Putin denies propping up Assad
2012-12-20 22:01
Moscow - Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday
denied propping up Syrian President Bashar Assad and stressed that Moscow was
only seeking to avert a perpetual civil war.
"We are not concerned about [Bashar Assad's fate].
We understand that the family has been in power for 40 years and there is a
need for change," Putin told a major Moscow press briefing.
But he made no call on Assad to step down and said it
remained up to the Syrian people themselves to decide their future through
peaceful talks.
"What is our position? Not to leave Assad's regime
in power at any price, but to first [let the Syrians] agree among themselves
how they should live next," Putin said.
"Only then should we start looking at ways to change
the existing order."
Russia has remained Syria's main major ally throughout 21
months of violence that an opposition monitoring group said on Thursday has
killed 44 000 people.
It scuttled three rounds of UN Security Council sanctions
against Assad for his crackdown and condemned Washington for recognising the
Syrian opposition as the legitimate voice of the country's citizens.
That position has frustrated Western attempts to end the
bloodshed by forcing Assad from power. It has also condemned Moscow's continued
military ties with Damascus.
Putin on Thursday argued that Russia's call for dialogue
was meant to avert "an endless civil war" between the armed rebels
and government forces, who still control most of the capital Damascus.
"We want to avoid [Syrian] disintegration,"
said Putin.
Putin's comments came less than a week after Russia's
chief Middle East envoy said it appeared that Assad would not be able to fend
off the rebels much longer.
The foreign ministry later denied an official shift in
Russia's position and noted that Moscow still recognised the Assad regime.