The German foreign minister
says talks with the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad may be
necessary in order to find a way out of the four-year-long crisis in the
Arab country.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Wednesday
that talks with Assad would become necessary as the only solution to the crisis
in Syria is a diplomatic one. "The way to end the violence will only be
achieved through negotiations for a political solution. Even though this will
require negotiations with the Assad government,” Steinmeier said in an
interview with German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung.
The top German diplomat also supported ongoing
efforts by the UN Secretary General's special envoy to Syria, Staffan de
Mistura, who is continuing negotiations with Assad and the so-called opposition
groups. The remarks by Steinmeier come against a backdrop of reactions by
various governments to the idea of holding talks with Assad, which had
earlier been proposed by US Secretary of State John Kerry.
Some governments, including Turkey, have
reacted furiously to the call by saying nothing would come out of such talks.
France and Britain have also adopted similar positions.
Kerry, whose country is a main
supporter of anti-government militants in Syria, said Sunday that
launching negotiations with Assad would be inevitable if a settlement is to
emerge from the conflict, which has claimed the lives of more than 215,000
people since March 2011. “We have to negotiate in the end” with Assad,
Kerry said in an interview with CBS News.
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