The Jerusalem Post

Expectatio­ns low as Syria’s warring sides meet

Kazakhstan meeting is first bilateral session since UN talks shelved • West deliberate­ly excluded

- • By OLZHAS AUYEZOV and SULEIMAN AL-KHALIDI

ASTANA (Reuters) – Syria’s warring sides met for talks for the first time in nine months on Monday, with frosty initial exchanges suggesting chances of a significan­t breakthrou­gh were slim as the country’s six-year-old conflict ground on.

They sat opposite each other at a round table in a hotel conference room before a day of negotiatio­ns – sponsored by Russia, Turkey and Iran in Kazakhstan’s capital Astana – got under way.

Both delegation­s said the focus was on the country’s cease-fire, a fragile precursor to a wider political solution.

But Bashar al-Jaafari, the head of the delegation representi­ng Syrian President Bashar Assad, said negotiator­s for the rebel forces had been rude and unprofessi­onal, accusing them of defending “war crimes” committed by Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, the terrorist group formerly known as Nusra Front.

A rebel source said opposition representa­tives planned to negotiate with the government side only via intermedia­ries.

Muhammad Alloush, the head of the opposition delegation, told delegates he wanted to stop “the horrific flow of blood” by consolidat­ing the shaky ceasefire and freezing military operations, saying Iran-backed militias had to leave Syria.

Russian news agency TASS cited a draft communique in which Moscow, Ankara and Tehran would commit to jointly fighting Islamic State and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham and set up a mechanism for trilateral monitoring of the cease-fire, which took effect on December 30.

But fundamenta­l divisions also remain between pro-Assad Russia and Turkey, which has supported anti-Assad rebels – including whether Syria’s president should stay in power or, as the rebels are demanding, step down.

There were no senior government figures among the delegation­s in Astana and Kazakhstan’s Foreign Ministry said it expected the meetings to be over by midday on Tuesday.

Some observers said the talks, which UN Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura is attending, could help jump-start UN-led negotiatio­ns that were suspended in late April.

De Mistura said it was crucial to get a mechanism to oversee and implement a nationwide cease-fire in place to build confidence.

“That by itself... would be a major achievemen­t,” he said, adding he hoped Astana could pave the way for direct talks between the government and opposition in Geneva next month.

The Astana talks pointedly exclude the West, though Kazakhstan, with the backing of Moscow and Ankara, extended an invitation to the new US administra­tion last week, which Washington declined.

Iranian officials have said they strongly oppose US involvemen­t, though George Krol, the US ambassador to Kazakhstan, attended as an observer.

Turkey and Russia – each for their own reasons – both want to disentangl­e themselves from the fighting. That has pushed them into an ad hoc alliance that some people believe represents the best chance for progress towards a peace deal, especially with Washington distracted by domestic issues.

The opposition arrived in Astana aware that the fall of their former urban stronghold, Aleppo, has shifted the momentum in the fighting in favor of Assad.

On Sunday, war planes bombed rebel-held areas of western Syria, killing 12 people in one location, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said, while insurgent shelling of Aleppo killed six.

“The cease-fire is clinically dead, but the Russians and Turks want to keep it alive to send a message to the internatio­nal community that they are the ones in charge of the Syrian situation,” said observator­y director Rami Abdulrahma­n.

 ?? (Mukhtar Kholdorbek­ov/Reuters) ?? MOHAMMAD ALLOUSH (second left), the head of the Syrian opposition delegation, attends peace talks in Astana yesterday.
(Mukhtar Kholdorbek­ov/Reuters) MOHAMMAD ALLOUSH (second left), the head of the Syrian opposition delegation, attends peace talks in Astana yesterday.

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