Russia accuses US of sparing ‘jihadists’ in Syria

Published October 1, 2016
Aleppo: Syrian pro-government forces take part in an operation to take control of Suleiman al-Halabi neighbourhood on Friday. The area is divided by the frontline that separates the rebel-held east and regime-held west of the city.—AFP
Aleppo: Syrian pro-government forces take part in an operation to take control of Suleiman al-Halabi neighbourhood on Friday. The area is divided by the frontline that separates the rebel-held east and regime-held west of the city.—AFP

MOSCOW: Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday accused the United States of protecting a jihadist group in Syria in its effort to overthrow the beleaguered regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

In an interview aired on Friday on BBC World News, Lavrov said Washington had vowed to “take as a priority an obligation to separate the opposition” from the former Al Qaeda affiliate once known as Al-Nusra Front, but that it had not done so.

“We have more and more reasons to believe that from the very beginning the plan was to spare Nusra and to keep it just in case for Plan B or stage two when it would be time to change the regime,” Lavrov said.

Moscow has repeatedly accused the US of failing on its commitment to persuade rebel forces to separate themselves from jihadist groups such as Al-Nusra, which changed its name to Fateh al-Sham Front in July after renouncing its ties to Al Qaeda.

A short-lived truce brokered by Moscow and Washington earlier this month could have led the two countries to coordinate strikes against jihadists, but the deal fell apart as both sides blamed each other for its failure. Moscow has been accused of indiscriminately bombing Aleppo’s opposition-controlled east as it helps an assault currently being conducted by Syrian government troops to capture all of the country’s second city.

The United Nations has warned that a humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in Aleppo unlike any witnessed so far in Syria’s brutal five-year war, which has claimed more than 300,000 lives.

Russia has said that it would continue its Syrian bombing campaign in spite of US warnings that Washington would suspend talks unless Moscow stopped its assault on Aleppo. The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that more than 9,300 people — including some 3,800 civilians — had been killed in the year of Russian air strikes in Syria in support of Assad.

Russia is sending more warplanes to Syria to further ramp up its campaign of air strikes, a Russian newspaper reported on Friday, as Moscow defied global censure over an escalation that Western countries say has torpedoed diplomacy.

Western countries accuse Russia of war crimes, saying it has deliberately targeted civilians, hospitals and aid deliveries in recent days to crush the will of 250,000 people trapped inside Aleppo’s besieged rebel-held sector. Moscow and Damascus say they have targeted only militants.

Published in Dawn, October 1st, 2016

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