TEHRAN, May 24, YJC - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has underlined the need for the involvement of influential external players, including Iran, in efforts to resolve the deadly conflict gripping Syria.
TEHRAN, Young Journalists Club (YJC) - Lavrov made the remarks on Tuesday in response to a question on US President Donald Trump’s recent anti-Iran comments.
The
resolution of problems in the Middle East and North Africa requires the
participation of external actors that "influence the situation on the
ground in one way or another. To a full extent, this also refers to Iran
and to what has to be done to settle the Syrian crisis,” he said.
He
also described the Islamic Republic as the "nucleus” of the
International Syria Support Group (ISSG), a working group formed to find
a diplomatic solution to the Syria crisis.
In a Sunday speech to
Arab Muslim leaders in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, Trump singled out Iran
as the world’s "biggest sponsor of terrorism” and urged its isolation,
claiming that Iran’s role in Syria was among the "most tragic and
destabilizing interventions.”
He made similar hostile remarks against Iran during his visit to the occupied territories on Monday.
Iranian
Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qassemi slammed the US president’s
remarks and said he "tried to encourage the countries of the region to
purchase more [American] arms by spreading Iranophobia.”
Astana talks ‘based on principle of inclusiveness’
Elsewhere
in his remarks, the top Russian diplomat referred to the intra-Syrian
peace talks, which were brokered by Tehran, Moscow and Ankara in the
Kazakh capital, Astana.
So far, four rounds of the negotiations
have been held, with the latest round having produced a memorandum of
understanding on de-escalation zones in Syria, sharply reducing fighting
in the country.
At Damascus’ request, Iran and Russia have been
lending military advisory support to the Syrian army in its efforts to
combat Takfiri terrorists who are wreaking havoc in the Arab country
since 2011. Moscow has also been providing Syrian troops with air power
to boost their ground operations against terrorists.
"The Astana
process is also based on the principle of inclusiveness, considering
that Russia, Turkey and Iran have come up with an initiative of a direct
inter-Syrian dialogue with the participation of the government and the
armed opposition,” Lavrov said.
In the Astana discussions, Turkey
acts as a representative of some Persian Gulf Arab states, including
Saudi Arabia and Qatar, he added.
Mediated by Russia and Turkey
with the support of Iran, a Syria-wide cessation of hostilities took
effect on December 30, 2016. The following day, the United Nations
Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution supporting efforts to
end the Syria turmoil and jump-start peace negotiations.
Lavrov
stressed that the UN approval of the Astana format and the Syria
ceasefire "demonstrates quite vividly the attitude of the international
community to this situation.”
Source: Press TV