http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/31/world/middleeast/syrian-opposition-leader-softens-position-on-talks-with-assad.html?ref=global-home&_r=0

Syrian Opposition Leader Softens Position on Talks with Assad
 
Thibault Camus/Associated Press
President François Hollande of France, left, with Syria's political opposition 
leader, Sheik Ahmad Moaz al-Khatib, in Paris in November. 

By HANIA MOURTADA and RICK GLADSTONE
Published: January 30, 2013 
  a.. 
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syria’s top political opposition leader on Wednesday 
expressed willingness for the first time to talk with representatives of 
President Bashar al-Assad, softening what had been an absolute refusal to 
negotiate with the government in an increasingly chaotic civil war. 


The opposition leader, Sheik Ahmad Moaz al-Khatib, coupled his offer with two 
demands: the release of what he described as 160,000 prisoners held by Mr. 
Assad’s government, and the renewal of all expired passports held by Syrians 
abroad — a gesture apparently aimed at disaffected expatriates and exiled 
opposition figures who could not return home even if they wanted to. 

Sheik Khatib’s offer, published in Arabic on his Facebook page, quickly 
provoked sharp criticism from others in the Syrian opposition coalition, with 
some distancing themselves and complaining that the leader had not consulted 
with colleagues in advance. The sheik later clarified in a second statement 
that he was expressing his personal opinion, while he chided critics in among 
his colleagues who he described as “those sitting down on their couches and 
then saying ‘Attack — don’t negotiate.’ ” 

Nonetheless, the offer still represented a potential opening for dialogue in a 
nearly two-year-old conflict that has threatened to destabilize the Middle 
East. 

The conflict’s potential to entangle neighbors was underscored on Wednesday 
with unconfirmed reports that Israeli warplanes had bombed a truck convoy in 
Syria that had been headed for the Lebanon border. The Associated Press quoted 
unidentified regional and United States officials as saying the target was a 
shipment of weapons including sophisticated antiaircraft missiles, possibly 
meant for delivery to the Shiite militant group Hezbollah, which is aligned 
with Mr. Assad and considers Israel its main enemy. Israeli, Lebanese and 
American defense officials all declined to comment on the report, but the 
Lebanese Army issued a statement that four Israeli aircraft had violated 
Lebanon’s airspace at least twice on Wednesday. 

Sheik Khatib made the offer as the United Nations was scrambling to raise money 
to manage the humanitarian crisis caused by the conflict, which has sent at 
least 700,000 Syrians into neighboring countries and left more than one million 
displaced inside Syria. A donor conference under way in Kuwait has produced 
commitments for about $1 billion of the $1.5 billion that the United Nations is 
seeking. 

“I announce that I am willing to sit down with representatives of the Syrian 
regime in Cairo or Tunisia or Istanbul,” Sheik Khatib said in the offer. His 
motivation to make such an offer, he said, was “to search for a political 
resolution to the crisis, and to arrange matters for the transitional phase 
that could prevent more blood.” 

There was no immediate Syrian government response to Sheik Khatib, a respected 
Sunni cleric who once had been the imam of the historic Umayyad mosque in 
Damascus. His unified Syrian opposition coalition, created at a meeting in 
Qatar two months ago, has been formally recognized by the Arab League, the 
European Union and the United States. 

Sheik Khatib’s offer was made less than a day after the peace envoy for Syria 
from the United Nations and Arab League, Lakhdar Brahimi, gave the United 
Nations Security Council a pessimistic prognosis for negotiations. 

It also followed a grisly massacre discovered on Tuesday in the contested 
northern city of Aleppo, from which anti-Assad activists posted videos online 
of scores of bound victims who had been shot in the head and dumped in a river. 
Some insurgents said the death toll exceeded 100, mostly abducted men in their 
20s and 30s. 

Both sides in the conflict blamed the other for those killings, just as they 
have traded accusations for other atrocities, including two major explosions a 
few weeks ago that killed more than 80 people at the University of Aleppo. 
Outside assessments based on video of the university blasts have suggested that 
a Syrian military missile was responsible. 

Sheik Khatib did not hide his contempt for Mr. Assad’s government in his 
statement, saying, “One can’t trust a regime that kills children and attacks 
bakeries and shells universities and destroys Syria’s infrastructure and 
commits massacres against innocents, the last of which won’t be the Aleppo 
massacre, which is unprecedented in its savagery.” 

But he decided to reach out, he wrote, partly because the Syrian government had 
publicly invited political opposition leaders this week to return to Damascus 
for what it called a dialogue. 

Three weeks ago, Mr. Assad said in a speech that he was open to reconciliation 
talks but not with political opponents he described as terrorists, the 
government’s generic term for armed insurgents. At the time, most members of 
the political opposition dismissed Mr. Assad’s speech as meaningless. 

The opposition’s longstanding position has been that Mr. Assad must resign as a 
precondition for any talks and that he cannot be part of any transitional 
government. Mr. Assad and his aides have said he has no intention of resigning 
and may even run for another term in elections next year. 

Hania Mourtada reported from Beirut, and Rick Gladstone from New York. 
Reporting was contributed by Anne Barnard and Hwaida Saad from Beirut, Isabel 
Kershner from Jerusalem and Eric Schmitt from Washington. 


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