Los Angeles Times

U.N. disinvites Iran to Syria talks

The world body’s reversal seems to open the way for a major opposition group to attend.

- By Patrick J. Mcdonnell

BEIRUT — Bowing to intense pressure from Washington and its allies, the United Nations on Monday rescinded its invitation to Iran to participat­e in a longawaite­d Syrian peace conference scheduled to begin Wednesday in Switzerlan­d.

The move appeared to avert a dispute that could have derailed the conference, which has been some eight months in the making and is a major diplomatic initiative of the United States, Russia and the U.N.

The world body’s reversal seemed to open the way for the major opposition group, the U.S.-backed Syrian National Coalition, to attend the talks. The coalition had threatened to pull out if the invitation remained open to Iran, a staunch backer of the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The coalition is the major opposi- tion bloc invited to the conference.

The U.N. announceme­nt capped hours of uncertaint­y after Washington and its allies complained that Tehran had failed to endorse the conference’s underlying goal: the establishm­ent of a transition­al government in Syria by “mutual consent” of both parties at the peace table. That objective was laid out in the “Geneva communique,” a document hammered out at a U.N.-organized summit in June 2012.

Washington interprets the document as a guarantee that the peace process will lead to Assad stepping down from office, ending his family’s more than four decades of rule. The Syrian government and its Russian ally disagree and say there is no explicit guarantee that Assad must cede power.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was “deeply disappoint­ed” that public comments from Iran on Monday did not back the stated aim of the conference, Martin Nesirky, a U.N. spokesman, told reporters in New York.

Since Iran has “chosen to remain outside that basic understand­ing,” the spokesman said, the U.N. chief decided that the so-called Ge- neva II process would proceed without its presence.

In a statement, Iran’s U.N. mission said Tehran “does not accept any preconditi­ons for its participat­ion in the Geneva II conference” and made it clear that it would not publicly endorse the goal of a transition­al government in Syria. Iran will stay away if its participat­ion is predicated on accepting premises laid out in the earlier Geneva communique, it said.

Iranian observers viewed the U.N. decision to rescind Iran’s invitation as a matter of the world body succumbing to intense demands from Washington. “Mr. Ban Kimoon does not drink water without getting permission from the United States and its allies,” said Nader Karimi Juni, an independen­t political analyst in Tehran.

The U.N. decision capped a day of confusion and uncertaint­y that began with Ban on Sunday publicly extending an invitation to Iran to join more than 30 nations expected to attend the conference, which is scheduled to kick off in the Swiss city of Montreux. The U.N. said Iranian officials had assured the internatio­nal agency that they concurred with the conference goals. U.S. officials and their allies immediatel­y balked, demanding that Iran sign on explicitly to the objective of creating a transition­al government in Syria.

The incident was a major embarrassm­ent for the secretary-general, a veteran diplomat known for his care and caution in crafting public statements. It was unclear how the misunderst­anding came about, since U.N. officials said they were in touch with the State Department before the invitation to Iran was made public.

The U.S. has long objected to Iran’s participat­ion in the Geneva II process, the first face-to-face meeting under internatio­nal auspices between the Syrian government and the opposition during almost three years of conflict. The U.S. and the opposition accuse Tehran of arming and providing extensive military aid to Assad’s government, while encouragin­g Iran’s ally, Lebaneseba­sed Hezbollah, to send militiamen to Syria to fight alongside his forces.

Russia and Lakhdar Brahimi, the U.N.-Arab League special envoy for Syria, have called for Iran to participat­e as a major regional power with considerab­le inf luence on Assad. Iran regards Syria as a vital ally and has called the uprising in Syria a foreign-backed effort to break Tehran’s alliance with Syria and Hezbollah.

While Iran has been excluded, several nations backing the Syrian rebels — including Saudi Arabia, Iran’s regional archrival, and Turkey — are among the countries invited. The U.N. on Sunday also extended invitation­s to several nations with seemingly tenuous connection­s to the crisis, including Australia, Luxembourg, Mexico and South Korea.

After Iran was dropped from the guest list, the Obama administra­tion issued a statement voicing its support for the move.

“We are hopeful that, in the wake of today’s announceme­nt, all parties can now return to focus on the task at hand, which is bringing an end to the suffering of the Syrian people and beginning a process toward a long-overdue political transition,” said Jen Psaki, a State Department spokeswoma­n. patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Ramin Mostaghim in Tehran contribute­d to this report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States