DUBLIN -- The top U.S. and Russian diplomats will hold a surprise
meeting Thursday with the United Nations' peace envoy for Syria,
signaling fresh hopes of an international breakthrough to end the Arab
country's 21-month civil war.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and mediator
Lakhdar Brahimi will gather in Dublin on the sidelines of a human rights
conference, a senior U.S. official said. The official spoke on
condition of anonymity because she wasn't authorized to speak publicly
on the matter. She provided few details about the unscheduled
get-together.
The former Cold War foes have fought bitterly over
how to address Syria's conflict, with Washington harshly criticizing
Moscow of shielding its Arab ally. The Russians respond by accusing the
U.S. of meddling by demanding the downfall of President Bashar Assad's
regime and ultimately seeking an armed intervention such as the one last
year against the late Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi.
But the
gathering of the three key international figures suggests possible
compromise in the offing. At the least, it confirms what officials
describe as an easing of some of the acrimony that has raged between
Moscow and Washington over the future of an ethnically diverse nation
whose stability is seen as critical given its geographic position in
between powder kegs Iraq, Lebanon and Israel.
The threat of
Syria's government using some of its vast stockpiles of chemical weapons
is also adding urgency to diplomatic efforts. Western governments have
cited the rising danger of such a scenario this week, and officials say
Russia, too, shares great concern on this point.
On Thursday,
Syria's Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad accused the United States
and Europe of using the issue of chemical weapons to justify a future
military intervention against Syria. He warned that any such
intervention would be "catastrophic."
In Ireland's capital, one
idea that Brahimi could seek to resuscitate with U.S. and Russian
support would be the political agreement strategy both countries agreed
on in Geneva in June.
That plan demanded several steps by the
Assad regime to de-escalate tensions and end the violence that activists
say has killed more than 40,000 people since March 2011. It would then
have required Syria's opposition and the regime to put forward
candidates for a transitional government, with each side having the
right to veto nominees proposed by the other.
If employed, the
strategy would surely mean the end of more than four decades of an Assad
family member at Syria's helm. The opposition has demanded Assad's
departure and has rejected any talk of him staying in power. Yet it also
would grant regime representatives the opportunity to block Sunni
extremists and others in the opposition that they reject.
The
transition plan never got off the ground this summer, partly because no
pressure was applied to see it succeed by a deeply divided international
community. Brahimi's predecessor, former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan, who drafted the plan, then resigned his post in frustration.
The
United States blamed the collapse on Russia for vetoing a third
resolution at the U.N. Security Council that would have applied world
sanctions against Assad's government for failing to live by the deal's
provisions.
Russia insisted that the Americans unfairly sought
Assad's departure as a precondition and worried about opening the door
to military action, even as Washington offered to include language in
any U.N. resolution that would have expressly forbade outside armed
intervention.
Should a plan similar to that one be proposed, the
Obama administration is likely to insist anew that it be internationally
enforceable - a step Moscow may still be reluctant to commit to.
In any case, the U.S. insists the tide of the war is turning definitively against Assad.
On
Wednesday, the administration said several countries in the Middle East
and elsewhere have informally offered to grant asylum to Assad and his
family if they leave Syria.
The comments came a day after the
United States and its 27 NATO allies agreed to send Patriot missiles to
Turkey's southern border with Syria. The deployment, expected within
weeks, is meant solely as a defensive measure against the cross-border
mortar rounds from Syria that have killed five Turks, but still bring
the alliance to the brink of involvement in the civil war.
The
United States is also preparing to designate Jabhat al-Nusra, a Syrian
rebel group with alleged ties to al-Qaida, as a foreign terrorist
organization in a step aimed at blunting the influence of extremists
within the Syrian opposition, officials said Wednesday.
Word of
the move came as the State Department announced Clinton will travel to
the Mideast and North Africa next week for high-level meetings on the
situation in Syria and broader counter-terrorism issues. She is likely
then to recognize Syria's newly formed opposition coalition as the
legitimate representative of the Syrian people, according to officials.
The
political endorsement is designed to help unite the country against
Assad and spur greater nonlethal and humanitarian assistance from the
United States to the rebels.
Associated Press