Assad's 'peace plan' meets opposition
2013-01-07 14:31
Damascus - A defiant speech by President Bashar Assad
calling for peace in Syria on his terms has met rejection by the opposition and
internationally, with only his ally Iran on Monday backing his stance.
Assad's plan was "detached from reality," a US
State Department spokesperson said, while Britain said Assad's address was
"empty" and France said it was an attempt "to justify the
repression of the Syrian people".
The office of EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton
said Europe's position remained that Assad should step down to permit a
political transition.
And Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi told CNN he would
endorse any decision by the Syrian people to put Assad on trial before the International
Criminal Court for war crimes.
The opposition Syrian National Coalition noted that Assad
had ruled out any dialogue with the rebels, making negotiations impossible.
Only Iran, which is supplying money, military advisors and,
according to the US, weapons to Assad's regime threw its weight behind its
ally.
"The Islamic republic... supports President Bashar Assad's
initiative for a comprehensive solution to the country's crisis," which
rejects "foreign interference," Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar
Salehi said in a statement on his ministry website.
Assad, in his first speech in seven months, on Sunday
outlined his vision for a way out of the 21-month conflict that has shattered
his country, killed more than 60 000 people according to the UN, and created a
well of instability exploited by Islamic jihadists and fuelled by regional
rivalries.
Any resolution of the conflict had to be purely Syrian,
Assad said - though he called those Syrians ranged against him "not a
loyal opposition but a gang of killers."
He stated that most of the anti-regime fighters were
foreigners, and said: "The one thing that is sure [is] that those who we
face today are those who carry the Al-Qaeda ideology."
But while his plan calling for an end to violence,
dialogue with opposition elements he deemed acceptable, and a vow to stand fast
against those he branded "terrorists" and their foreign backers drew
wild applause from his Damascus audience, it offered little realistic prospect
of ending what has become a civil war.
Detached from reality
"His initiative is detached from reality" and
was another attempt "to cling to power," US State Department spokesperson
Victoria Nuland said.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the speech
was full of "empty promises" and would "fool no one".
"Bashar Assad's remarks show once again his denial
of reality in which he has shut himself away to justify the repression of the
Syrian people," French foreign ministry spokesperson Philippe Lalliot said
on Monday.
On the day of Assad's speech, another 91 people were
killed across Syria, the British-based watchdog the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said.
Combat continued unabated on Monday outside Damascus,
where troops are bombarding rebel positions. Five people, including four
members of the same family, were killed in shelling on Kfar Batna to the east,
the Observatory said.
In the eastern city of Deir Ezzor, one soldier who had
defected was killed in fighting near a local political security branch office.
Steps towards peace
The US and Europe, which have declared the National
Coalition the "legitimate representative" of the Syrian people, are
pressing Assad to leave power as the first step to any process to restore peace
in Syria.
But with Russia and China blocking any UN-approved
international action against Assad's regime, the Syrian war is slipping ever
deeper into bloodshed with fears of lasting sectarian fractures.
Although the toll has climbed sharply in the past six
months, and the rebels have grabbed swathes of rural territory, the war has
become a grinding impasse punctuated by shelling, regime air strikes and by car
bombs set off by an increasingly radicalised insurgency.
Efforts by the joint UN-Arab League peace envoy, Lakhdar
Brahimi, have made no more headway than those of his predecessor, Kofi Annan,
who resigned in frustration.
Pope Benedict XVI on Monday renewed his call for a
ceasefire and dialogue to halt the "endless slaughter" and civilian
suffering in Syria.
The conflict, he said: "Will know no victors but
only vanquished if it continues, leaving behind it nothing but a field of
ruins."