UN still seeks Syria peace talks
Thursday September 5, 2013
The United Nations is making a desperate new push for a Syria
peace conference even as the United States prepares a possible military
strike, according to diplomats.
Talks on a conference are to be
relaunched at the Group of 20 summit in Russia this week with the
30-month-old conflict at a new level of bitterness after the suspected
use of banned chemical weapons, envoys said.
Despite doubts that
the two sides in the war will come to the table, UN Under Secretary
General Jeffrey Feltman discussed a possible conference during a
landmark visit last week to Iran, a key backer of President Bashar
al-Assad, UN officials and diplomats said.
Britain's Foreign
Secretary William Hague said his government would press the Syrian
opposition when Syrian National Coalition leader Ahmad al-Jarba visits
London on Thursday.
He added that Prime Minister David Cameron
would call on Russian President Vladimir Putin to apply pressure for
such a conference when they meet in Saint Petersburg this week.
Hague on Tuesday told the British parliament there is still 'an overwhelming case' to try for a negotiated settlement.
The
major UN Security Council powers - United States, Russia, China,
Britain and France - agreed a transition blueprint for Syria at a
conference in Geneva in June last year.
Russia and the US agreed
to push for a follow up meeting in May when the UN's Syria envoy
Lakhdar Brahimi was on the verge of resigning in frustration at
deadlocked peace efforts.
'There will be a lot of discussion in
Saint Petersburg about making an announcement of timing for a Geneva II
conference,' said a senior envoy at the United Nations.
The
envoy said there could be an announcement before the annual United
Nations leaders' summit starting September 24 that a conference would
be held, possibly in October.
The United States, Britain and France on one side and Russia and China on the other remain at odds on the Syria conflict.
But they have all called for a peace conference.
'The
stalemate among the key players on the council remains,' Australia's
UN ambassador Gary Quinlan, Security Council president for September,
told reporters on Wednesday.
Quinlan, however, confirmed that
'brokering' would now take place at the G20 summit, adding that even in
Security Council talks on Wednesday the major powers had stressed the
need for a peace conference.
'The problem of course is how to
deliver that and how it can successfully be delivered quickly and again
I imagine this is going to be a major topic of discussion among the
key players' in Saint Petersburg.
The prospect of a military
strike and Syria's divided opposition, which has demanded that Assad be
kept out of any transitional government, bears heavily on the
prospects for talks however.
Russia and the US have halted
contacts on a peace conference since the chemical weapons crisis
erupted on August 21, according to UN diplomats.
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said a US attack could 'kill' hopes for a Geneva II.
But
some western leaders believe there can be no conference until Assad
has been punished for his alleged use of chemical weapons.
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