CNN-- A Syrian minister declared "victory" for
his country on Sunday, thanking Russia for orchestrating a chemical
weapons deal to avert U.S. military action, Russia's state-run news
agency RIA Novosti reported.
"We welcome these
agreements. On the one hand, they will help Syrians come out of the
crisis, and on the other hand, they prevented the war against Syria by
having removed a pretext for those who wanted to unleash it," National
Reconciliation Minister Ali Haidar was quoted as saying.
He called the deal an
achievement of Russian diplomacy, and "a victory for Syria won thanks to
our Russian friends," RIA Novosti reported.
The Syrian regime
recently created the "national reconciliation" post to send a message
that it wants to end the brutal violence that has led to more than
100,000 deaths, according to U.N. estimates.
The opposition ridicules the post as mere window dressing.
Haidar is not part of President Bashar al-Assad's inner circle and does not speak for the entire regime.
Groundbreaking deal reached
The remarks came after
Russia and the United States reached a groundbreaking deal on a
framework to eliminate Syria's chemical weapons.
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stood side by side
Saturday in Geneva, Switzerland, as they set out a series of steps the
Syrian government must take.
Syria must submit a
comprehensive list of its chemical weapons stockpile within one week,
Kerry said, and international inspectors must be on the ground no later
than November.
Senior U.S. State
Department officials said that according to the timeline, initial
inspections of declared chemical weapons sites must be completed by
November; all production and mixing and filling equipment must be
destroyed by November; and all chemical weapons material must be
eliminated by mid-2014.
The verification and
destruction process will be carried out by personnel from both the
United Nations and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons, the body that implements the international ban on chemical
weapons use, according to the framework agreement.
Russia and the United
States will now work to get a U.N. Security Council resolution that will
keep the process under review and allow the Security Council to
consider the use of force if Syria fails to comply.
China said Sunday it welcomed the deal.
"We believe this
framework agreement has cooled the tense situation in Syria and has
opened a new opportunity to use a peaceful means to resolve the chemical
weapons issue," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said after a meeting
with visiting French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius.
China, like Russia, is a Syrian ally. Like Russia, it has veto power in the U.N. Security Council.
Opposition group wants Syrian air power restricted
A ban on chemical weapons isn't enough, a Syrian opposition group said Sunday.
It called for the Syrian regime to end the use of airpower over populated areas.
"The Syrian National
Coalition insists that the ban of use of chemical weapons, which led to
the loss of lives of more than 1,400 Syrian civilians, must be extended
to ban the use of the regime air power and ballistic weapons against
population centers, in addition to the redeployment of heavy weapons
away from population centers, and the prohibition of use of these
weapons to bomb Syrian cities and villages," the group said in a
statement.
"The world must not
allow the Assad regime to take advantage of the Russian initiative and
their joining the treaty on the prohibition of the use of chemical
weapons as an excuse to continue the daily slaughter of the Syrian
people with impunity," it added.
The group expressed skepticism about the chemical weapons deal.
"The Assad regime has a
long track record of deceit when it comes to dealing with the treaties
and empty promises in the regime attempt to buy more time," the
coalition statement said.
It asked rebel supporters to strengthen its military capabilities.
"The coalition calls
upon the Arab brothers and Friends of Syria military to strengthen the
arm capability of the military opposition to be able to neutralize the
Assad air force and his tanks to force the regime to end its military
campaign and accept a political solution that will lead to a democratic
transition in Syria," it said.
Gen. Salim Idriss, head
of the rebel Free Syrian Army, told reporters in Istanbul he has
information that Syria has already started to move chemical materials
and weapons out of the country, into Lebanon and Iraq.
Iraq denied the allegation, calling it "cheap propaganda."
"We confirm that Iraq is
against possessing such weapons and other weapons of mass destruction
anywhere in the world and under any excuse," said a statement Sunday
from the Iraqi prime minister's office.
U.N. report due soon
The United States and
its allies blame al-Assad's forces for the chemical weapons attack
outside Syria's capital last month that Washington says killed more than
1,400 people.
Al-Assad and other officials vehemently deny their forces were responsible.
U.N. Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon said Friday his team is preparing a report for the Security
Council that he believes will be an "overwhelming report that chemical
weapons were used." The report is expected to be delivered Monday
morning, according to three diplomatic sources.
The U.N. team's mandate did not include determining who was responsible for the attack.
CNN's Josh Levs, Saad Abedine, Hamdi Alkhshali, and Nick Paton Walsh contributed to this report.
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