EU's Mogherini: Russian Syria Intervention a 'Game-Changer'

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EU foreign affairs head Federica Mogherini warned Monday that Russian intervention in Syria was a very high-risk "game-changer" as the international community seeks a political solution to the war.

"It is for sure a game-changer, it has some very worrying elements... it has to be coordinated, otherwise it risks being extremely dangerous, not only from a political point of view but also military," Mogherini said.

She said Russian military support for long-time Moscow ally President Bashar al-Assad had to be directed against the extremist jihadi fighters of Islamic State, not against the rebel groups seeking his ouster backed by the West.

Moscow says its air and missile strikes include IS, but the West believes they seek to bolster Assad's position and let him to retake ground lost in the past 18 months.

The 28-nation European Union is divided over what role Assad can play in a solution to a conflict which has claimed some 250,000 lives so far.

Mogherini refused to be drawn one way or the other as she arrived for an EU foreign ministers' meeting in Luxembourg dominated by the crisis.

She said the EU would put all its energy to support UN efforts to broker a peace deal and "this is a process which has to have all the relevant actors around the table."

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond warned that while there could be some flexibility on working with Assad, there were serious risks too of driving the rebels into the arms of IS.

"We are very clear that we cannot work with Assad as the long-term solution for the future of Syria," Hammond said.

"We can be flexible about the manner ... the timing of his departure, but if we try to work with Assad, we will only drive the opposition into the arms of IS, the very opposite of the outcome that we want," he said.

A draft statement of the meeting's conclusions on Syria seen by AFP refers to a "peaceful and inclusive transition," without mentioning Assad.

It adds however: "There cannot be a lasting peace in Syria under the present leadership and until the legitimate grievances and aspirations of the Syrian society are addressed."

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Sunday that Russia's military actions in Syria were meant to "stabilize the legitimate authorities and create conditions for finding a political compromise."

Comments 3
Thumb Mystic 12 October 2015, 13:05

Go ahead and try to stop the Russians then pajama.boy.

Try help your "moderate" salafi friends.

Default-user-icon performing his jihadi doodoo (Guest) 12 October 2015, 13:14

The more the game changes the more ig stays the same, bottom line you can bomb from the sky all you want at the end the war is won by boots on the ground and neither the syrian army, iranian guards nor any of it's iranian mercenaries imported from Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan, Pakistan or anywhere else have been able to do the job properly in 4 years now, they keep losing ground and even their so called victories have all been temporary if not fake.

Default-user-icon Frigate! (Guest) 12 October 2015, 15:32

Yeah Southern, Russia is so committed to fighting terrorists with Neanderthal islamic ideologies out of 9 rockets launched from warships in the Caspian sea 4 fell in Iran.