Syria
peace talks likely to be postponed as Russia plans to ship more
weapons
Geneva
negotiations conceived by US and Russia will not take place in early
June as hoped, say diplomats
31
May, 2013
Peace
talks in Geneva between Syria's warring parties are almost certain to
be postponed after further diplomatic setbacks on Friday, as Russia
announced its intention to ship more weaponry to the Assad regime.
Heavy
fighting continued on the ground in Syria, where it emerged that a
British man and American woman had been killed, apparently while
fighting with the rebels in Idlib, in the north, earlier this week.
The
US and Russia had together conceived the Geneva talks between the
Assad regime and the Syrian opposition, raising hopes that the two
superpowers, long at odds over the civil war raging in the country,
could at last make some progress in curbing the violence.
But
after the Syrian National Coalition leader George Sabra ruled out
taking part while civilians were being killed and "in light of
Hezbollah and Iran's militia's invasion of Syria", diplomats
admitted that the talks would not take place in early June as
scheduled. They remain hopeful that they will go ahead, probably in
July or August.
However,
the US and Russia's differences were once more brought into stark
relief with the news that Russia's MiG aircraft maker is finalising
an agreement to ship at least 10 fighter jets to Syria. MiG's
director general, Sergei Korotkov, said a Syrian delegation was in
Moscow to discuss the details of a new contract for the delivery of
MiG-29 M/M2 fighters.
The
US has already criticised Russia for agreeing to deliver S-300
anti-aircraft missiles to Syria, a deal that has prompted alarm in
neighbouring Israel.
"It
is not helpful to have the S-300 transferred to the region while we
are trying to organise this peace [conference] and create peace,"
the US secretary of state, John Kerry, said at a joint news
conference with Germany's foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, in
Washington.
"We
ask them again not to upset the balance within the region with
respect to Israel," Kerry added. "The weaponry that is
being provided … has a profoundly negative impact on the balance of
interests and the stability of the region and it does put Israel at
risk. It is not, in our judgment, responsible because of the size of
the weapons, the nature of the weapons and what it does to the region
in terms of Israel's security, so we hope that they will refrain from
that in the interests of making this peace conference work."
More
than 80,000 people have been killed in the fighting in Syria,
according to the UN. On Friday, Syrian TV reported that the British
man, Ali Almanasfi, 22, from Acton, west London, was killed,
alongside an American woman and another unidentified westerner, on
Wednesday. Syrian TV posted a picture of Almanasfi's passport and
graphic pictures of his body were posted on the internet.
A
Foreign Office spokesman said: "We understand that a British
national has been killed in Syria. Their family have been informed
and we are providing consular assistance."
Scotland
Yard confirmed that his family had filed a missing persons report on
4 February, and it is understood the report contains the family's
fears that he may have travelled abroad.
At
the flat where Almanasfi's mother and sister live, his family were
visited by two police officers but refused to comment on reports of
his death.
Almanasfi's
brother-in-law Kusai Noah said he was stunned about the news of his
death. "He didn't tell anyone that he'd gone … we didn't know
that he was going anywhere," he said. "He disappeared. We
made a missing report for the police. This was a couple of months
back."
Syrian
TV identified the dead American woman as Nicole Mansfield, 33, from
Michigan. "I'm just devastated," her aunt, Monica Mansfield
Speelman, told Reuters. "Evidently, she was fighting with
opposition forces." Speelman said the FBI had informed the
family on Thursday afternoon.
Their
deaths came amid growing concerns about the increasing prominence of
jihadist groups within the rebel fighters. The most powerful, Jabhat
al-Nusra, pledged allegiance to al-Qaida in April. The uprising
against Bashar al-Assad began with peaceful protests in March 2011
but has since erupted into a bloody civil war. Assad maintained from
the start that he was fighting against "terrorists",
including foreign jihadists.
Almanasfi
was known to MI5 along with other British citizens who have gone to
Syria to fight with different rebel groups, intelligence sources made
clear on Friday.
British
counter-terrorist officials, almost certainly including MI5 officers,
are said to have tried to persuade him not to go. "We do try and
stop people from going. We have to do it by persuasion as we can't
stop them from going to France or Turkey," a Whitehall source
said.
Most
Britons going to fight in Syria travel via France or Turkey. Between
70 and 100 are believed to have gone so far but it is difficult to be
precise as nothing may be known about them before they make for
Syria.
British
security and intelligence officials describe the number of British
citizens or residents going to fight for rebel groups, including
those supporting al-Qaida, as "worrying".
The
UK and France have faced criticism for forcing the EU to end an
embargo on arms sales to Syrian rebels, with concerns raised that
they will only prolong the conflict and inevitably fall into the
hands of jihadists, despite the UK's insistence that if weapons are
sent they will only go to the "good" rebels. Hours after
the UK and France's actions at the EU meeting of foreign ministers on
Monday, Russia announced delivery of the S-300 missiles to Syria. The
deputy foreign minister, Sergei Ryabkov, argued that the delivery of
the S-300 system had been previously agreed with the Syrian
government in Damascus and would be a "stabilising factor"
that could dissuade "some hotheads" from entering the
conflict.
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