Frankrijk en de VS willen Iran weren van besprekingen over Syrië (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op vrijdag 14 juni 2013, 18:32.
Auteur: Andrew Rettman

BRUSSELS - It is unclear when they will happen, where or who will go, but one thing is sure - neither France nor the US want Iran at the next Syria peace talks.

Diplomats expect a bit more clarity after a preparatory meeting by Russian and US envoys in Geneva on 25 June.

The Syria talks were originally expected this month.

But a diplomatic source in Geneva said "early September" is now the most likely date.

One reason for the delay is that rebels factions cannot agree who to send. Another one is military gains by Syrian forces, which are making the regime less keen to negotiate.

July is out because the Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts on 9 July.

But another big question is whether to invite Iran.

The Islamic republic is Syria's top ally. It has sent elite troops to fight on its side and it is the paymaster of Hezbollah, a Lebanese militia whose guerrillas are also fighting for the Syrian regime.

When asked by EUobserver i if Iran should be at the peace talks, Robert Baer, a US security expert and former CIA officer, said simply: "Got to include Iran."

For its part, France, a former colonial power in Syria, sent a senior official to Tehran on 27 May.

But its foreign minister, Laurent Fabius i, told EU peers at a behind-closed-doors meeting in Brussels later the same day that: "Iran should not participate, because they really don't want a solution."

An EU diplomat shed light on Fabius' thinking.

"The French believe that if Iran goes they will link Syria to the nuclear dossier. They will ask for concessions in the nuclear talks in return for any positive steps on Syria," the contact said, referring to long-term EU and US efforts to stop Iran from enriching uranium.

The British foreign office told EUobserver on Friday (14 June) it is still making up its mind on Iran's participation.

But the US gave a blunt No.

"Whoever attends the conference on Syria must be opposed to further militarisation of the conflict," a US state department official told this website.

"Iran has played a destructive role in this crisis by sending its Quds force into Syria and by directly supporting the Assad regime's brutality against the Syrian people. Is this compatible with 'opposition to further militarisation'? How can it play a positive role at Geneva?" the official added.

Britain and France said last month they will ship arms to rebels if the peace talks fail.

The US on Thursday upped the ante by saying they are doing it already.

Ben Rhodes, the White House's deputy security advisor, told press that Syria last year killed up to 150 people using sarin gas on "a small scale" but "multiple times."

He added: "The President has made a decision about providing more support to the opposition … that includes military support."

EU foreign affairs chief Catherine Ashton i noted: "These developments can only reinforce the importance of a political solution."

But for its part, Russia believes it is the US, not Iran, which is giving up on diplomacy.

Alexei Pushkov, the Russian parliament's foreign affairs chief, Tweeted on Friday that Rhodes' line on sarin is a "fabrication" reminiscent of false intelligence that late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, an excuse for the US invasion in 2003.

"What would be [Syrian leader] al-Assad's interest in using small quantities of sarin against the rebels? Why? To give a pretext for foreign intervention? It's not logical," Pushkov wrote.


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