Local Editor
Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi on Sunday welcomed Syrian
opposition leader Ahmed Moaz al-Khatib's readiness to hold talks with the
Syrian government as Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held his first
direct talks with the coalition's leader.
"It's a good step forward," Salehi said at the Munich
Security Conference, where he said he had held a "very good meeting" with
Khatib. The talks were the first between the Iranian foreign minister and
Khatib, who became Syrian National Coalition leader late last year and who also
met US Vice President Joe Biden in Munich on Saturday.
Addressing
participants at the conference, where three days of talks wrap up later Sunday,
Salehi said he was pleased to have met the Syrian opposition chief and that they
had decided to continue contacts.
Khatib reiterated at the start of
the conference an earlier surprise announcement that he was ready for dialogue
with the Damascus regime -- subject to conditions, including the release of
160,000 detainees.
The idea of direct talks has however already been
rejected by the Syrian National Council, the main body in the coalition, which
opposes any negotiations before Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's
departure.
Salehi said that his country was "ready to be part of a
solution" in Syria. Salehi said the opposition and government in Syria needed to
be able to get around the negotiating table and that he had stressed to Khatib
the need for the two sides to meet and organize presidential elections.
Russia: We
will make that happen
Lavrov also welcomed Khatib's initiative, adding: "If we take into account
the fact that the coalition was founded on a refusal to engage in a dialogue
with the regime, it's a very important step."
"I reminded Khatib that after the creation of the coalition and the
appointment of their leader, we immediately demonstrated our interest in
maintaining regular contact," Lavrov said after the meeting on the sidelines of
the Munich Security Conference. "We will make that happen," he added.
Lavrov had earlier Saturday held separate talks with U.S. Biden and U.N.-Arab
League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi amid strong disagreement between Moscow and
Washington about ways to end the Syria conflict.
Russia's top diplomat also said Moscow shared Washington's concern about the
possible use of chemical weapons in Syria but considered the situation to be
safe at this stage.
"We coordinate this issue (chemical weapons) with the Americans on a daily
basis. We have reliable information that for now, the Syrian government has
control of the chemical weapons, that the situation is safe," Lavrov said in his
address to the conference.
"I think that this (the use of chemical weapons) is a 'red line' for
everyone. We are categorically against the use of any arms," he said.
Lavrov also said that John Kerry, the new U.S. secretary of state, should be
making his way to Russia soon.
US: "Tyrant" Assad must
go
The U.S. vice president stressed that "great differences" remain between
Washington and Moscow. Biden "urged Khatib to continue his efforts to maintain
unity among the SOC [Syrian Opposition Coalition] leadership, to isolate
extremist elements within the broader opposition, and to reach out to, and be
inclusive of, a broad range of communities inside Syria, including Alawites,
Christians and Kurds", according to a White House statement.
Earlier he insisted Assad was a "tyrant" and must go.
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