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Russia's President; Dmitry Medvedev
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Credit:
Reuters
Russia told the U.N. Security Council on Thursday it would veto a disputed
draft resolution backing an Arab League plan to end the violence in Syria if it
were put to a vote as early as Friday, a Western diplomat said.
Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin was addressing a closed-door meeting of
the council that some envoys had said was close to agreement on the draft, said
the diplomat, speaking on condition he was not identified.
The most controversial section of the text is a phrase saying the council
"fully supports" the Arab plan, which among other things calls for
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to step aside. Moscow says that amounts to
"regime change."
Despite the Russian objections, European and Arab drafters of the resolution
were still likely to prepare a vote-ready version of the text later on
Thursday, said the diplomat, who was present at the council session.
Such a move does not necessarily mean a vote is imminent and it was not
clear when the resolution's sponsors would call for one. Colombian Ambassador
Nestor Osorio told reporters council discussions would continue on Friday.
Before the meeting, Pakistan's U.N. Ambassador Abdullah Hussain Haroon told
reporters the 15-nation council was "two words away" from agreement
on an amended version of a European-Arab draft resolution circulated to the
council by Morocco.
But that view was disputed by U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice, who said,
"That's not my impression."
Russia has led opposition to the draft resolution, which seeks to end 10
months of bloodshed in Syria as security forces have cracked down on anti-Assad
protesters. Moscow says it will not allow a repeat of a March, 2011 resolution
on Libya that led NATO to help rebels overthrow leader Muammar Gaddafi.
While Churkin has said agreement on some kind of Security Council resolution
on Syria is possible, he said earlier this week it could not be voted on until
next Tuesday at the earliest. European and Arab countries, however, have been
pushing for a vote sooner than that, perhaps on Friday.
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