Thursday, October 17, 2013

Iran and Syria both are aggressively seeking out resolution of their issues - whether you agree with their motives for acting or sincerity , the fact is they are moving forward at least regarding engaging the West !


Iran And Six Powers Set To Resume Nuclear Talks On November 7

Iran and the six powers – the United States, Britain, France, China, and Russia plus Germany – have agreed to meet again in the Swiss city of Geneva on November 7-8.
Iran Nuclear Plant - Illustration - Photo: clicknect.com
Iran Nuclear Plant – Illustration – Photo: clicknect.com
After the talks deal Wednesday, Iran said it was hopeful for a “new phase in our relations” with the international community.
The White House said Iran had shown a greater level of “seriousness and substance” than ever before at the two days of talks in Geneva.
Germany was also positive, saying the latest talks had boosted hopes for a diplomatic solution but a wary Russia warned there was “no reason to break into applause”.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said the talks had “reinforced hope that a diplomatic solution is possible to completely calm our concerns about the nature of the Iranian nuclear program”.
European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton told reporters the next meeting would convene in Geneva on November 7 and 8.
She read from what she underlined was an unprecedented joint statement agreed with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif and herself as chair of the international negotiating team.
“We hope that this a beginning of a new phase in our relations,” Zarif told reporters. While the details remain under wraps, Iran’s lead nuclear negotiator Abbas Araqchi said its proposal involved “proportionate and reciprocal steps by both sides”.
Iran’s plan contains three steps that could settle the nuclear dispute “within a year”, Araqchi has said, the first achievable “within a month or two, or even less”.


Syrian deputy PM says peace talks set for November

Long-awaited Geneva II conference said to be imminent, but opposition still not on board
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Syria's War
 
Syria
 
Chemical Weapons
SNC
Secretary of State John Kerry, third from right, meets at the U.N. in July with leaders of the Syrian National Coalition, the Western-backed opposition group, to promote an international conference and a political solution to the civil war.
Richard Drew/Associated Press
Echoing calls from U.S. and Russian leaders for peace talks to end the Syrian conflict as early as next month, a Syrian deputy prime minister said on Thursday that the highly anticipated Geneva II conference would in fact take place at the end of November.
Qadri Jamil, a political dissident who now serves in the Syrian government, said from Moscow that the long-delayed international conference aimed at bringing the Syrian government and opposition together to negotiate an end to the civil war would take place Nov. 23-24.
"Geneva is a way out for everyone: the Americans, Russia, the Syrian regime and the opposition," Jamil told Reuters. “Whoever realizes this first will benefit. Whoever does not realize it will find himself overboard, outside the political process."
Within hours of that statement, Russian foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich told reporters, "We shouldn't get ahead of ourselves."
"It is not a matter for Syrian officials but the responsibility of U.N. Secretary General to announce and set dates agreed with all sides," he added, but he neither confirmed nor denied that those dates had been set.
When contacted by Al Jazeera, Jamil’s office in Damascus said the deputy prime minister was speaking in his capacity as a member of an opposition delegation and not on behalf of the Syrian government.
Syria's War
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov have both called for urgent peace talks to be scheduled in line with a U.N. Security Council resolution directed at ridding the Syrian regime of its chemical weapons stockpile, but there is no indication that any high-profile rebel groups have signed on to the idea of negotiating with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
“A political settlement with international backing is the best hope for a stable peace in Syria right now,” said Chris Chivvis, a senior political scientist at the RAND Corp., who called Jamil’s statements a “positive sign” for ending the war that has killed 115,000 people in two and a half years.
“But the main question remains whether the increasingly fragmented rebels can be convinced to accept the deal.”
That concern was underlined Thursday by opposition activists, who roundly deny that a peace conference involving prominent opposition leaders is imminent.
They call Jamil a "fake" opposition member and say he has long been co-opted by the regime and disowned by the revolution.
Ali Amin Suwaid, a political officer with the Syrian Revolution General Commission, which works for a “moderate, democratic” Syria, considers Jamil part of the thinly veiled “soft regime,” with no authority to speak for the wider opposition movement.
“No one from the opposition on the ground or outside of Syria who are really not part of the ‘pro-regime opposition’ will accept to participate in the peace conference unless removing Assad is part of the conference,” Suwaid told Al Jazeera. “They will lose their legitimacy the moment they agree to talk to Assad.”
Like many among the opposition, he believes the regime has embraced the talks as a means of postponing decisive action on Syria by the West.
The Western-backed Syrian National Coalition (SNC), the mainstream revolution’s political leadership-in-exile, voted on Sunday not to attend Geneva II, the second edition of a June 2012 conference that proved largely inconsequential in establishing a transition government. Kerry has said Geneva II would aim to pick up where its predecessor left off.
“The SNC considers going to Geneva against the fundamental principles established by the SNC,” read a statement from the coalition, which has said it will participate in talks only if Assad’s departure following a transition period is guaranteed.
“Things may change, of course — and we’re not saying he needs to resign before we go — but we’re not going to Geneva to shoot the breeze at one more meeting and at the same time lose our credibility,” said George Netto, an SNC member who serves as a liaison between the coalition and the State Department in Washington.
Netto, who said he initially encouraged the SNC to embrace the Geneva II conference, now worries that the coalition is suffering from a credibility crisis and would not be well served by attending.
“Going without a clear agenda to Geneva II, without getting the consensus and the mandate from the actual fighters and activists on the ground, will be like shooting themselves in the foot," he said about the SNC. "They’ll lose whatever credibility they have on the Syrian street.”
Nevertheless, the SNC said it remains committed to a transition government, for which Kerry has reiterated U.S. support in recent statements.
“We believe that President Assad has lost the legitimacy necessary to be a cohesive force that could bring people together,” the secretary of state told Reuters on Monday.
Jamil, a leader of the leftist People’s Will Party, which participated in peaceful anti-regime protests in 2011, has repeatedly condemned international intervention in Syria and even praised Russia for vetoing proposed U.N. sanctions against the regime.
In June 2012, following elections that Jamil himself called “forged and manipulated,” he was appointed deputy prime minister for economic affairs. His acceptance of the position, and his appointment to the government’s committee for reforming Syria’s constitution, drew accusations that he had been co-opted into the regime’s political apparatus.
In his Thursday comments, Jamil did not specify which parties from the opposition had signed on to the November conference — or if any even had.

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