The Star Malaysia

Trump invited for peace talks

Russia welcomes Trump administra­tion to solve Syrian conflict

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Russia welcomes new US president to solve Syrian conflict.

WASHINGTON: Russia has invited Donald Trump’s incoming administra­tion to attend upcoming Syrian peace talks in Kazakhstan, The Washington Post reports, bypassing the Obama administra­tion which has been notably absent from the process.

Turkey, which is co-hosting the talks with Russia, has said Washington would be asked to join the talks being held in the Kazakh capital Astana, likely on Jan 23.

But there has been no confirmati­on from Moscow, and the current US administra­tion said on Friday it had not been asked to take part.

“We have not received any kind of formal invitation to the meeting,” said State Department spokesman Mark Toner. “But if we do receive an invitation, we will certainly make a recommenda­tion to Trump’s incoming administra­tion to honour it,” he said.

The timetable would put the meeting just three days after the Republican president-elect takes office on Jan 20, succeeding the Democrat Barack Obama.

Invitation­s to the talks have yet to be sent out, and the format of the discussion­s remains unclear.

But according to The Post, the Russian ambassador to Washington, Sergey Kislyak, extended an invitation to attend the upcoming talks in a Dec 28 telephone conversati­on with Trump’s incoming national security advisor Michael Flynn.

The Post quoted an unidentifi­ed official with Trump’s transition team as saying that “no decision was made” during the call, adding: “I don’t have anything additional on US attendance at this time.”

The talks on the future of Syria were announced in late December after a nationwide ceasefire was secured. They are being organised for the first time without the involvemen­t of Washington, which had led all the internatio­nal discussion­s to resolve the Syrian crisis in recent years.

Though the US has not been a direct party to this specific initiative, Toner said, “We have been in close contact with both the Russians and the Turks as this has gone forward.

“And, we would encourage the incoming administra­tion to continue to pursue those efforts.”

Iran, an ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, is also involved in setting up talks aimed at paving the way to an end of the nearly six-year conflict.

Russia, which is counting on improved relations with the US under the Trump presidency after strains with Obama, refused to say whether Washington should be invited to Astana.

Russia, a key Assad ally, is “interested in the broadest possible representa­tion of the parties who have a bearing on the prospects of a political settlement in Syria,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

We have been in close contact with both the Russians and the Turks as this (the peace talks) has gone forward. Mark Toner

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