Kurdish-controlled
areas of northern Syria were expected to imminently declare a federal
system, a move likely to further complicate peace talks in Geneva on
ending more than five years of war. Russia
pulled more warplanes out of Syria, a new delivery of humanitarian aid
reached northern Aleppo province and U.N. mediator Staffan de Mistura
named a Russian academic to his team of advisers in a nod to Russia's
importance in ending fighting. But
despite a more than two-week-old "cessation of hostilities" and
President Vladimir Putin's decision to pull out of Syria some of the
Russian forces that have tipped the balance of the war in President
Bashar al-Assad's favor, any hopes of a breakthrough at the peace talks
in Geneva remain slim. The Kurds
appear to be taking matters into their own hands after being excluded
from the talks in Geneva, which began on Monday, by drawing up plans to
combine three Kurdish-led autonomous areas of northern Syrian into a
federal arrangement. This
arrangement, which two senior Kurdish officials said they backed, would
be sure to alarm neighboring Turkey, which fears growing Kurdish sway in
Syria is fuelling separatism among its own Kurdish minority. "Syria's
national unity and territorial integrity is fundamental for us. Outside
of this, unilateral decisions cannot have validity," a Turkish Foreign
Ministry official said. The Syrian
Kurdish YPG militia have been an important ally in the U.S.-led military
campaign against Islamic State in Syria, and this has also been a point
of friction between the United States and its NATO ally Turkey. In
Geneva, Bashar Ja'afari, head of the Syrian delegation in Geneva, also
rejected any talk of a federal model for Syria and ruled out direct
talks with the main opposition delegation. Ja'afari
also said Putin's announcement of a partial withdrawal of his armed
forces on Monday had come as no surprise to the Syrian government,
describing it as "common decision, taken both by President Putin and
President Assad". SYRIA POSITION UNCHANGED Some
Western officials and commentators speculated Putin intended the
partial withdrawal to force the Syrian government to soften its position
at the talks to improve chances of progress, but Ja'afari signaled no
change in its stance. Putin's
announcement surprised the West. He cited Russian military success in
Syria as the reason for the draw-down but his belief that the
intervention delivered him a seat at the top table of world affairs may
have tipped his hand. De
Mistura's appointment of Vitaly Naumkin plays into this narrative. A
former Soviet army officer, Naumkin is an expert on Islam and the Arab
world and served as a moderator at earlier peace talks on Syria that
were held in Moscow. But, talking
about the latest round of talks last week, Naumkin told Russia's RIA
news agency: "There are no expectations. It is a difficult, complicated
negotiation process." The Geneva
talks are part of a diplomatic push launched with U.S.-Russian support
to end a conflict that has killed more than 250,000 people, created the
world's worst refugee crisis, and allowed for the rise of Islamic State.
U.S.-Russian cooperation has
already brought about a lull in the war via the "cessation of
hostilities agreement", though many violations have been reported. Opening
the indirect talks, de Mistura said Syria faced a "moment of truth",
and he has described Putin's decision to withdraw some of Russia's
forces as a "significant development". Regional foes
Saudi Arabia and Iran, which are deeply at odds over Syria, welcomed
Putin's move and the Arab League said it would help the U.N.-mediated
talks to end the conflict. Just
under half of Russia's fixed-wing strike force based in Syria has flown
out in the past two days, according to Reuters calculations based on
state television footage. The
precise number of planes that Russia kept at its Hmeymim base in Syria's
Latakia province is secret. But analysis of satellite imagery, air
strikes and defense ministry statements suggested it had about 36
fixed-wing military warplanes there. At
least 15 of those planes have been seen on television flying out in the
past two days, including Su-24, Su-25, Su-30 and Su-34 jets though
Reuters could not independently verify the movements of the aircraft. RUSSIAN JETS IN ACTION Despite the partial
withdrawal, Russian warplanes have been carrying out new sorties
against positions belonging to Islamic State, which is not covered by
the cessation of hostilities. Assad also still enjoys military backing from Iran, which has sent forces to Syria along with Lebanon's Hezbollah. The
United States has also been carrying out air strikes in Syria. An
Islamic State-linked website said the radical Muslim group had shot down
a military plane near Kirkuk in Syria, but U.S. officials said they
knew nothing of such reports. Under
the cessation of hostilities, fresh humanitarian aid has reached areas
hit by recent fighting. A new convoy of 26 trucks brought aid to about
13,000 families in northern Aleppo province, the Red Cross said. The
delivery by the Syrian Red Crescent to towns including Azaz, Afrin and
Tal Rifaat was the largest in the area for weeks, Red Cross spokesman
Pawel Krzysiek said. Clinics had been resupplied in the meantime, he
said. On the second day of talks
in Geneva on Tuesday, opposition negotiators demanded that the
government detail its thoughts on a political transition in Syria and
said there had been no progress on freeing detainees. The
moves at a conference in the Kurdish-controlled town of Rmeilan, which
was discussing a "Democratic Federal System for Rojava - Northern
Syria", further complicated hopes of progress in Geneva. Rojava is the
Kurdish name for northern Syria. Aldar
Khalil, a Kurdish official and one of the organizers, told Reuters he
anticipated the approval of a new system, and "democratic federalism"
was the best one. Idris Nassan, another Kurdish official, expected a
declaration of federalism. Syrian
Kurds effectively control an uninterrupted stretch of 400 km (250 miles)
along the Syrian-Turkish border from the Euphrates river to the
frontier with Iraq, where Iraqi Kurds have enjoyed autonomy since the
early 1990s. They also hold a separate section of the northwestern
border in the Afrin area.
Kurdish moves on federalism cloud Syria peace drive

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