G20 leaders fail to reach consensus on Syria issue
The G20 summit has failed to heal the rift over US plans for military action against the embattled Syrian regime, as world leaders today could not reach a consensus on the deeply divisive issue.
Russian President Vladimir Putin met US President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the G20 summit and held talks on Syria. Putin later said the meeting did not end their differences on the conflict.
“We spoke sitting down... It was a constructive, meaningful, cordial conversation. Each of us kept with our own opinion,” Putin told reporters.
Putin’s chief foreign policy aide Yury Ushakov said that the “contradictions remained” after the talks that lasted for nearly half an hour.
The US government accuses President Bashar al-Assad’s forces of killing 1,429 people in a poison-gas attack in the suburbs of Damascus on August 21, a charge denied by the Syrian government.
Obama discussed the deepening crisis in Syria with other G20 delegates at a lengthy working dinner last night where their differences in opinion became obvious. On the final day of their talks these divisions were even more entrenched.
Putin hosted the dinner that ran on into the early hours of this morning but failed to win a breakthrough on how to halt the imminent conflict in Syria.
The Syrian issue dominated the dinner meeting during which Prime Minister Manmohan Singh made an intervention and said India is opposed to any unilateral military action against Syria without UN authorisation.
Planning Commission Deputy Chairperson Montek Singh Ahluwalia said that it was the Prime Minister’s view that the world community should wait for the report of the UN inspectors on the alleged use of chemical weapons in Syria.
The Prime Minister also told his fellow G20 leaders that India condemns the use of chemical weapons whether in Syria or anywhere in the world, Ahluwalia, who was present at the dinner meeting, told reporters here.
Many leaders at the dinner remained in doubt about whether Assad’s regime was behind the attack, according to a French official in St Petersburg.
Earlier, a fleeting interaction between Obama and Putin became the high-drama moment of the summit, underscoring the laboured state of relations between the two leaders who stand on opposing sides of the Syrian conflict.
Russia has emerged as one of the most staunch critics of military intervention against the Assad regime, saying any such move without UN blessing would be an aggression.
Post new comment