French president Francois Hollande told
key Syrian opposition “not to go to Geneva if there is no ending for Bashar
al-Assad’s rule,” Syrian Deputy Chairman of the National Coalition said in a
report was sent to some opposition figures and obtained by Zaman Alwasl.
Mohammad Farouk Tayfour, NC second man and
deputy leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria revealed that France
"would like to order an air strike , but NATO did not agree on the
approval , especially in the Brussels meeting with the participation of Saudi
Arabia and the UAE."
In relevant document issued on November
26, 2013 by Syria’s key opposition the National Coalition revealed that the
former U.S. Ambassador to Damascus Mr. Robert Ford had told the NC officials
that Geneva II will be without pre-conditions or guarantees.
The American diplomat said that some of
the Alawite officers in the regular army, "are looking for gains regarding
to the high loss for their sect (when Bashar al-Assad will be ousted),’’ as
well some of the regime figures who may stay according to the document which
has obtained by Zaman Alwasl.
Ford assured to the west backed opposition
that the Russian President Vladimir Putin is the first Russian official
regarding the Syrian case, not the Foreign Ministry in hint to Sergei Lavrov.
The Scheduled peace conference on January
22 in Montreux hotel in Switzerland is, in essence, a media presence for Syrian
opposition, according to Ford, to show that Syrian revolution is not
represented by the radical Islamists, where both sides, opposition and the regime,
can sit together as equals.’’
A prominent opposition figure said that
Ford told Some NC members, ''What the Syrian parties will agree on in Geneva
will be achieved,'' adding, each party has the right to veto on any discussion
or subject.
Three days ago, the "Friends of
Syria", an alliance of mainly Western and Gulf Arab countries who oppose
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, urged opposition groups to attend this
month's peace talks, saying there was no alternative for a political solution.
"There is no other political
solution," French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on behalf of the
group. "There will be no political solution for Syria unless 'Geneva 2'
meets."
An internationally sponsored meeting bringing Assad's government and opposition groups to the table is due to be held from January 22 in Switzerland, on the shores of Lake Geneva.
In a final statement, the 11 core Friends
of Syria nations urged the Syrian National Coalition to attend the talks. The
grouping of Western-backed rebels is deeply divided on whether to go and will
announce a decision on January 17.
"We urge the National Coalition to
respond positively to the invitation to set up the Syrian opposition delegation
sent by the U.N. Secretary General," the Friends said in a joint
communique.
"We invite them to form, as soon as
possible, a delegation of opposition forces to participate in the political
process."
Coalition President Ahmed al-Jarba, who
attended the Paris meeting, did not say whether he believed the Coalition would
send a delegation, but said he was reassured that the 11 nations had agreed
that there could be no transition if Assad remained in power.
"We are all in agreement to say that
Assad has no future in Syria," he said.
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