Syrian army
successes will help accelerate a political settlement to the country's
civil war, President Bashar al-Assad said, because they weaken the
position of international opponents who he accused of hindering any
agreement. In an interview
published as government forces, backed by heavy Russian air power,
maintained an offensive against Islamic State militants, Assad said his
government "continue to be flexible" in its approach to talks aimed at
ending the war. "However at the
same time, these victories will have an impact on the forces and nations
which hinder a settlement because those states, first of all, Saudi
Arabia, Turkey, France and Great Britain, are betting on our defeat on
the battlefield in order to enforce their terms during the talks," he
said. He was speaking in an
interview with Russia's RIA news agency published on Tuesday, two days
after government forces backed by intense Russian air power drove
Islamic State militants out of Palmyra, delivering one of the biggest
setbacks to the jihadist group since it declared a caliphate in Syria
and Iraq in 2014. Indirect peace
talks at the United Nations in Geneva adjourned on Thursday after making
little progress. The talks were able to go ahead after a limited truce,
sponsored by the United States and Russia, took effect last month -
although it excludes Islamic State and the Nusra Front groups. U.N.
envoy Staffan de Mistura says he wants the negotiations to address
political transition, which he called the "mother of all issues". But
before the talks started, the Syrian government said the issue of the
presidency was a red line. However
Assad told RIA that the government delegation displayed flexibility at
the talks with the opposition "in order not to miss a single chance" for
settlement. Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergei Ryabkov said last week that Moscow's position that
Assad's future should not be discussed at the moment had finally found
understanding in Washington. But a senior member
of Syria's opposition leading negotiations with Damascus said on
Tuesday that Assad's future should be the main topic of the talks in
Geneva, and Moscow's call not to discuss this aims at undermining the
negotiations. Moscow's military
intervention helped turn the tide of Syria's five year conflict in
Assad's favor, after rebels had made significant gains last year in
northwest Syria. "Russia's
military support, the support provided by Syria's friends and the
military achievements of the Syrian army - all this will lead to the
speeding up of political settlement, and not vice versa," Assad said. TOWN ENCIRCLED Remaining
Islamic State fighters had withdrawn on Tuesday from positions
northeast of Palmyra, where they had fought the army a day earlier, the
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Russian
and Syrian jets targeted the town of Sukhna, about 60 km (40 miles)
northeast of Palmyra where many retreating Islamic State fighters had
sought refuge, the Observatory said. State
media said the army and its militia allies also captured territory
around al-Qaryatain, about 100 km (60 miles) southwest of Palmyra,
including farmland to the south and a mountain area to the west. "The town is almost
encircled," the Observatory's director Rami Abdulrahman said. Russian
jets carried 29 raids on al-Qaryatain on Tuesday morning alone, he said. If
the army takes al-Qaryatain, Sukhna and other pockets of Islamic State
control, it will sharply reduce the jihadist group's ability to project
military power into the heavily populated western region of Syria, where
Damascus and other main cities are located. Russia and Iran, Assad's two main allies, both pledged to continue support for Damascus after the capture of Palmyra. France,
a key backer of opposition forces in Syria, said the Islamic State
defeat in Palmyra was positive news, but should not divert attention
from the fact that the main culprit for the conflict is the Syrian
government. "The advances against
Daesh today should not lead us to forget that the regime is primarily
responsible for the conflict and the 270,000 people killed since five
years," foreign ministry spokesman Romain Nadal said. In
addition to the quarter of a million fatalities, the war has displaced
10 million people, drawn foreign powers into the conflict and created
the world's biggest refugee crisis.
Syria's Assad says military gains will speed up political deal

Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.