US Syria
Policy: Signs Of Shift: Trump Son Meets Pro-Russia
Damascus Figure
The president-elect’s son reportedly met with Randa
Kassis, a Syrian politician who strongly supports
Russian intervention, in Paris last month
By Julian Borger in Washington and Raya Jalabi in New
York
November 24, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Guardian" -
A
meeting in Paris between Donald Trump’s son and a Syrian
politician with strong ties to
Russia has strengthened expectations that the new US
administration will side with Moscow in the conflict.
The meeting
Donald Trump Jr attended at the Paris Ritz on 11
October,
reported in the Wall Street Journal, was co-hosted
by
Randa Kassis, who runs a Syrian group portrayed as
the “patriotic opposition” by Moscow. Kassis is widely
viewed as pro-regime by many dissidents, because she
advocates political transition in cooperation with the
Syrian leader,
Bashar al-Assad, and because of her strong support
of Russian intervention.
“Russia
intervened to save the country, for the sake of Syria,”
Kassis said on the al-Jazeera programme
Opposite Direction on Tuesday. “The problem is that
you don’t know the Russians, you don’t understand the
Russians … you just accuse the Russians of being against
the opposition but you need to understand them.”
Bassam
Barabandi, a former Syrian diplomat who defected and is
now a Washington-based dissident said that Kassis’s
organisation does not have widespread support. “It is
really her and a group of her friends,” he said. “No one
else in
Syria recognises her as an opposition except the
regime.”
Her husband,
Fabien Baussart, is a French businessman who runs a
small thinktank in Paris called the
Centre for Political and Foreign Affairs, and has
strong commercial ties to Kazakhstan and Russia.
Baussart introduced Kassis, a former Damascus socialite,
to Sergey Lavrov, according to Joseph Bahout, a Syrian
expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace.
“She is a good
friend of Lavrov, and he invited her and several others
to Moscow and they created what is known – with a
certain irony – as the ‘Moscow opposition’,”Bahout said.
“The Russians in their cynicism tried to impose these
people as an opposition delegation to the peace talks in
Geneva. But of course the rest of the opposition all
objected.”
Kassis recently
posted comments on her Facebook page about the meeting,
saying: “Syria’s opposition got hope that political
process will move forward and Russia and the United
States will reach accord on the issue of the Syrian
crisis, because of Trump’s victory. Such hope and belief
is the result of my personal meeting with
Donald Trump Junior in Paris in October.”
“I succeeded to
pass [to] Trump, through the talks with his son, the
idea of how we can cooperate together to reach the
agreement between Russia and the United States on
Syria,” Kassis said in her Facebook posting.
Throughout his
campaign, Trump praised Russia and the Syrian
government for “fighting Isis”, although very little
of the war effort of either government is focused on the
Islamic State movement. It is mostly aimed at areas held
by other opposition groups, and their bombing of those
areas has been responsible for the great majority of the
civilian casualties, according to human rights groups.
Earlier this
month, Assad appeared to give the president-elect a
cautious endorsement, saying
Trump would be a “natural ally” if he fulfils his
pledge to fight “terrorists”.
In an
interview with the New York Times on Wednesday,
Trump said: “I have a different view on Syria than
everybody else.”
He gave no
specifics other than to say his view was opposed to the
Republican senator Lindsey Graham, who has proposed
tougher action to back some opposition groups, defend
civilians and confront Russia and the Syrian regime. He
said he had very strong ideas on Syria, but would only
discuss them off the record.
In the same New
York Times interview, Trump also suggested that his
son-in-law, Jared Kushner, might serve as an envoy on
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. That suggestion and
his son’s attendance at the Paris meeting have
reinforced earlier impressions that he would rely
heavily on personal and business connections in foreign
policy, using family members as go-betweens despite
their lack of experience.
Members of
Trump’s entourage also came under fire from a former
counter-terrorist official on Wednesday for their
lobbying on behalf of an Iranian rebel group, the
Mujahidin e-Khalq (MeK), that was on the state
department foreign terrorist organisation list from 1997
until 2012.
Daniel
Benjamin, the coordinator for counter-terrorism in the
state department from 2009 to 2012, accused the former
New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and former ambassador to
the UN, John Bolton, both candidates for high office in
the new administration, of accepting lavish fees from an
organisation that had in the past been responsible for
the deaths of American citizens and other civilians.
“You can tell a
lot about potential Cabinet nominees by the terrorist
group they shill for,” Benjamin wrote in
Politico on Wednesday. “The MeK has plenty of
American blood on its hands, as well as that of
thousands of Iranians killed while the group was a
strike force serving Saddam Hussein in the 1980s and
’90s.” |