Ahead of Syria Conference, US and Russia Soften Positions on Assad
Days before international talks on a resolution to the Syrian civil war were set to convene in New York on Friday, Secretary of State John Kerry on Tuesday appeared to accept Russias longstanding position that peace talks could not rule out letting dictator Bashar al-Assad stay in power.
Kerrys revelation that the US and other Western nations were not after regime change in Syria earned him fierce criticism in the press. The Washington Post slammed him in an editorial, saying his statement conveyed the message that the power structure in Damascus that has granted Russia a naval base and served as a conduit for Iranian weapons to the Hezbollah militia in Lebanon can remain.
On Thursday, however, diplomats involved in the talks revealed that Russia had no objection to Assad ceding power as part of a peace agreement, suggesting that the softening of American and allied stances on the thorny question of Assads fate had enabled Moscow to do the same.
As one diplomat told Reuters: "What you've got is a move that will end up with Assad going
And the Russians have got to the point privately where they accept that Assad will have gone by the end of this transition, they're just not prepared to say that publicly."
Unfortunately, other diplomats say that even if Assad can be forced into retirement, a price of his removal might be letting him slink away to Russia or Iran rather than face justice at the International Criminal Court.
Although such an outcome would severely disappoint millions of Syrians, Politico quotes a former Obama administration official as saying: Its hard enough to get rid of him as it is
If he was under indictment there would be even less of a chance. Arab states have also made their peace with letting Assad escape prosecution if he will agree to leave.
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