies have left about 350,000 people in critical need in the enclave.

 ?? SALAMPIX/ABACA PRESS FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus, Syria, on Feb. 10.
SALAMPIX/ABACA PRESS FILE PHOTOGRAPH Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus, Syria, on Feb. 10.

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