Putin urges Syria talks

(File image) Russian President Vladimir Putin

(File image) Russian President Vladimir Putin

Published Jul 23, 2012

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Sochi, Russia - Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Syria's crisis must be resolved through negotiations not force, and warned that if President Bashar al-Assad's government was toppled a civil war could continue with roles reversed.

After talks with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, Putin said last week's vote to extend an observer mission showed that compromise could be found at the United Nations but gave no sign Russia would drop its opposition to sanctions or intervention.

“We think that the future of a country should not be decided on the basis of military victory or defeat of one of the sides, but through a negotiation process, on the basis of compromise and agreements reached,” Putin said.

“The current Syrian leadership and the armed opposition must find in themselves the strength to organise a negotiation process,” Putin told a joint news conference after the meeting in the Black Sea resort city of Sochi.

“In the course of the talks (they need to) decide how their country will live in the future.”

But he stood firm on Russia's insistence that Assad's exit from power could not be a precondition for such a process and said the overthrow of the government would only bring more bloodshed.

“We fear that if the current leadership is removed from power unconstitutionally, the opposition and the current leadership may simply trade places,” Putin said, adding that in that case “nobody knows how long civil war would continue”.

Reflecting a persistent rift over 16 months of bloodshed in Syria, Monti said he urged Moscow, which has vetoed three U.N. Security Council resolutions that would have increased pressure on Assad, to help seek new ways to solve the problem.

He said Italy understood Russia's concern over any Security Council resolution that could allow for military intervention, but suggested the lack of tough action by global powers council could be more dangerous.

“I understand Russia's concern over possible repetition of a negative experience,” Monti said in an apparent reference to a 2010 resolution allowing an air campaign in Libya, which Russia says NATO turned into a mandate to oust Muammar Gaddafi.

“But at the same time we need to take into account the risk ... that if the United Nations does not take certain action, the situation could go out of control,” he said through an interpreter. - Reuters

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