Carla Babb
September 22, 2015
6:07 PM
PENTAGON—
The Pentagon said Tuesday that any additional Russian
support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad would be "fanning the
flames" of the war in Syria .
Moves to enhance the military capabilities of the Assad
government would be "counterproductive" to diplomatic efforts to end
the bloody civil war, Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said.
"For Russia
to play a constructive role in this [fight against Islamic State], there has to
be a political component that needs to move forward," he said.
First military contact
Cook's warning came four days after Secretary of Defense Ash
Carter spoke over the phone with Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Shoygu
about Russia 's deepening
involvement in Syria .
A senior defense official said the call was "constructive" but
"there was no discussion of immediate Russian activity in Syria ."
"At this point we still do not have an entirely clear
picture of exactly what the Russians are hoping to do in Syria ,"
Cook told reporters.
Clearing up that picture might prove difficult, because for
now, officials say there are no new military-to-military conversations
scheduled between the U.S.
and Russia on Syria .
When asked whether Carter thought military contacts wouldn't
continue unless the Russians committed to proceed with the political process,
Cook replied, "That was the message that the secretary delivered to
Minister Shoygu."
Political opportunity missed?
The U.S.
has repeatedly said defeating Islamic State militants in Syria requires
credible partners on the ground, along with a peaceful resolution to the
four-year civil war that includes Assad stepping down.
The Guardian, a British national daily newspaper, reported
last week that Russia
proposed that Assad could step down as part of a peace deal in 2012.
The report quoted a senior negotiator involved in
back-channel discussions at the time, former Finnish President Martti
Ahtisaari, as saying that Western powers failed to seize on that proposal.
Since then, tens of thousands have died and millions have fled from their homes
in Syria .
The Guardian reported that at the time, Ahtisaari met with Russia 's
permanent representative to the U.N., Vitaly Churkin.
“He said three things," Ahtissaari was quoted as
saying, "One, we should not give arms to the opposition. Two, we should
get a dialogue going between the opposition and Assad straight away. Three, we
should find an elegant way for Assad to step aside.”
Ahtisaari said he passed on the message to the American,
British and French missions at the U.N., but he told the Guardian: “Nothing
happened because I think all these, and many others, were convinced that Assad
would be thrown out of office in a few weeks, so there was no need to do
anything.”
Ahtisaari won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2008 “for his efforts
on several continents and over more than three decades to resolve international
conflicts.”
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