Syria
crisis: Russia calls for coordinated resolution to Islamic State conflict
Monday,
October 5, 2015
9:41 AM
Russia appeared
to seize the initiative in international efforts to end the conflict in Syria
on Sunday as Washington scrambled to devise a new strategy for the war-ravaged
country and France sent warplanes to bomb Islamic State
targets.
The Russian
president, Vladimir Putin, said Moscow, which this month sent tanks and
warplanes to a Russian military base in Syria, was itself trying to create
a “coordinated framework” to resolve the conflict.
“We would
welcome a common platform for collective action against the terrorists,” Putin said in an interview on Sunday on CBS’s 60 Minutes
programme.
He derided US
efforts to end the Syria war, which has driven a tide of refugees into
neighbouring states and Europe.
It was
announced in Baghdad that Russian military officials were working with
counterparts from Iran, Syria and Iraq on intelligence and security cooperation
to counter Islamic State, which has captured large areas of both Syria and
Iraq.
The move was seen in the
region as potentially giving Moscow more sway in the Middle East.
As leaders
gathered in New York at the UN general assembly, the US secretary of state, John Kerry, discussed Syria with the Russian foreign
minister Sergei Lavrov. He said that while it was vital to coordinate efforts
against Islamic State militants this was not yet happening.
“I think we
have concerns about how we are going to go forward,” Kerry told reporters. US
officials said Kerry was working on a new political initiative in New York that
would include Russia and key regional powers.
A senior State
Department official told reporters: “It was a very thorough exchange of views
on both the military and the political implications of Russia’s increased
engagement in Syria.“
Kerry also
discussed Syria with Iran’s foreign minister during a meeting at theUnited Nations on Saturday.
Putin, who will meet the
US president, Barack Obama, in New York on Monday, branded US support for rebel
forces in Syria illegal and ineffective and said Damascus should be included in
international efforts to fight Islamic State.
He mocked US plans to
train up to 5,400 Syrian rebels to fight the group. “It turns out that only 60
of these fighters have been properly trained, and as few as four or five people
actually carry weapons,” he said.
Putin said Russia had no
current plans to deploy combat troops. “Russia will not take part in any field
operations on the territory of Syria or in other states; at least, we do not
plan it for now,” he said.
Referring to the risk of
radicalised fighters returning home after fighting for Isis, he said: “There
are more than 2,000 militants in Syria from the former Soviet Union. Instead of
waiting for them to return back home we should help President al-Assad fight
them there, in Syria.“
Critics have urged Obama
to be more decisive in the Middle East and Syria – where the UN has said
250,000 people have died after four years of conflict – and say lack of a clear
American policy has given Islamic State opportunities to expand.
Divisions over the role of
the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, remain critical.
The president of Iran,
Hassan Rouhani, like Russia a big military supporter of Assad, told reporters
any discussion of political reform in Syria should come only after the threat
of “terrorism” had been removed.
The US, Britain
and some other allies in recent days have softened demands that Assad
immediately leave power, raising the possibility
that he could stay during a transition.
The US under secretary of
state ,Wendy Sherman, said on Friday: “We do not think it is credible for Assad
to remain for any length of time as the leader,” but added: “We appreciate
there may be a political solution here where Assad is there for some period of
time in some capacity while a transition takes place.“
The German foreign
minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, however, told ARD television on Sunday that
the formation of a transitional Syrian government should be kept separate from
discussions on the future of Assad.
A senior State Department
official said if the Russians were going to play a greater role in the fight
against Islamic State, it was essential to have talks on “de-confliction” –
measures to avert inadvertent clashes between the militaries.
“We are just at the
beginning of trying to understand what the Russians’ intentions are in Syria,
in Iraq, and to try to see if there are mutually beneficial ways forward here.
We have got a long way to go in that conversation,” the official said.
France said it had launched
its first air strikes in
Syria, destroying an Islamic State training camp in the east of the country to
stop the group from attacking French interests and to protect Syrian civilians.
France had until now struck Islamic
State targets in neighbouring Iraq only.
France had feared strikes
in Syria could be counter-productive and could strengthen Assad, but it was
shaken by a series of deadly attacks by Islamic militants this year.
In addition, Paris has
become alarmed by Islamic State gains in northern Syria and the possibility of
France being sidelined in negotiations to reach a political solution in Syria.
A French diplomatic source
said Paris needed to be one of the “hitters” in Syria – those taking direct
military action – to legitimately take part in any negotiations for a political
solution to the conflict.
Israel, which borders
Syria and has previously attacked sites in Syria, carried out at least three
air strikes against Syrian army targets on the Golan Heights on Sunday, rebel
sources and a monitoring group said.
NA.
"Syria crisis: Russia calls for coordinated resolution to Islamic State
conflict."28 Sept. 2015. theguardian.
5 Oct. 2015. <http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/sep/28/russia-syria-crisis-call-for-coordinated-resolution-conflict>
Comment: This
article talks about the various political issues between multiple countries
with the Islamic State. The author of this article seems to criticize the
United States' actions on the matter of the expanding of the Islamic State and
the "indecisiveness" of the US president. Syria seems to be deeply involved with the
Islamic State and it's "threats of terrorism." The author does not
give further information about what the involved countries should do in order
to stop the Islamic State's expansion, other than that President Barak Obama
should be more "decisive" in dealing with the matter. The article is
highly informational with a glimpse of bias of the author, but it is not apparent
to the readers. I think that the stopping of the expansion of the Islamic State
is needed because of the safety issues of the continuous threats of
"terrorism" from the Islamic State.-Tiana Park
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