Russia
says West exploiting Syria deal to threaten force
Russia accused the West
on Sunday of trying to exploit a chemical weapons deal with Syria to
push through a U.N. resolution threatening force against President
Bashar al-Assad
22
September, 2013
Assad's
government has handed over information about its chemical arsenal to
a U.N.-backed weapons watchdog, meeting the first deadline of the
ambitious U.S.-Russia accord that the U.N. Security Council is due to
endorse in the coming days.
But
major powers on the council, who have disagreed throughout a conflict
that has killed 100,000 people, remain divided over how to ensure
compliance with the accord.
The
United States, France and Britain want a council resolution issued
under Chapter 7 of the U.N. charter, which could authorize sanctions
or military intervention if Damascus reneges on its commitments.
Russia,
which along with China has blocked three draft resolutions on Syria
since the 2011 uprising against Assad erupted, opposes Western
threats of force against an ally that Moscow has continued to arm and
support during the civil war.
"They
see in the U.S.-Russian deal not a chance to save the planet from
significant quantities of chemical weapons in Syria, but as a chance
to do what Russia and China will not allow, namely to push through a
resolution involving (the threat of) force against the regime and
shielding the opposition," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov said.
Assad,
in an interview with China's state broadcaster CCTV, said he was "not
concerned" about the U.N. draft resolution. He said that by
submitting the draft, "the U.S., France and Britain are just
trying to make themselves winners in a war against a Syria which is
their imaginary enemy."
He
also said China and Russia "are playing a positive role in the
Security Council to ensure any excuse for military action against
Syria will not stand."
Lavrov
said Russia was ready to send troops to Syria to ensure the safety of
U.N. chemical weapons inspectors.
"An
international presence is needed on the perimeters of the areas where
the experts will work," he said. "We are willing to send
our troops and military police to participate.
"I
do not think that there is a need for a major contingent. I think
military observers will be sufficient."
Assad
agreed to destroy Syria's chemical weapons after a sarin gas strike
in Damascus suburbs last month - the world's deadliest chemical
attack in 25 years.
Washington
accused Assad's forces of carrying out the attack, which it said
killed more than 1,400 people. It said a report by U.N. chemical
weapons experts last week supported its view - an assertion that
Moscow disputes.
Assad
has blamed rebels for the attack, saying it made no sense for his
forces to use chemical weapons when they were gaining the upper hand
and while U.N. chemical inspectors were staying in central Damascus.
Russia's
Foreign Ministry said Lavrov spoke by telephone with U.S. Secretary
of State John Kerry on Sunday about efforts to implement the disposal
of Syria's chemical weapons.
A
State Department official said the United States and other member
states on the council of the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons had not yet seen the information given to the
U.N.-backed watchdog by Syria.
"We
will make an evaluation of the document after it has been distributed
to member states," the official said.
HOPES
FOR PEACE TALKS
While
the chemical deal paves the way to the destruction of 1,000 tonnes of
mustard gas, VX and sarin that security experts believe Syria
possesses, the rare instance of U.S.-Russian cooperation has also
raised hopes of a revived international push for a political solution
to the wider Syrian conflict.
A
letter seen by Reuters on Sunday from the head of the Syrian
Coalition, Ahmad Jarba, to the U.N. Security Council revealed he had
committed his group for the first time to attend a proposed Geneva
peace conference - on condition that it aimed to establish a
transitional government with full powers.
The
coalition had resisted pressure to go to Geneva, especially after the
August 21 chemical weapons attack.
Jarba's
comments mean that both Assad's government and the main political
opposition have agreed in principle to attend the peace talks.
However their conditions for participation still appear far from
reconcilable.
Rebels
and the political opposition insist Assad can play no role in a
transitional authority, while the government has ruled out conceding
power to its opponents.
Jarba's
coalition also has very limited influence over the fighters inside
Syria, particularly the increasingly powerful Islamist brigades and
al Qaeda-linked groups.
The
rebels, fighting to end 40 years of Assad family rule, were angered
by the U.S.-Russian accord to eliminate Syria's chemical weapons,
saying it has distracted the world while Assad deploys a large
conventional arsenal to crush his foes.
They
had hoped the United States would launch air strikes against Assad,
which they could use as a platform to retake territory from Assad's
forces after they were forced on the defensive on several fronts in
recent months.
In
central Damascus, a mortar shell struck the Russian Embassy compound
on Sunday, wounding three employees, the Foreign Ministry in Moscow
said. None of the injuries was serious, it said in a statement.
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