The Syrian government is ready for peace talks with the opposition, but the legitimacy of President Assad “isn’t up for discussion,” Syrian FM Walid Muallem said. It comes as the Syrian opposition remains undecided on who will represent them at Geneva.
Any political program or work document produced at the Geneva-2
peace conference would have to go through a popular referendum in
Syria before it can be applied, Muallem, Syrian Foreign and
Expatriates Minister said in an interview with Sky News Arabia on
Saturday.
Moreover, the minister reiterated that Syrian President Bashar
Assad was legitimately elected to serve until the upcoming
elections in mid- 2014, and that his resignation “isn’t up for
discussion with anyone.”
Muallem said that the Syrian government is prepared to hold talks
with “licensed opposition parties” on forming a national
unity government. He went on to disregard the “Doha coalition” –
the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition
Forces formed in Doha, Qatar in November 2012 from various
opposition groups – as the sole representative of the opposition,
saying that it “failed in the eyes of Syrians after they
demanded the US to wage aggression on Syria.”
Although mid-November has been set as an approximate date for the
Geneva-2 conference by the UN, the precise date remains unclear,
Muallem noted, saying that the UN and its envoy Lakhdar Brahimi
“are having trouble gathering the opposition” in Geneva.
The Syrian crisis can be resolved if all the parties, including
the Western powers and their allies, follow the UN Security
Council resolution on Syria, and if Syria’s neighbors stop
“funding, training and harboring terrorists,” the
minister believes. Earlier, Muallem told RT that once the US, the EU and some of the
Gulf countries stop supporting the opposition fighters on the
ground, the Syrian conflict will end within a “few weeks.”
Muallem’s words come about a week after the Syrian National
Coalition’s president Ahmad Jarba said in a letter to the UN Security Council that the
coalition will attend Geneva-2, but only if its agreed purpose is
to ensure “the establishment of a transitional government with
full executive powers.” Earlier, Jarba openly urged the
Security Council to adopt a resolution that would allow the use
of force to cripple the Syrian government’s “war machine.”
While the Syrian National Coalition has been recognized by
several Western and Arab states as the “sole legitimate
representative of the Syrian people,” it has had trouble
uniting the disparate rebel forces fighting on the ground.
Thirteen of the most powerful rebel groups – including a division
of the FSA and more radical Islamists – on Wednesday stated that “all groups formed abroad without
having returned to the country do not represent us” and
called to unite under an “Islamic framework based on Sharia
law.”
This comes as the Syrian opposition has been pressured by the
international community to come up with a delegation for the
Geneva-2 peace conference, with Russia urging its Western and
regional sponsors to push the opposition into talks.