Unless the
bloodshed in Syria stops, the region could descend into a chaotic sectarian
conflict, Secretary of State John Kerry said Saturday, as he called for an
urgent political resolution to the war that has dragged on for two years and
claimed 93,000 lives.
The top U.S. diplomat and his counterparts from 10 Arab
and European nations agreed at a daylong meeting in Qatar to step up military
and other assistance to the Syrian rebels. But Kerry would not disclose details
of the aid, saying only that it would re-balance the fight between the rebels
and President Bashar Assad’s better-equipped forces that are increasingly
backed by Iranian and Hezbollah fighters.
“The continued bloodshed at the hands of the Assad regime and the increasing involvement of Iran and its proxy, Hezbollah, threaten the very prospects of a political settlement and of peace,” Kerry said, adding that the U.S. and other nations are not backing the rebels to seek a military victory in Syria.
“We do so to …
find a political settlement,” he said. “Reliable civilian governance and a
stronger and more effective armed opposition will better enable the opposition
to be able to provide the counterweight to the initiative of Assad to reach out
across borders … to bring Iranians and to bring Hezbollah – again, a terrorist
organization – to the table.”
Rebels say they have already received new weapons from
allied countries – but not the U.S. – that they claim will help them to shift
the balance of power on the ground where regime forces have scored recent
military victories. Experts and activists said the new weapons include
anti-tank missiles and small quantities of anti-aircraft missiles.
“Our
information from Doha says that five countries have decided to start arming us
immediately, and four other countries will give us logistical and technical
support and, at a later stage, arm the Free Syrian Army,” a spokesman for the
opposition fighters, Loay AlMikdad, said in an interview with Qatar’s
Al-Jazeera TV. He said the nations were both Arab and non-Arab, but he would
not elaborate.
Kerry blamed Hezbollah and Assad with undermining efforts to negotiate a settlement and set up a transitional government.
“We’re looking at a very dangerous situation,” that has
transformed “into a much more volatile, potentially explosive situation that
could involve the entire region,” Kerry said.
The war
already has spilled into neighboring countries and is increasingly being fought
along sectarian lines, pitting Sunni against Shiite Muslims and threatening the
stability of Syria’s neighbors.
Kerry
said top U.S. diplomats are ready to go to Geneva to meet with U.N.-Arab League
envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and other officials next week to advance the political
process.
Doha was
the first stop on Kerry’s two-week trip through the Mideast and Asia. He is to
discuss a wide range of bilateral issues on Sunday and Monday with Indian
officials in New Delhi, just one stop on a seven-nation tour where he will
tackle prickly U.S. foreign policy issues, from finding peace between the
Israelis and Palestinians to trying to gain traction on U.S. talks with the
Taliban to end the Afghanistan war.
James
Dobbins, U.S. special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan, arrived in Doha on
Saturday, but talks with the Taliban, which were supposed to take place in
coming days, have not been scheduled. They are to be held at a controversial
new political office the Taliban just opened in Doha.
Kerry
said the Americans and Qataris were on board to help negotiate a political
resolution to the war, but it was up to the Taliban to come to the table. “We
are waiting to find out whether the Taliban will respond, Kerry said, lowering
expectations about the prospects for negotiation.
“We will
see if we can get back on track. I don’t know whether that’s possible or not,”
Kerry said. “If there is not a decision made by the Taliban to move forward in
short order, then we may have to consider whether the office has to be closed.”
At the
close of the meeting, the 11 nations (the U.S., Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United
Arab Emirates, Jordan, Egypt, Turkey, Britain, Germany, France and Italy)
expressed concern about the growing sectarian nature of the Syrian conflict,
renewed their call on the regime to let U.N. investigators probe the reported
use of chemical weapons and condemned the intervention of Hezbollah militias
and fighters from Iran and Iraq.
In a
joint press conference in Tehran, Iran Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi and
his Lebanese counterpart Adnan Mansour lambasted Western powers that arm and
support Syrian opposition fighters.
“I am
shocked to see how Western powers speak of human rights and act otherwise when
it comes to Syria - where they arm cannibals who fought in Syria so that they
[opposition fighters] continue their atrocities more than before,” Salehi said.
In their
communique, the ministers expressed support for a transitional governing body
that would take charge of military and other government institutions. But they
added that “Bashar Assad has no role in the transitional governing body or
thereafter.”
That is
a sticking point with Russia, a key Assad ally that has resisted calls for his
removal.
Russia
may have worked to assure Assad government’s attendance at any future peace
conference, but Moscow also has been undermining peace efforts by sending more
weapons to help the Syrian government’s counteroffensive against the rebels.
Russian
leaders warn that if Assad steps aside, the resulting power vacuum could be
quickly filled by Al-Qaeda connected rebels, who are well-armed and aggressive
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