Russia says it won’t push for ouster of Assad from Syria

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BEIRUT — Russia said Sunday it has no intention of pushing for the ouster of President Bashar Assad, as international negotiators seeking a way out of the escalating Syrian crisis again failed to reach a breakthrough.

BEIRUT — Russia said Sunday it has no intention of pushing for the ouster of President Bashar Assad, as international negotiators seeking a way out of the escalating Syrian crisis again failed to reach a breakthrough.

Meantime, the Syria turmoil continued to spill over its borders, as four more people were killed in the latest spasm of Syria-related violence in the tense northern Lebanese city of Tripoli.

And inside Syria, another day of fierce clashes and government bombardment was reported in the suburbs of Damascus as government troops battled rebels intent on cutting off the capital and its international airport.

Violence in Syria has long been outpacing efforts to reach a diplomatic solution. International mediators have stepped up efforts to broker a peace in recent days as clashes have intensified and fears have risen about the government’s potential use of chemical weapons on its own citizens.

The sense that Assad’s rule is weakening amid rebel gains has prompted speculation that Moscow was finally willing to tell its long-time ally that it was time for him to go. U.S. and Russian talks in Dublin last week with the U.N.’s Syrian envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi, added fuel to speculation that Russia — which has on three occasions blocked proposed United Nations actions against Assad — was ready to cut their longtime ally loose.

But Russian Foreign Minster Sergei Lavrov made it clear Sunday that Moscow had not soured on the Syrian leader.

“We are not conducting any negotiations on the fate of Assad,” Lavrov told reporters in Moscow. “All attempts to portray things differently are unscrupulous, even for diplomats of those countries which are known to try to distort the facts in their favor.”

The latter comment seemed aimed at Western officials who had hinted that Moscow was ready to help expedite Assad’s departure after almost 21 months of civil conflict, tens of thousands of deaths and vast infrastructure damage.

Assad himself has not been seen publicly in recent days, though his portrait remains ubiquitous in pro-government districts of the capital and he recently told a Russia television station that he was born in Syria and planned to die there.

Russia has said repeatedly it is not wedded to Assad holding on to power, but insists that Syria’s fate must be decided through negotiations among Syrians. Yet talks appear unlikely in such a polarized atmosphere: The armed opposition says it will not negotiate with Assad, whom it calls a killer, and Assad said his government will not sit down with “terrorists,” its term for the armed opposition.

U.S. and Russian officials met Sunday in Geneva with Brahimi, the U.N. and Arab League special envoy on Syria. In a joint statement, they said the situation in Syria was “bad and getting worse,” but voiced the hope that a political solution was “still necessary and still possible.”

How to negotiate a way out when both sides seem intent on a fight to the finish is the question that has befuddled Brahimi and his predecessor, Kofi Annan, the Nobel laureate who left the Syrian special envoy post in August, labeling his task “mission impossible.”

After quitting, Annan did say that Assad needed to step down for a solution to emerge. Brahimi has not endorsed that position.

Also on Sunday, Russia downplayed White House fears that a desperate Assad could deploy chemical weapons and said the greatest danger was that part of Syria’s chemical arsenal could fall into the hands of rebels. Both U.S. and Israeli officials have also voiced concern that chemical armaments could end up in the hands of insurgents, who have overrun a number of military bases. Syria’s fragmented rebel legions include hard-core Islamist brigades hostile to the West and sympathetic to al-Qaida.

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In Lebanon, more violence erupted Sunday in the tense northern city of Tripoli as Syria returned the bodies of three Lebanese men killed after crossing into Syria to join the anti-Assad rebels. At least four people died Sunday in a new round of sectarian-tinged clashes, according to news reports, brining the reported toll to at least 17 in a week of fighting between pro and anti-Assad factions in Lebanon’s second largest city. Scores more have been wounded as feuding factions have exchanged sniper fire, rockets and grenades.

Diplomats fear Syria’s turbulence could eventually suck in Lebanon, with is weak central government and history of sectarian warfare, and also destabilize other adjacent nations, including Turkey, Jordan and Iraq. More than 500,000 refugees have already fled into neighboring nations, taxing the countries’ ability to care for the influx.