Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov assured to the key Opposition president his support to a transitional governing
body, Zaman Alwasl’s sources quoted Mr.
Ahmad Assi Al Jarba saying.
National Coalition opposition chief is to visit Moscow on Tuesday at the invitation of Russian authorities, AFP said.
"Mr. Jarba has accepted the Russian invitation and will go to Moscow on February 4," Monzer Aqbiq, head advisor to the leader of the Syrian National Coalition, told AFP.
Diplomats say to Reuters that Syria's regime may have madelegitimizing blunder by turning up at
peace talks in Geneva since it had little to gain, little room for maneuver and
may have started down a slippery slope by legitimizing its opponents,.
But its
chief sponsor, Russia, is keen to see a peace deal take shape, so it cannot
leave..
Diplomats say the real pressure on Syria
comes from its ally Russia, which organized the talks jointly with the United States, and which
Syria cannot afford to turn its back on.
Marc Finaud, an expert on arms control and Middle East
diplomacy at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, said Russia's main objective was
to maintain its status as a world power by showing, as in recent deals on
handing over Syria's chemical weapons and curbing Iran's nuclear ambitions,
that "nothing can be done without Russia".
It also
wanted to maintain its strategic objectives within Syria, including a naval
base and arms sales, he said. But, like Syria's other major ally, Iran, it was not clinging to supporting Assad himself,
Finaud said.
The government delegation has drawn a
"red line" around Assad, saying that his role is not called into
question by the document that serves as the basis of talks.
But the
opposition say the net will gradually close on the president, since the
transitional governing body that the talks aim to establish requires both
sides' consent.
"That
means both parties have a veto. So we will put a veto over Bashar and the close
circle around him. And of course they will put a circle around some of the
names that we will propose," said opposition spokesman Anas al-Abdah,
Reuters reported.
The
government is expected to try to provoke splits in opposition ranks and to spin
the talks out as long as possible to discredit their foes as a negotiating
force.
"They
will try and try. We'll be very patient. We'll be extremely patient, and we'll
wait until we drag them kicking and screaming into this negotiation," said
Abdah.
If the two
sides move on from the rhetorical sparring and start talking in earnest, they
could find common ground in fighting a common enemy - foreign Islamist fighters
who are not represented at the Geneva talks, Finaud said.
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