The failure of the European Union to agree on a new arms embargo for
Syria is undermining the peace process, Moscow says. But the delivery of
S-300 surface-to-air missiles may help restrain warmongers.
The comments come from Deputy Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Ryabkov, referring to the results of Monday’s meeting in
Brussels. After a lengthy negotiating session, EU governments
failed to resolve their differences and allowed a ban on arming
the Syrian opposition to expire, with France and Britain scoring
an apparent victory at the expense of EU unity.
The EU's move, which the Russian diplomat branded as an "example
of double standards", opens the door for Britain and France to
supply weapons to Syrian rebels fighting the regime of President
Bashar Assad.
Criticizing Europe’s decision to open the way for potential arms shipments to Syrian
rebels, Russia insists that its own sale of arms to the Syrian
government helps the international effort to end the
two-year-long conflict, the diplomat added. He was referring to
the delivery of the advanced S-300 long-range air defense
systems, which Russia is carrying out under a contract signed
with Syria several years ago.
“Those systems by definition cannot be used by militant groups
on the battlefield,” Ryabkov said. “We consider this
delivery a factor of stabilization. We believe that moves like
this one to a great degree restrain some hotheads from escalating
the conflict to the international scale, from involving external
forces.”
However, Russia has neither confirmed, nor denied “the status of
those shipments.”
“The only thing I can tell is that we are not refusing from
them,” Sergey Ryabkov said. “We see that this question
worries our partners, but we have no reason to reconsider our
position in this sphere,” he said.
Despite the uncertainty around S-300 shipments, Israel said it
will know how to act if Russia does supply surface-to-air
missiles.
"I can say that the shipments are not on their way yet,"
Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon told reporters. "I hope they
will not leave, and if, God forbid, they reach Syria, we will
know what to do," he said, without disclosing his sources.
Israel is concerned by possible Russian supplies to Syria, saying
that advanced weapon systems could end up in the hands of Iran or
the Lebanese Hezbollah group.
Once the Russian SAM missiles are deployed by Syria, it will have
a better control of its airspace. The country endured three
airstrikes this year, which are widely thought to have been
conducted by Israel, but were never officially confirmed as such.
Britain and France have made a
commitment not to deliver arms to the Syrian opposition
"at this stage," an EU declaration said. EU officials,
however, said the commitment effectively expires on August
1.
However, UK Foreign Secretary William Hague has stressed that
Britain may start arming the rebels before an August 1, saying
that it has a right to do so from now on. At the same time, he
noted that Britain would only send arms to Syrian rebels with
other countries and not in violation of international law.
London and Paris have argued support for rebels fighting Assad by
allowing EU arms deliveries, despite the fact that extremist
elements are known to work alongside the rebels.
Other EU governments, led by Austria and Sweden, argued that
sending more weapons to the region would increase violence and
spread instability.
Russia's envoy to NATO Aleksandr Grushko said that the abolition
of the EU arms embargo on the Syrian opposition will only
exacerbate armed conflict in that country.
"We need to refrain from taking steps that would be contrary
to this logic. Such steps include armed or non-lethal support to
the opposition. This just adds fuel to the fire," Grushko
said on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Moscow and Washington remain undecided as to the
content of a proposed international conference on Syria,
according to Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov.
"There remains a gap between the positions of Russia and the
US regarding some issues and aspects of this major international
crisis," he emphasized.
"And we, for our part, cannot agree to hold such events [the
international conference on Syria] amid a situation where
partners and possible participants in such a conference seek to
impose solutions on the Syrian people from the outside, as well
as predetermine the course of a transitional process, the
parameters of which have not been determined yet," Ryabkov
said.
http://rt.com/news/eu-arms-syria-embargo-russia-870/
Wednesday 29 May 2013
Russia slams end of EU arms embargo, calls S-300s ‘stabilizing factor’ in Syria
Posted @ 16:36
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