Mon, 17/09/2012 - 22:39
Saudi Arabia opted to stay away from
a meeting of four regional powers on the Syrian crisis on Monday,
adding to a sense that the forum is unlikely to advance the quest for
peace.
The "contact group" of Egypt, Iran,
Turkey and Saudi Arabia was assembled at Egypt's initiative. But
Egyptian presidential spokesperson Yasser Ali and an Arab League
official both said the Saudi foreign minister was staying away for
health reasons, without saying why no one else was coming in his place.
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
also said Saudi Arabia, which attended a preparatory meeting last week,
would be absent on Monday, but that it would join in future meetings.
There was no immediate Saudi comment.
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud
al-Faisal underwent surgery last month, keeping him away from official
business, but he has been represented at international meetings by
Deputy Foreign Minister Prince Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah.
Diplomats and Western officials have
been skeptical that the group can reach any tangible deal, particularly
when it includes both Sunni Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran, who have tussled
for influence in sectarian conflicts across the Middle East.
Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt have all
demanded that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad step down, while Iran is
his main ally and accuses states including Saudi Arabia and Turkey of
helping the rebels who are fighting to topple him.
Against that backdrop, some analysts
said Egypt may itself not have expected much from the group and that
Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy’s main aim may have been to put Cairo
back on the map as a regional power broker.
One ambassador to the Arab League said
it was "not possible for regional states to succeed in solving this
(Syrian) file in light of the differences between Russia and China on
one side and America and the West on the other."
Deadlock
China and Russia have vetoed Western-
and Arab-backed UN Security Council resolutions intended to raise
pressure on Assad to halt the violence and engage in talks on a peaceful
solution.
The U.N.-Arab League mediator on Syria,
Lakhdar Brahimi, also visited Cairo on Monday after making his first
trip to Damascus in his new post. Brahimi met privately with Arab League
chief Nabil Elaraby in Elaraby's home in Cairo.
During the meeting Brahimi told Reuters
that his visit to Damascus made him "form an inclusive image about the
situation in Syria that confirmed that the situation is extremely
dangerous and escalating."
Brahimi said he would next go to New
York where he would report to the UN Security Council and some Arab
ministers, who will be there to attend the UN General Assembly meeting
that starts on Tuesday. He said he would then return to Syria, without
specifying precisely when.
Davutoglu said Brahimi should have a
different mandate from Kofi Annan, the former UN secretary general who
quit as Syria envoy complaining about the impasse at the Security
Council.
"He must not allow Assad to buy more
time with this type of mission," Davutoglu said. "Assad misused Kofi
Annan's mission to increase pressure on people. Brahimi shouldn't give
Assad this chance."
A diplomatic source told the daily
Al-Ahram that Egypt would seek agreement at Monday's meeting on a call
for an immediate halt to Syria's violence, a rejection of any foreign
military intervention, and an endorsement of Syrian unity.
The quartet meeting also aimed to help
bring together Syria's myriad opposition groups and sects to achieve its
people's "aspirations for democracy, freedom and dignity," according to
Al-Ahram.
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