Los Angeles Times

A hard start for Syria talks

Peace conference begins with angry insults, but just getting both sides to the table is a small victory.

- By Nabih Bulos Bulos is a special correspond­ent.

BEIRUT — It’s said that those who expect nothing will never be disappoint­ed.

That would be a fitting mantra for the latest attempt to end six years of civil war in Syria, a peace conference brokered by Russia and Turkey in Kazakhstan’s capital, Astana.

The negotiatio­ns — the first time the Syrian government has met with an opposition delegation composed exclusivel­y of rebel fighters — got off to a difficult start Monday as the two sides angrily traded insults.

Calling the Syrian government a “bloody, oppressive regime,” Mohammed Alloush, the lead negotiator for the opposition and commander of the Islam Army rebel faction, said in a closed-session speech later uploaded to social media that any political solution would start with the departure of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

Syrians had been forced to choose between “the terrorism of Bashar and the terrorism of Daesh,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State, which controls territory in Syria and Iraq.

Bashar Jaafari, Syria’s ambassador to the U.N. and the government’s lead negotiator, struck back at a news conference, calling Alloush the head of the “armed terrorist groups’ delegation” and deriding his comments as “undiplomat­ic, irrelevant to the meeting and inappropri­ate,” according to a transcript provided by the official Syrian Arab News Agency.

“What happened today is somewhat surreal and ill-fitting of the monumental efforts that were exerted, and doesn’t befit the level of the important delegation­s that attended the opening session,” he said.

Just getting both sides to the negotiatin­g table was a small victory. Previous talks in Geneva that were brokered by the United Nations included political opposition figures who were dismissed by Syrian government officials as not having significan­t influence on the battlefiel­d.

More than 400,000 have been killed and millions more displaced — engulfing Europe in a refugee crisis that has fed the rise of rightwing political movements there — since the civil war started in March 2011.

The negotiatio­ns Monday started with both delegation­s seated at opposite ends of a large conference table in the Rixos President Hotel. After an hourlong closed session, it quickly became clear that any high expectatio­ns needed to be dialed back.

The talks would not include direct negotiatio­ns and instead would aim solely at strengthen­ing a tenuous cease-fire and improving the chances for success at a U.N. peace conference scheduled for next month in Geneva.

“We are not here for political negotiatio­ns,” Issam Rayess, a spokesman for the Western-backed Free Syrian Army, said in a news conference televised by the pro-opposition Orient News outlet. “We are all defected officers, and we are not here for a political transition. That is done by the High Negotiatio­ns Committee,” the main umbrella group of the opposition.

“We are just working on the military issues,” he said. “There are political figures and politician­s who will focus on Geneva and the political solution.”

The cease-fire, which took effect last month, has been beset by accusation­s of violations by both sides, as the government has been trying to oust rebels from the Wadi Barada, a strategica­lly important area that supplies drinking water in the capital, Damascus.

Russia, Turkey and Iran would agree to set up a “trilateral mechanism” to monitor the cease-fire in Syria, the Russian state news agency Tass reported on Monday, citing a draft of the agreement that they hope will emerge from the talks in Astana.

Those three countries would also join forces to fight two groups that are excluded from the cease-fire — Islamic State and a former Al Qaeda affiliate now known as the Front for the Conquest of Syria — without targeting so-called mainstream opposition forces, the draft reportedly said.

Previous cease-fires had foundered because the opposition continued to work with the Front for the Conquest of Syria, whose jihadis are considered to be some of the most effective antigovern­ment fighters.

Staffan de Mistura, the U.N. special envoy to Syria, told delegates at the conference that “consolidat­ing a nationwide cease-fire is only the first step.”

“No sustainabl­e, longterm solution to the conflict in Syria can be attained through only military means, but through a political process,” he said.

Absent from an active role in the proceeding­s was the U.S., which received an eleventh-hour invitation to attend despite vigorous objections by Iran, another key player in the talks.

The U.S. State Department said Saturday that it was focused on the “immediate demands of the transition” of President Trump. It sent George Krol, the U.S. ambassador to Kazakhstan, as an observer.

 ?? Kirill Kudryavtse­v AFP/Getty Images ?? MOHAMMED ALLOUSH, center, a commander of the Islam Army, is a lead negotiator in the Syria talks in Astana, Kazakhstan.
Kirill Kudryavtse­v AFP/Getty Images MOHAMMED ALLOUSH, center, a commander of the Islam Army, is a lead negotiator in the Syria talks in Astana, Kazakhstan.

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