Syria, opposition make wobbly truce-talk start

Each side calls the other ‘terrorist’

Russian Tu-22M3 bombers strike targets from the Islamic State militant group Monday in Syria. The U.S. denied a Russian claim that the two countries are coordinating in striking against militants.
Russian Tu-22M3 bombers strike targets from the Islamic State militant group Monday in Syria. The U.S. denied a Russian claim that the two countries are coordinating in striking against militants.

ASTANA, Kazakhstan -- Talks between the Syrian government and representatives of rebel factions got off to a rocky start Monday after their first face-to-face meeting in Kazakhstan that marked a shift in the war's dynamics and confirmed Russia's role as regional heavyweight.

The gathering in Astana, the Kazakh capital, is the latest in a long line of diplomatic initiatives aimed at ending the nearly 6-year-old civil war, which has killed hundreds of thousands of people and displaced half of Syria's population.

The talks are focused on shoring up a shaky cease-fire declared Dec. 30, not on reaching a larger political settlement. Syria's bitter divide was on display as the delegates emerged from a closed, hourlong session marked by sharp exchanges.

Syria's U.N. envoy Bashar Ja'afari said the opposition delegation represented "terrorist armed groups," and denounced the opening address delivered by the chief rebel negotiator, calling it "provocative" and "insolent."

The head of the rebel delegation, Mohammad Alloush, had described Syrian President Bashar Assad's government as a "terrorist" entity. He called for armed groups fighting alongside it, including the Lebanese Hezbollah, to be placed on a global list of terrorist organizations, according to a video leaked by opposition delegates.

"The presence of foreign militias invited by the regime, most notably the Lebanese Hezbollah and the Iraqi Hezbollah ... contributes to the continuation of bloodshed and obstructs any opportunity for a cease-fire," Alloush said.

Such outfits were no different, he added, than the Islamic State militant group, which is excluded from the cease-fire.

After an opening ceremony, both sides split and did not meet face-to-face again. The meeting concluded until today.

Still, it was a significant departure from past meetings, given the fact that Syria's government delegation sat opposite representatives of more than a dozen armed factions that it describes as terrorists.

[EMAIL UPDATES: Get free breaking news alerts, daily newsletters with top headlines delivered to your inbox]

U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura mediated the talks, which are to be followed by more negotiations in Geneva next month. A year ago, he was shuttling between government and opposition delegations in separate rooms in Geneva, in talks brokered by the U.S. and Russia that were inconclusive.

Russia takes charge

The talks in Astana, capital of the former Soviet republic Kazakhstan, reflected the shifting dynamics in Syria since then, with Russia emerging as the main power broker and the U.S. relegated to the role of observer.

"We're in uncharted territory," said Noah Bonsey, a senior analyst for the International Crisis Group, who was in Astana.

"We're here in Russia's back yard, and the ball is in their court. There's a new political and military dynamic, and it is happening on Russian political turf."

The Trump administration is not directly involved because of the "immediate demands of the transition," the State Department said Saturday. The U.S. ambassador to Kazakhstan, George Krol, attended Monday's session at the luxury Rixos President Hotel, a Turkish-owned chain.

"The United States remains committed to a political resolution to the Syrian crisis, which can bring about a more representative, peaceful, and united Syria, free of terrorism and extremism," said State Department spokesman Mark Toner.

The Russians, until recently, shared the Syrian government's view that there are no "moderate" Syrian rebels. That changed in December, after the military defeat of the rebels in their stronghold of east Aleppo.

The rebels' collapse was also a defeat for U.S. diplomacy, which had been focused on securing a cease-fire in Aleppo.

Russia has since moved to the center of the international diplomacy, sidelining the United States and its European and Persian Gulf Arab allies while reaching out to Turkey and Iran, the two nations with the most influence on the ground in Syria.

Turkey controls the border on which the rebels rely for their supplies and has troops fighting alongside rebels against the Islamic State in a pocket of territory in northern Syria.

Iran sponsors and funds many of the militias fighting on the ground on behalf of Assad, including the Lebanese Hezbollah militia.

Moscow has also courted the rebel groups it previously rejected as potential negotiating partners when Washington was trying to promote talks.

The opposition delegation was headed by Alloush, a political officer with the Islamist Jaish al-Islam group, which Moscow previously sought to persuade the United States to designate as a terrorist organization.

"It's a big shift. Russia has realized that those people they were calling terrorists, they can talk to them," said Yahya al-Aridi, a spokesman for the rebel delegation.

And after their military defeats, the rebels realize they have no choice but to negotiate with Russia, he said.

"We are not falling in love with the Russians. We do not forget they targeted markets and hospitals with their planes," he said.

"But this change is something to welcome, and we are ready to help it, especially if it results in a situation where Syrian children are not being killed on a daily basis."

Deep divisions

Still, the Syrian parties remain deeply divided on almost everything, including who is to blame for repeated cease-fire violations, and whether the cease-fire should apply to the al-Qaida-linked Jabhat Fatah al-Sham, which fights alongside mainstream rebel factions.

Ja'afari accused the opposition of "misinterpreting the idea of the cessation of hostilities," and defended a government offensive in the Barada Valley outside Damascus. The fighting there has cut off water to millions of the capital's residents for a month.

The government, which has always portrayed the conflict as a war on terrorism, is hoping to win international support and potentially recruit rebel factions to help it battle extremist groups.

Cabinet minister Ali Haidar said in Damascus that the talks would "test intentions" on the cease-fire.

The rebels are bitter over a string of territorial losses, including last month's defeat in Aleppo, Syria's largest city and former commercial center. Russia, with its influential air power, and Iran, with thousands of Shiite militiamen in Syria, turned the war unequivocally in Assad's favor.

With little room to maneuver, rebel groups, particularly those beholden to Turkish assistance and those operating in northern Syria, agreed to send representatives to Astana.

The opposition delegation accused the government of undermining the talks to pre-empt any discussion of a political transition.

Issam al-Rais, a representative of a rebel faction in southern Syria, said there would be "no need to go further [to discuss] a political transition" if the cease-fire could not be strengthened. He said opposition factions were discussing mechanisms to verify cease-fire violations with Turkey and Russia.

Al-Aridi, the spokesman for the rebel delegation, said the opposition had a "productive" meeting with Russian and Turkish representatives in Astana, in the presence of de Mistura.

He said the talks would conclude today.

Russia's official news agency Tass said the final document for the talks is to call on Syria's rebels to distance themselves from Jabhat Fatah al-Sham. Tass added that the three countries would confirm their determination to jointly fight the Islamic State and Jabhat Fatah al-Sham.

The group works closely with other rebels and has called the meeting a "conspiracy" designed to divide the insurgents.

Syria's conflict began with an Arab Spring-inspired uprising against the Assad family's four-decade rule and escalated into a civil war after the government violently cracked down on dissent and the opposition took up arms.

The fighting is estimated to have killed more than 400,000 people since March 2011.

In past talks, the rebels have insisted that Assad step down as part of any peace plan, but his fate is not up for negotiation in Astana.

In another departure, the opposition delegation is mainly drawn from armed groups, not civilian organizations.

Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman said preserving the cease-fire will be "the most important issue" on the agenda, and that Tehran hopes the talks can pave the way for the delivery of humanitarian aid.

Bahram Ghasemi suggested that discussions of a larger political settlement would have to wait.

"Let's wait and see how the process can be continued based on conclusions that will be announced [today]."

D.C., Moscow at odds

As the Astana talks continued, Moscow and Washington engaged in a public dispute Monday over whether the U.S.-led coalition was now working with the Russian military in Syria.

A Russian Defense Ministry statement said its warplanes had flown a joint mission with coalition aircraft, attacking Islamic State targets near the city of al-Bab. The statement said Russian forces in Syria had received coordinates of Islamic State targets near al-Bab on Sunday "from the U.S. side via hotline with the international coalition headquarters."

That claim was almost immediately denied by the U.S. military.

U.S. Air Force Col. John Dorrian, a coalition spokesman, labeled the Russian claim as propaganda.

U.S. Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said the U.S. does have routine "deconfliction" talks with Russia to avoid unintended aerial incidents in Syria's crowded skies.

But Davis says there have been no changes to that arrangement, and the U.S. has insisted for months that it has no coordination or sharing of targets with Russia.

Later Monday, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said new U.S. President Donald Trump was willing to work "with Russia or anybody else" to defeat the Islamic State.

Information for this article was contributed by Philip Issa, Nasser Karimi, Vitnija Saldava, Bassem Mroue, Bradley Klapper, Zeina Karam and Sarah El Deeb of The Associated Press and by Liz Sly, Suzan Haidamous, Zakaria Zakaria and Brian Murphy of The Washington Post.

A Section on 01/24/2017

Upcoming Events