Syrian opposition says West is already aiding rebels

The diplomat said Western powers still considered a military solution was “going
to take a long time and a high cost”, and that attempts to bring it to
an end through pressure on the regime, including from Russia, were still the
best hope.

William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, arriving at the “Friends of Syria”
conference, said that Britain was not contemplating sending arms. “There
may well be people who say that, and it reflects the intense frustration
that we all feel,” he said.

“We have in the European Union an arms embargo on Syria, so of course we
will observe that arms embargo in all directions.”

Western officials and the SNC are keen to stress the “humanitarian”
purpose of the meeting of “Friends of Syria” in Tunis today, a
gathering of countries keen to put an end to the crisis organised in light
of the failure of the United Nations to take action. More than 50 foreign
ministers will be attending.

They will discuss proposals by the Red Cross and the SNC to establish “humanitarian
corridors” allowing the access of aid, with the agreement of the Syrian
authorities. One suggestion is for a daily two-hour ceasefire to allow
supplies in and the injured to be taken to safety.

That proposal would rely on Russia, which has agreed to the plan in outline,
putting pressure on the regime. But Russia and China, which support the
regime and have vetoed attempts to censure it and call for President Assad
to step aside at the UN, are both boycotting the conference.

Humanitarian relief, which a draft conference communique demands be allowed
within 48 hours, is likely to be the first task for Kofi Annan, the former
UN secretary-general appointed as a special envoy on Thursday night.

The gathering will make a key diplomatic breakthrough, recognising the SNC as “a
legitimate representative of Syrians seeking peaceful democratic change”.

This stops short of the recognition granted in the early stages of the Libyan
uprising to the Transitional National Council as the country’s legitimate
government. But Western leaders hope it will give credibility to the main
Syrian opposition voice in discussion of what will happen following what
they regard as an “inevitable” transition of power.

It is also a warning of the possible “Libyan” fate awaiting the
Assads, and an encouragement to senior figures inside the regime but not
personally loyal to it that there is an alternative.

“We, in common with other nations, will now treat them and recognise them
as a legitimate representative of the Syrian people,” Mr Hague said.

The draft communique being discussed makes no mention of military intervention
or even the supply of weapons. Western officials have ruled out direct
intervention and, while not denying that supplying weapons is an option and
a last resort if all else fails, say it is not on the agenda in the
immediate future.

However, a state department official in a briefing yesterday pointedly refused
to rule out negotiations on the issue today, behind closed doors.

Mrs Kodmani told The Daily Telegraph that matters wrere already further
advanced than that. “The provision of arms is now a consensus,”
she said.

“There are informal networks that have been operating. Many arms are
getting into the country.” She specified that “Western”
countries were providing communications, body armour and night-vision
goggles.

This is particularly significant as these, along with technical and advisory
support on the ground from special forces, represented the limits of British
military aid to Libya.

Actual weapons were largely supplied by Qatar, which is also the driving force
for intervention in Syria by the Arab League.

The rebels are largely dependent on Kalashnikovs, many brought with them by
defecting regime troops but some bought at inflated prices on the black
market in Turkey and Lebanon, rocket-propelled grenades, and a few mortars.
They are believed to have a small number of more specialised weapons taken
from the regular army, including anti-tank guided weapons, at least one of
which has already been used successfully in the battlefield.

As the diplomats gathered, the bombardment of Syrian cities continued.

Five more people died in the Homs suburb of Baba Amr, where two western
jouranalists, Marie Colvin of The Sunday Times and Remi Ochlik, a French
freelance photographer, were killed on Wednesday.

Attempts were continuing to rescue other journalists wounded at the same time,
including Paul Conroy, a British photographer on assignment with The Sunday
Times, and Edith Bouvier, a French reporter.

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