MOSCOW | BY ANDREW OSBORN
Vladimir Putin used a rare visit to Moscow by Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad to talk up the Kremlin's potential to help broker a political
settlement to the crisis as he tried to show the West Russia has become a major
player in the Middle East.
Assad flew to Moscow on Tuesday evening to thank Putin
personally for his military support, in a surprise visit that Russian state
media cast as a diplomatic coup.
It was Assad's first foreign visit since the start of the Syrian crisis
in 2011, and came three weeks after Russia launched a campaign of air strikes
against Islamist militants and rebels in Syria that has bolstered Assad's
forces.
The Kremlin, which said it had invited Assad to visit Moscow, kept the
visit quiet until Wednesday morning.
Putin told Assad he hoped progress on the military front would be
followed by moves towards a political solution in Syria, bolstering Western
hopes Moscow will use its increased influence to cajole Assad into talking to
his opponents.
Moscow, which feels shut out by the West because of the Ukraine crisis,
is keen to show its detractors it is pursuing military and diplomatic tracks
simultaneously, and Putin spoke to several regional leaders after meeting
Assad.
He talked by telephone to the kings of Saudi Arabia and Jordan, as well
as the presidents of Egypt and Turkey to brief them on the details of Assad's
visit.
Assad's confidence is likely to be boosted by his Moscow visit, which
comes as his forces wage counter offensives in western Syria against insurgents
backed by Assad's foreign opponents, as well as Islamic State militants.
"First of all I wanted to express my huge gratitude to the whole
leadership of the Russian Federation for the help they are giving Syria,"
Assad told Putin.
"If it was not for your actions and your decisions the terrorism
which is spreading in the region would have swallowed up a much greater
area."
Russian officials have repeatedly said they have no special loyalty for
the Syrian leader, but his audience with Putin will be seen in the West as yet
another sign the Kremlin wants Assad to be part of any political solution, at
least initially.
The visit also suggests that Russia, and not longtime ally Iran, has now
emerged as Assad's most important foreign friend.
Russian state TV made the meeting its top news item, showing Assad,
dressed in a dark blue suit, talking to Putin, together with the Russian
foreign and defense ministers.
aThe Kommersant daily cited unnamed sources saying
meetings between the two delegations had lasted over three hours. The Syrian
presidency Twitter account said Assad and Putin held three rounds of talks -
one of them a closed meeting and the other two including Russia's foreign and
defense ministers.
The Kremlin has cast its intervention in
Syria, its biggest in the Middle East since the 1991 Soviet collapse, as a
common sense move designed to roll back international terrorism in the face of
what it says is ineffective action from Washington.
It has been trying to get the United
States to embark on a serious dialogue with Moscow over Syria. So far, it has
only succeeded in clinching a technical deal with Washington about the safety
of both countries' air forces in Syria.
Moscow is likely to use Assad's visit to
buttress its domestic narrative that its air campaign is just and effective and
to underline its assertion that its actions show it has shaken off the Ukraine
crisis to become a serious global player.
Russia has a combined force of around 50
jets and helicopters in Latakia protected by Russian marines. It also has
military trainers and advisers working with the Syrian army.
Russia's air force says it has flown over
700 sorties against more than 690 targets in Syria since Sept. 30.
Assad, who looked relaxed, praised Moscow's
political approach to the Syrian crisis which he said had ensured it had not
followed "a more tragic scenario." Ultimately, he said, the
resolution to the crisis was a political one.
"Terrorism is a real obstacle to a political
solution," said Assad. "And of course the whole (Syrian) people want
to take part in deciding the fate of their state, and not just the
leadership."
POLITICAL
SOLUTION?
Putin said Russia was ready to help find a
political solution and hailed the Syrian people for standing up to militants
"almost on their own",
Sergei Shoigu, his defense minister, said
Russia's air support had helped the Syrian army move from defense to attack,
saying Moscow would continue to provide military support.
Putin said Russia Islamist militants
fighting Assad's forces posed to its own security. "Unfortunately on
Syrian territory there are about 4,000 people from the former Soviet Union - at
a minimum - fighting government forces with weapons in their hands," he said.
"We, it goes without saying, can not
allow them to turn up on Russian territory after they have received battlefield
experience and undergone ideological instruction."
Positive developments on the military
front in Syria would provide a basis for a long-term political solution,
involving all political forces, ethnic and religious groups, said Putin.
"We are ready to make our
contribution not only in the course of military actions in the fight against
terrorism, but during the political process," he said, according to the
transcript released by the Kremlin.
When asked whether Assad's own political
future had been discussed, Putin's spokesman declined to comment.
In Berlin, German Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier urged Russia to stop bombing targets in Syria.
"If Russia is really serious about
claiming to contribute to the stabilization of Syria, then that can't succeed
if thousands more people are forced to flee by military offensives," he
said.
A senior member of the Syrian National
Coalition accused Russia of colonial behavior.
"They are trying to deliver a message
to international and regional powers that anyone who wants to reach a political
solution in Syria must come to Russia," Monzer Akbik of the Western-backed
opposition group, told Reuters.
How Assad got to and back from Moscow
remains a mystery, but publicly available flight tracking data suggested
Assad's hosts may have laid on transport for him.
It showed an IL-76MD Russian military cargo
plane flew from Syria to Moscow's Chkalovsky military airfield on Tuesday, and
that an IL-62M plane from Russia's presidential fleet flew to Latakia, a
government controlled Syrian province, that same evening.
(Additional
reporting by Maria Tsvetkova, Ekaterina Golubkova and Jack Stubbs in Moscow, Sabine Siebold in Berlin and Dasha Afanasieva in Turkey; Editing by Christian Lowe and Dominic Evans)
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