President
Vladimir Putin announced out of the blue on Monday that "the main part"
of Russian armed forces in Syria will start to withdraw, telling his
diplomats to step up the push for peace as U.N.-mediated talks resumed
on ending the five-year-old war. Syria
rejected any suggestion of a rift with Moscow, saying President
Bashar al-Assad had agreed on the "reduction" of Russian forces in a
telephone call with Putin. Western
diplomats speculated Putin may be trying to press Assad into accepting a
political settlement to the war, which has killed 250,000 people,
although U.S. officials saw no sign yet of Russian forces preparing to
pull out. The anti-Assad opposition simply expressed bafflement, with a spokesman saying "nobody knows what is in Putin's mind". Russia's
military intervention in Syria in September helped to turn the tide of
war in Assad's favour after months of gains in western Syria by rebel
fighters, who were aided by foreign military supplies including
U.S.-made anti-tank missiles. Putin
made his surprise announcement, made with no advance warning to the
United States, at a meeting with his defence and foreign ministers. Russian
forces had largely fulfilled their objectives in Syria, Putin said. But
he gave no deadline for the completion of the withdrawal and said
forces would remain at a seaport and airbase in Syria's Latakia
province. In Geneva, United Nations
mediator Staffan de Mistura told the warring parties there was no
"Plan B" other than a resumption of conflict if the first of three
rounds of talks which aim to agree a "clear roadmap" for Syria failed to
make progress. Putin said at the
Kremlin meeting he was ordering the withdrawal from Tuesday of "the main
part of our military contingent" from the country. "The
effective work of our military created the conditions for the start of
the peace process," he said. "I believe that the task put before the
defence ministry and Russian armed forces has, on the whole, been
fulfilled." With the participation
of the Russian military, Syrian armed forces "have been able to achieve
a fundamental turnaround in the fight against international terrorism",
he added. "COMPLETE COORDINATION" Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin had telephoned the Syrian president
to inform him of the decision, but the two leaders had not discussed
Assad's future - the biggest obstacle to reaching a peace agreement. The move was announced on the day United Nations-brokered talks involving the warring sides in Syria resumed in Geneva. Moscow
gave Washington no advance warning of Putin's announcement, two U.S.
officials said. Speaking on condition of anonymity, they added that they
had seen no indications so far of preparations by Russia's military for
the withdrawal. In Damascus, the
Syrian presidency said in a statement that Assad had agreed to the
reduction in the Russian air force presence, and denied suggestions that
this reflected a difference between the two countries "The
whole subject happened in complete coordination between the Russian and
Syrian sides, and is a step that was carefully and accurately studied
for some time", the statement said, adding that Moscow had promised to
continue support for Syria in "confronting terrorism". Syria regards all rebel groups fighting Assad as terrorists. Rebels and opposition officials alike reacted sceptically. "I
don't understand the Russian announcement, it's a surprise, like the
way they entered the war. God protect us," Fadi Ahmad, spokesman for the
First Coastal Division, a Free Syria Army group fighting in the
northwest, said. Opposition
spokesman Salim al-Muslat demanded a total Russian withdrawal. "Nobody
knows what is in Putin's mind, but the point is he has no right to be in
be our country in the first place. Just go," he said. A
European diplomat was also sceptical. "It has the potential to put a
lot of pressure on Assad and the timing fits that," the diplomat said. "However, I say potentially because we've seen before with Russia that what's promised isn't always what happens." MOMENT OF TRUTH The
Geneva talks are the first in more than two years and come amid a
marked reduction in fighting after last month's "cessation of
hostilities", sponsored by Washington and Moscow and accepted by Assad's
government and many of his foes. Russia's
U.N. ambassador Vitaly Churkin confirmed some forces would stay in
Syria. "Our military presence will continue to be there, it will be
directed mostly at making sure that the ceasefire, the cessation of
hostilities, is maintained," he told reporters at the United Nations in
New York. However, he added: "Our
diplomacy has received marching orders to intensify our efforts to
achieve a political settlement in Syria." Speaking
before Putin's announcement, de Mistura said Syria faced a moment of
truth, as he opened talks to end a war which has displaced half the
population, sent refugees streaming into Europe and turned Syria into a
battlefield for foreign forces and jihadis. The
limited truce, which excludes the powerful Islamic State and Nusra
Front groups, is fragile. The warring sides have accused each other of
multiple violations and they arrived in Geneva with what look like
irreconcilable agendas. The Syrian
opposition says the talks must focus on setting up a transitional
governing body with full executive power, and that Assad must leave
power at the start of the transition. Damascus says Assad's opponents
are deluded if they think they will take power at the negotiating table.
In a sign of how wide the rift
is, de Mistura is meeting the two sides separately, at least initially.
The talks must focus on political transition, which is the "mother of
all issues", the U.N. envoy said.
Putin says Russians to start withdrawing from Syria, as peace talks resume
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