The Syrian opposition set terms on Sunday for attending peace talks to end the Syrian civil war, in a move that throws the proposed conference into further confusion after the international envoy said there should be no preconditions.
The
long-delayed talks — known as Geneva 2 — are meant to bring Syria's
warring sides to the negotiating table, but have been repeatedly delayed
because of disputes between world powers, divisions among the opposition and
irreconcilable positions of Assad and the rebels.
Syrian
National Coalition President Ahmad Jarba said the opposition would not attend
unless there was a clear timeframe for President Bashar al-Assad to leave
power. He also said they could not accept the presence of Iran.
"We have decided not to
enter Geneva talks unless it is with dignity, and unless there is a successful
transfer of power with a specific timeframe, and without the occupier Iran at
the negotiating table," Jarba told an Arab League emergency meeting of
foreign minister in Cairo.
Lakhdar Brahimi, the
international envoy for Syria, has said he hoped the conference could still be
held in the next few weeks despite obstacles.
Though he had in the past said
he thought Assad would not be part of a transitional government that Geneva 2
would attempt to install, he said on Friday that his opinions had no bearing on
the parameters for the conference.
There is also discord among
world powers over whether Iran should be invited to the talks. Tehran has said
it is ready to come and Brahimi says the UN preferred that Iran attend but
there had been no agreement on that yet.
A senior State Department
official, speaking ahead of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry's visit to Cairo
and Riyadh, said the top U.S. diplomat would make clear to the Saudis that Iran
would not be welcome to attend the Syria peace talks unless it endorsed a past
agreement that would see Assad give up power.
"Iran has not done that,
and without that even we couldn't consider the possibility of their
participating," the official added, stressing: "It is a question of
just making sure they understand the details of how firm our position is."
Call for weapons
In Cairo, an Arab League draft
communique called on the Syrian opposition to attend the conference.
"It [Arab League] decided
to call on all sides of the Syrian opposition under the leadership of the
Syrian National Coalition ... to accelerate the formation of the negotiating
delegation."
In Cairo, Jarba urged world
powers to supply Syrians fighting Assad with weapons in the conflict that has
so far claimed the lives of more than 100,000 people.
"We demand a clear
decision on supplying the Syrian people with weapons to fight the hostility
which gets worse hour by hour ... We guarantee that these weapons will not fall
into the wrong hands."
The growing influence of
radical Islamist fighters and the disarray of rebel forces have made Western
powers wary of intervening directly in the civil war by supplying weapons or
troops.
While some rebel tensions stem
from contrasting ideological outlooks, most infighting centres around rival
claims over the control of territory, smuggling and other spoils of war.
Arab and Western officials have
said that international powers were unlikely to meet their goal of holding the
conference in November.
Even if Jarba were to attend
the Geneva 2 meetings, he has no authority over the rebel brigades battling to
overthrow Assad.
The main rebel brigades have
announced their opposition to the conference if it does not result in Assad's
removal.
Source: Reuters
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