'Al Khatib & Hariri in Saudi
Arabia'
"...“The SNC was parachuted down on
us to draw
the domesticated opposition into a settlement with the regime,” he added. The
Russians and Americans “want to exhaust the two sides in order to lead them into
a Lebanese-style settlement where there are neither winners nor
losers.”
It appears that Turk had decided to sabotage the SNC from
within, insisting in the same interview that “what is most important is not what
some of the major powers want, but what is happening on the ground inside
Syria.” He said that he was counting on the armed opposition “to bring down the
regime, no matter the cost.”Turk’s views were backed by the effective
leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, Farouk Tayfour, who played a critical role in
the Islamists’ armed uprising against Hafez al-Assad between 1979 and
1982.In the July 2012 opposition conference in Cairo, Tayfour
declared that “we are willing to take matters into our own hands,” after
acknowledging that the Council’s strategy of foreign intervention along the
lines of Iraq and Libya had failed.
Tayfour and Turk succeed in blocking Washington’s choice to head up the
SNC, businessman Riad Seif, agreeing at the last minute to a compromise
candidate with no political experience, the current president, Moaz
al-Khatib.
Khatib consequently dropped what was considered a political bomb
in the SNC by agreeing to “negotiations with the regime,” justifying it as a
personal position due to the fact that “countries make promises, but do not
fulfill them. They tell the Syrians to attack, but abandon them in the heat of
battle.”
Within days, Khatib’s initiative galvanized support, first from
Washington then the Russians and Iranians. Soon, elements within the opposition
alliance, including Seif and a coterie of Damascene opposition businessmen, as
well as a faction of the Muslim Brotherhood, offered their support.
At first,
Khatib’s dialogue initiative was little more than an attempt to test the waters
within the SNC to see how far they would go in terms of a negotiated solution.
But on 14 February 2013, in a meeting of the founding committee of the SNC in
Cairo, the Coalition formally agreed to a “political solution,” while imposing
some negotiation conditions.
Despite this, there remains two contradictory currents
within the SNC still fighting to get their way. One side is moving in the
direction of talking with certain elements within the regime, while the other
continues to hold out for changing the military balance on the
ground. ..."
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