[The emergency talks are aimed at laying
down a blueprint for international seizure of the weapons that the United States has said Syrian forces used to gas to
death more than 1,400 people last month near Damascus . Russia , Syria ’s main international backer and arms
supplier, offered Monday to negotiate the issue, after President Obama sent U.S. warships to the Mediterranean and asked Congress to authorize a
military strike against the Syrian government for its chemical weapons use.]
By Anne Gearan and Karen DeYoung
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad added to the tension by saying that he is willing to place his chemical arsenal under international control — but only if the United States stops threatening military action and arming rebel forces trying to unseat him.
Assad, in an interview with a Russian
television station, said he is prepared to sign the international convention
banning the weapons and would adhere to its “standard procedure” of handing
over stockpile data a month later.
Kerry made clear that he had a much
shorter time frame in mind and that Assad was not a party to the negotiations.
“There is nothing ‘standard’ about this process,” Kerry said as he headed into
an initial meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
“The words of the Syrian regime, in our
judgment, are simply not enough,” he said.
After an hour-long session to outline the
logistics and agenda for the talks, both men and their deputies departed for a
joint dinner, while U.S. and Russian teams of technical experts stayed
behind to iron out the details. A senior State Department official said the
full delegations would reconvene Friday morning.
The emergency talks are aimed at laying
down a blueprint for international seizure of the weapons that the United States has said Syrian forces used to gas to
death more than 1,400 people last month near Damascus . Russia , Syria ’s main international backer and arms
supplier, offered Monday to negotiate the issue, after President Obama sent U.S. warships to the Mediterranean and asked Congress to authorize a
military strike against the Syrian government for its chemical weapons use.
The legislation, an uphill battle for
Obama amid lawmakers’ skepticism, is on hold pending the outcome of what are
likely to be two days of talks in Geneva . The pause button also has been hit at
the United Nations, where the United States , Britain and France have been readying a Security Council
resolution designed to authorize the use of force if Syria does not adhere to any U.S.-Russia
agreement on the weapons.
An open letter from Putin
As Kerry and Lavrov met behind closed
doors, public statements flew from Moscow to Washington and back again.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, in an
open letter to “the American people and their political leaders” published on
the New York Times opinion pages, said any use of force was a violation of
international law and would constitute an illegal “act of aggression.”
The United States , he said, was developing a habit of
military intervention that had given the country an image of preferring “brute
force” over democracy. Noting Obama’s reference to “American exceptionalism”
during a Tuesday night address to the nation on Syria , Putin wrote, “It is extremely dangerous
to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional, whatever the motivation.”
“There are big countries and small
countries, rich and poor, those with long democratic traditions and those still
finding their way to democracy. Their policies differ, too,” he wrote.
Obama did not directly respond during
brief remarks at the opening of a Cabinet meeting at the White House. He said
he was “hopeful” that the Geneva talks would yield “a concrete result.”
Later, White House press secretary Jay
Carney said it was “clear that President Putin has invested his credibility in
transferring Assad’s chemical weapons to international control and ultimately
destroying them. This is significant. Russia is Assad’s patron and protector, and the
world will note whether Russia can follow through on the commitments
that it’s made.”
“As for the editorial,” Carney said, “you
know, we’re not surprised by President Putin’s words. But the fact is that Russia offers a stark contrast that demonstrates
why America is exceptional.” Putin’s government, he
added, was “isolated and alone” in backing Assad’s assertions that Syrian
rebels were responsible for last month’s chemical attack.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers were even less
diplomatic. House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) said he was “insulted” by
Putin’s article.
Despite the tensions, Kerry said the United States is serious “about engaging in
substantive, meaningful negotiations even as our military maintains its current
posture to keep up the pressure on the Assad regime.”
He added that diplomacy cannot become a
delaying tactic.
“This is not a game,” he said, as the
talks began in this Swiss city, once the site of historic U.S.-
Russia arms-control talks and the original international covenant banning
chemical weapons as a tool of war.
Kerry and Lavrov did not take questions at
their joint appearance before reporters. Lavrov made a point of saying that the
discussions should “move this situation from this current stage of military
confrontation.”
“We proceed from the fact that the
solution of this problem will make unnecessary any strike on the Syrian Arab Republic ,” he said through an interpreter.
Kerry responded that it was only the
threat of military action that had created the diplomatic opening and that the United States will remain ready to strike.
International inspections
In a briefing for reporters traveling with
Kerry, senior State Department officials said the U.S. delegation would present the Russians
with information about sites where U.S. intelligence suspects Syria ’s estimated 1,000 tons of chemical
weapons are stored. Officials expect the Russians to provide their own
assessment, presumably with information furnished by the Syrian government.
The officials, who spoke on the condition
of anonymity, said they also expected to discuss security concerns regarding
international arms inspectors. “We’ve suggested to the Russians they come
prepared to discuss it, as well. It is certainly not a permissive environment,”
one official said.
Farhan Haq, a spokesman for U.N. Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon, told reporters that the United Nations has received a
document from the Syrian government indicating its commitment to accede to the
Chemical Weapons Convention. It was not clear whether the document, which he
said was written in Arabic and was still being translated, included any
preconditions.
“This starts the process” of becoming a
member of the convention, Haq said.
Security Council members are expected to
meet Monday, when Ban would brief them on the findings of a U.N. chemical
weapons team that probed the Aug. 21 attack.
The inspection team was mandated only to
determine whether the attack had occurred, not to affix blame. But a senior
Western official at the United Nations said the inspectors collected “a wealth”
of evidence that formed a circumstantial case against Assad’s forces.
In his Tuesday interview with Russia ’s Rossiya 24 television, Assad said
“terrorists,” the term he has long used to refer to rebel fighters, “are trying
to incite a U.S. attack against Syria .” Repeating his charge that the rebels
were responsible for the chemical attack, he said that “there are countries
that supply chemical substances” to the Syrian opposition.
It was only Tuesday that Assad’s
government acknowledged for the first time the existence of its chemical
weapons stockpile. Although Assad said he had agreed to sign the arsenal over
to international control, he insisted that it would happen only “when we see
that the United States truly desires stability in our region and stops
threatening and seeking to invade,” as well as supplying the rebels.
Kerry also met Thursday with Lakhdar
Brahimi, the U.N.-Arab League envoy for Syria , and spoke by telephone with the leader
of the Syrian Opposition Coalition and with Gen. Salim Idriss, the rebel
military commander.
The rebels have expressed dismay at
Obama’s decision to call off military strikes while the diplomacy plays out. A
State Department official said Kerry made clear to them that he was seeking
“tangible commitments” to “a strong, credible and enforceable agreement” and
“reiterated that President Obama’s threat of military action very much remains
on the table.”
No Syrians were expected to attend the Geneva negotiations.
DeYoung reported from Washington . Will Englund in Moscow , Colum Lynch at the United Nations and Ed
O’Keefe in Washington contributed to this report.