A U.N. plan to suspend Syria's
nearly five-year-old civil war calls for listing which militant groups
may be fought despite an eventual ceasefire, one of the toughest issues
vexing diplomats trying to end the conflict. A
U.N. draft discussion paper obtained by Reuters includes eight
"framework principles" to be embraced by all countries and rebel groups
that sign on to a ceasefire. The ceasefire plan also lists issues still
to be negotiated, including defining "those terrorist organizations
against whom combat is allowed." The
paper's authenticity was confirmed by two diplomats who spoke on
condition of anonymity. The diplomats stressed that the document was a
draft, originally prepared by the United Nations, and they said multiple
versions of the draft have been passed back and forth among U.S., U.N.
and other diplomats. The ceasefire
idea, endorsed by the U.N. Security Council on Dec. 18 at the urging of
major powers and regional players that include the United States,
Russia, Iran and Turkey, would exclude militant groups such as Islamic State, also known as ISIS, and al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front. Diplomats
say the result could be a messy, partial ceasefire in which government
and acceptable rebel forces stop shooting at one another but still go
after Islamic State militants and other groups branded as terrorist. With
Nusra Front fighters scattered across northern Syria rather than
concentrated in any one place, attacks on them could harm civilians as
well as groups who signed on to any ceasefire, diplomats and analysts
said. Identifying the groups still subject to attack is a diplomatic task delegated to Jordan's government. In
a tangible sign of the difficulty, the Jaysh al Islam militant group
has agreed to take part in the peace talks, yet its leader was killed on
Friday in an air strike that rebel sources say was carried out by Russian aircraft. The
U.S. State Department said the killing had complicated efforts to
achieve a political settlement, a point it said U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry made to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in a phone
call on Monday. JAN. 25 IN GENEVA Staffan
de Mistura, the third U.N. envoy tasked with ending a civil war that
has killed at least 250,000 people and driven millions from their homes,
has taken the lead in laying out the possible dimensions of a
ceasefire, diplomats said. De
Mistura has said he hopes to open talks between the Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad's government and opposition groups in Geneva on Jan. 25. Those talks will focus on trying to get the two sides to agree on a political transition for Syria. Separate talks are underway about the shape of a ceasefire and the draft document obtained by Reuters addresses this. Quick
agreement seems likely on some framework principles, such as a
recognition of Syria's territorial integrity, but others will be vexing.
Among these is one to require the withdrawal of "foreign fighters
unlawfully present in Syria." That
language could allow Assad to argue that fighters from Iran, Russia,
Iraqi Shi'ite militias and others that support him are in Syria at his
invitation and therefore lawfully present - a stance sure to be resisted
by opposition and rebel groups. 'DEVILISHLY DIFFICULT' The document lays out three possible ceasefire models that could vary from one region of Syria to another: - A ceasefire that excludes "undesired groups," presumably those deemed to be "terrorist." - A ceasefire open to all who embrace the framework principles. - A limited ceasefire that would reduce violence by barring the use of certain weapons. Diplomats
and analysts stressed the challenge of getting the Assad government and
the opposition and rebel groups into talks, let alone to lay down their
arms. "This whole document does
indeed reflect how devilishly difficult it's going to be to implement a
nationwide ceasefire in Syria and when I say nationwide, I am not
including the area run by ISIS," said Fred Hof, a former State
Department official who worked on Syria now at the Atlantic Council
think tank. "It's going to be impossible to have a one-size-fits-all set of arrangements," he added.
Syria ceasefire plan struggles to define a 'terrorist'
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