Chances of convening the seventh round of the Syrian Constitutional Committee talks
Feb 02, 2022 1584

Chances of convening the seventh round of the Syrian Constitutional Committee talks

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Chances of convening the seventh round of the Syrian Constitutional Committee talks

 


The United Nations Special Envoy to Syria, Geir Pedersen, expressed his desire to hold the seventh round of the Constitutional Committee next February, linking this to the success of the regime and opposition delegations to overcoming challenges and taking more confidence-building measures between them. Pedersen's efforts to set a date for the seventh round before the end of 2021 had previously stumbled, as the sixth round ended in October without achieving any progress or breakthrough in the talks; which prompted the UN envoy to describe it as disappointing. The special envoy seems to be counting on international support to push the political process forward and out of the stalemate, as he held bilateral consultations for this purpose with high-ranking officials from Qatar, Turkey, Iran, Russia and the European Union in December 2021. He also had talks with senior officials from the United States, Germany, France, Italy, the United Kingdom and the Arab League in January 2022. Despite all that, however, circumstances don’t yet seem to be ready for convening a round in February for several reasons; the most notable among which are:


There is no guarantee that the Syrian regime will not obstruct the talks again; especially since it was responsible for the failure of the sixth session after refusing to submit any text on drafting constitutional principles despite the agreement that all delegations should do so.

 

  •  Russia's insistence on reducing the constitutional reform process to mere amendments to the 2012 constitution, especially when the Russian Special Presidential Envoy, Alexander Lavrentiev, had previously stressed at the end of 2021 that the process of drafting the Syrian constitution should not lead to a change in power.

 

  •  Russia's lack of interest in achieving a breakthrough in the political process within the framework of the Constitutional Committee; especially when there is no satisfactory progress for Russia in discussions with the United States on issues of early recovery and reducing economic sanctions on the Syrian regime.  That being said, Moscow’s top priority in dialogue with Washington however, remains the Ukraine rather than Syria.