Iran, Saudi among 30 countries invited to Syria talks

Iran, Saudi among 30 countries invited to Syria talks

BEIRUT - Agence France-Presse
Iran, Saudi among 30 countries invited to Syria talks

Iranian President Rouhani (R) shakes hands with Russian FM Lavrov (L) in Tehran on December 11, 2013. Lavrov urged all "responsible countries" to act to ensure a Syrian peace conference achieves positive results, in remarks during a visit to Iran. AFP Photo

Iran and Saudi Arabia, which back opposite sides in Syria's war, are among more than 30 countries slated to attend a peace conference next month, diplomats said.
 
The so-called Geneva 2 conference, a follow-up to a 2012 meeting, is aimed at mapping out a political transition to end nearly three years of fighting that has killed more than 120,000 people and displaced millions.
 
But the January 22 meeting will actually be held at the lakeside Swiss city of Montreux because of a shortage of hotel rooms in Geneva, which will be hosting a luxury watch fair, a Western diplomat told AFP.
 
"At the moment there are 32 countries invited, but that number may increase because everyone wants to come," an Arab diplomat told AFP.
 
"In addition to the five permanent members of the Security Council (the United States, Britain, France, Russia and China), there are the neighbouring countries, as well as Saudi Arabia and Iran, and also Germany and Italy and others." Shiite Iran is a key ally of President Bashar al-Assad's regime, while Saudi Arabia has strongly backed the Sunni-led rebels. Most countries will be represented by their top diplomats and "each minister can speak for five minutes," the Arab diplomat said. Afterwards, many of the foreign ministers will attend the World Economic Forum in Davos, which runs from January 22 to 25.
 
The regime and the opposition will each send delegations to the meeting, and will hold bilateral talks hosted by UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi on January 24 in Geneva.
 
"Each delegation will be composed of nine members and both the regime and the opposition should present their lists to the UN by December 27, but it is not certain they will respect this date," the Arab diplomat said.
 
Composing the list could prove a daunting task for Syria's opposition, which is riddled with internal divisions and increasingly at odds with powerful rebel groups fighting on the ground, many of which have rejected the conference.
 
Saudi Arabia's intelligence chief Bandar bin Sultan told Russian President Vladimir Putin this month that Riyadh would send a delegation to the meeting, but only on the condition the opposition is represented by the National Coalition, an umbrella group backed by Western and Arab nations, according to a third diplomat who did not wish to be identified.
 
Various other parties, including tolerated opposition groups inside Syria which are closer to regime ally Russia and do not support the rebellion, have reportedly expressed interest in attending the conference.
 
"Putin has not, for the moment, responded to the request," he said.
 
The Coalition has said it is going to the conference to discuss the removal of Assad from power, while the regime has said it will attend the negotiations "without preconditions".
 
Diplomats said they expected the atmosphere at the talks to be tense, and a European diplomat at the United Nations said UN officials would meet with the delegates ahead of the conference to explain the "rules of the game".
 
"At this point, I don't even know for sure if the conference will take place because there are still so many unknowns," he said.
 
The Syrian regime looks set to attend the conference in a position of strength after a string of battlefield victories in the mountainous Qalamoun region near the border with Lebanon.
 
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group that relies on activists and other witnesses inside Syria, said Syrian troops backed by Lebanese and Iraqi militiamen have captured almost the entire region.
 
That will allow the regime to reopen the key Damascus-Homs highway linking the capital to the centre of the country and to deny the rebels crucial smuggling routes along the Lebanese border.
 
The rebels, meanwhile, are more divided than ever, with a powerful new Islamist alliance eclipsing the Western-backed Free Syrian Army.
 
The Islamic Front -- which does not include Al-Nusra Front or the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, two Al-Qaeda affiliates -- seized key bases and arms depots from the FSA this week.
 
The move prompted the United States and Britain to suspend their non-lethal aid to the FSA and added to concerns over whether any agreement struck in Switzerland can be implemented on Syria's ever-shifting battlefields.