The Delaware Gazette

Iran tries to calm Syria crisis as violence rages

ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY

Asso­ci­ated Press

BEIRUT — As Syr­ian forces strug­gled to drive rebels from the country’s largest city, the regime’s key ally Iran tried Thurs­day to start an alter­na­tive polit­i­cal process to address the crisis.

Iran gath­ered an array of nations rang­ing from strong sup­port­ers of Dam­as­cus to far-flung nations a world away from the Syr­ian civil war.

The one-day forum is unlikely to result in any inter­na­tional con­sen­sus, but it shows Iran’s resolve to stand by Pres­i­dent Bashar Assad as his forces try to crush the 17-month-old uprising.

On Thurs­day, Syr­ian rebels said they were low on ammu­ni­tion but still man­aged to put up resis­tance against a regime ground offen­sive in the city of Aleppo, a cen­ter of fight­ing for more than two weeks.

Tehran billed Thursday’s con­fer­ence as a way to focus on dia­logue — an alter­na­tive to Western-led ini­tia­tives that call for Assad to give up power.

Iran has said in the past that the Syr­ian regime’s crit­ics fail to take into account vio­lence by the rebels.

“Iran is against the killing of unarmed peo­ple and cit­i­zens by any side,” Iran­ian For­eign Min­is­ter Ali Akbar Salehi said at the gathering.

He also warned that send­ing weapons to the oppo­si­tion will only fuel the cri­sis, and he accused rebels of using civil­ians as “human shields.”

Syr­ian rebels last week inter­cepted a bus car­ry­ing 48 Ira­ni­ans in a Dam­as­cus sub­urb and seized them. Rebels claimed the men are mil­i­tary per­son­nel, includ­ing some mem­bers of Iran’s pow­er­ful Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Guard, who were on a “recon­nais­sance mis­sion” to help Assad’s crackdown.

Iran, how­ever, says the 48 were pil­grims vis­it­ing a Shi­ite shrine in Dam­as­cus. Salehi said Wednes­day that some of the pil­grims are retired mem­bers of the army and Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Guard.

The over­whelm­ingly Sunni Mus­lim rebels have also seized 11 Lebanese Shi­ite pil­grims who have been held in north­ern Syria since May.

Salehi said some 30 coun­tries attended the meet­ing, includ­ing Rus­sia and China, as well as far-off Benin, Cuba and Mau­ri­ta­nia. The meet­ing was called at short notice, and most coun­tries were rep­re­sented at the ambas­sador level.

Rus­sia in the past has urged the West to allow Tehran to take part in inter­na­tional dis­cus­sions on how to set­tle the Syr­ian cri­sis, argu­ing that the Islamic repub­lic could play an impor­tant role. Moscow has been the main pro­tec­tor and ally of Assad’s regime, shield­ing it from U.N. sanc­tions over its bru­tal crack­down on an upris­ing that has evolved into a full-blown civil war.

The U.S. dis­missed the Iran­ian gathering.

“We think the Iran­ian behav­ior in Syria is destruc­tive,” State Depart­ment spokesman Patrick Ven­trell said. “It’s just hard for us to imag­ine that after putting so much effort into keep­ing Assad in power … how they can be a con­struc­tive actor in facil­i­tat­ing a polit­i­cal solu­tion to the crisis.”

On Thurs­day, gov­ern­ment troops and rebels clashed in oppo­si­tion bas­tions of Aleppo, a city of 3 mil­lion people.

The state news agency claimed Wednes­day that Assad’s force had regained con­trol of the Sala­hed­dine neigh­bor­hood, the main rebel area in Aleppo. But activists said rebels were still putting up a fight there on Thursday.

“The bat­tle is still going on in the streets of Sala­hed­dine and in other neigh­bor­hoods in Allepo,” rebel spokesman Abdel Azziz Salameh told The Asso­ci­ated Press. “Our fight­ers have a short­age of ammu­ni­tion but they have not withdrawn.”

The regime has been try­ing to drive rebels out of Aleppo for two weeks. But the blis­ter­ing attacks on rebel posi­tions from the ground and the air appear to be only slowly chip­ping away at the opposition’s grip on its strongholds.

Aleppo-based activist Moham­mad Saeed said troops were using war­planes and tanks to shell the towns of Hre­i­tan and Tel Rifat north of Aleppo, from where most of the rebels con­verged on the city.

“They are try­ing to cut the main lines from Tel Rifat to Aleppo,” Saeed said.

Aleppo holds great sym­bolic and strate­gic impor­tance. Some 25 miles (40 kilo­me­ters) from the Turk­ish bor­der, it has been a pil­lar of regime sup­port dur­ing the upris­ing. An oppo­si­tion vic­tory there would allow eas­ier access for weapons and fight­ers from Turkey, where many rebels are based.

Syria’s close ties to Iran and the Islamic mil­i­tant group Hezbol­lah in Lebanon mean that the con­flict has the poten­tial to draw in the country’s neighbors.

On Thurs­day, Lebanese offi­cials arrested Michel Samaha, a for­mer Lebanese min­is­ter and par­lia­ment mem­ber, who is one of the most ardent Lebanese sup­port­ers of the Syr­ian regime.

Samaha often appeared on local TV sta­tions as an ana­lyst and spoke out in favor of the regime. His wife, Gladys, told local media that secu­rity agents kicked in the front door early Thurs­day and pulled Samaha from his bed. She called his arrest a purely polit­i­cal deten­tion because of his polit­i­cal position.

But Lebanese offi­cials said only that he was arrested for “secu­rity” rea­sons. They spoke on con­di­tion of anonymity because they were not allowed to speak to the media.

Also Thurs­day, Assad appointed a new prime min­is­ter to replace the one who defected to neigh­bor­ing Jor­dan this week. State-run news agency SANA said he appointed Health Min­is­ter Wael Nader al-Halqi, a Sunni mem­ber of the rul­ing Baath party from the south­ern province of Daraa, the birth­place of the revolt.

Al-Halqi replaces Riad Hijab, whose defec­tion was a humil­i­at­ing blow to the regime. Like nearly all promi­nent defec­tors so far, Hijab is a mem­ber of Syria’s major­ity Sun­nis — the Mus­lim sect which forms the bedrock of the uprising.

Still, power remains closely held within Assad’s inner cir­cle and the most sig­nif­i­cant lead­er­ship is dom­i­nated by mem­bers of the rul­ing elite’s minor­ity Alaw­ite sect, an off­shoot of Shi­ite Islam.

AP News Posted by on Aug 9 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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