US, Iran to meet before multilateral Syria talks in Vienna

Kerry will meet Javad Zarif on Thursday ahead of a fresh round of talks on ending the Syrian conflict


Afp October 29, 2015
John Kerry (L) and Sebastian Kurz (R) shake hands before a meeting at the Hotel Imperial October 29, 2015 in Vienna, Austria. PHOTO: AFP

VIENNA: Secretary of State John Kerry will meet his Iranian counterpart in Vienna on Thursday ahead of a fresh round of talks on ending the Syrian conflict, a senior State Department official said.

Tehran will join the talks on Friday in what will be the first time it has participated in international negotiations aimed at resolving the bloodshed as key nations backing Syria's warring sides seek to thrash out differences over the future of President Bashar al-Assad.

The inclusion of Iran  -- a key Assad backer -- marks a crucial shift after it was excluded from earlier talks, largely due to opposition from the United States and Saudi Arabia.

Iran foreign minister will join Syria talks in Vienna

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was also to meet with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov on Thursday, according to the Russian news wire Interfax.

The talks come in the context of two days of diplomatic efforts involving all the major international players in the same room for the first time.

On Thursday evening, Russia -- which backs Assad -- will hold talks with the United States, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, all of whom back rebels seeking to overthrow the Syrian leader.

Syrians inspecting damaged buildings following a reported air strike on October 29, 2015. Nearly 600 people have been killed in Russian air strikes in Syria, two-thirds of them opposition fighters, a monitor said. PHOTO: AFP

It will be the second time in less than a week that the four envoys have met on Syria.

But Friday's talks will be a wider gathering of regional players which will see Zarif joining representatives from Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Egypt, Lebanon and the European Union.

So far there has been no mention of either the Syrian government or the opposition joining.

Assad accuses West of backing 'terrorist' groups in Syria

The sides remain bitterly divided over the question of Assad, and an earlier round of talks on October 23 ended inconclusively.

On one side, Russia and Iran are backing Assad's forces on the ground and say Damascus must be helped to defeat "terrorism" before a political process can take shape.

On the other, the US and its key regional allies Turkey and Saudi Arabia are supporting groups fighting Assad and insist he must go.

Around a quarter of a million people have died in the Syrian conflict over the past four and a half years.

COMMENTS (1)

Stranger | 9 years ago | Reply Iran is a gutsy country - standing up along to KSA and US.
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