West wants Russia to offer Assad exile
RUSSIA: Western nations led by
the United States are seeking to persuade Russia to host President Bashar AL-Assad in exile as a way out of the escalating Syria crisis, a Russian
newspaper report said Wednesday.
But Moscow so far has not been
receptive to the idea, even though Kremlin sources put Assad's chances of
political survival at “10 percent”, the Kommersant daily said.
Quoting a Russian diplomatic
source, Kommersant said Western nations led by the United States were making
“active attempts” to persuade Russia to offer a home to Assad, whose fate has
become a major sticking point in the crisis.
But the source added: “We
(Russia) have no and have had no plans to host Assad.” Russia and other world
powers at a meeting in Geneva on Saturday agreed a plan for a transition in
Syria which did not make an explicit call for Assad to quit power.
However much to Russia's
annoyance, several Western states have since said the accord clearly implies
that there is no future for Assad. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov Tuesday
accused the West of seeking to “distort” the agreement.
But Kommersant said that Russia
was not protecting Assad personally and the positions of Moscow and the West
were not as distant as their public statements indicated.
“We are not defending Assad,” it
quoted a source close to the Kremlin as saying.
“The Syrian president has lost
time. The chances of him holding out are not great -- 10 percent. And we are
not against the Syrian opposition. But we are against outside armed
intervention in Syria,” the source added.
Russia has been under sustained
pressure from the West to publicly call for Assad to quit amid a spiralling
conflict that has already claimed over 15,000 lives but Moscow has rejected
imposing any outside solution.
AFP
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