(Reuters) -
Syrian opposition representatives met in Moscow on Monday at the start
of a meeting which the Damascus government will join later this week in
efforts to revive peace talks. Nearly four years into
a war that has killed more than 200,000 people and displaced millions,
even the Russian hosts accept there is little chance of a breakthrough
at the conference, spurned by most opposition groups. No
senior Russian officials are due to take part but one senior official
said Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov might join the conference later this
week if the initial signs are good. "If
they all gather and the atmosphere is constructive between the
representatives of the government and opposition delegations, it's
possible there will be a meeting with Minister Lavrov and all of them on
Wednesday," Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov told reporters as
delegates gathered at the ministry residence in Moscow. The
initial talks in Moscow will be between opposition groups. Syrian
government representatives are expected to join only on Wednesday, the
penultimate day of the conference. Russia's
longstanding proposals for a peace plan do not require its ally
President Bashar al-Assad to leave power, though his main opponents
consider this the basis for any talks. The
United States is publicly committed to removing Assad has not objected
to the conference and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry had said he
hopes they can prove useful. Asked
about the Moscow talks, Assad told Foreign Affairs Magazine: "What is
going on in Moscow is not negotiations about the solution; it's only
preparations for the conference." He
said many countries had no interest in the conference succeeding and
wanted them to fail, but added: "I wouldn't say I'm pessimistic. I would
say we have hope, in every action." Opposition
figures are attending as individuals rather than as representatives of
major factions. Many are thought to be from a Damascus-based official
opposition tolerated by Assad and viewed as traitors by his armed
enemies. None of the main Sunni Muslim insurgent groups fighting on the ground was invited. The
main opposition alliance, the Turkey-based National Coalition for
Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, once touted by Western and
Arab countries as a government in exile, is boycotting. Monzer
Akbik, a National Coalition representative, said the Moscow talks were
"an initiative to reinvent the Assad regime in another form" and that Russia was not an honest broker for peace because it supports the Syrian government. In
the four years of fighting, two U.N. mediators have hosted high profile
conferences in Geneva, only to quit in frustration after talks failed
to yield meaningful progress.
Low expectations as Moscow hosts Syria talks

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