DAMASCUS (Agencies)
The foreign ministers of Iran, Oman, Qatar and Syria held an unannounced meeting in the Syrian capital on Saturday ahead of an Arab summit clouded by a crisis in Lebanon.
The four-way meeting was preceded by talks between Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki and his Syrian counterpart Walid Muallem, the official SANA news agency reported.
The two officials mainly discussed "the situation in Lebanon and in the Palestinian territories," the agency said.
The four foreign ministers held their meeting at a restaurant near the city's international airport, witnesses told Reuters. Mottaki and his Qatari counterpart left Damascus immediately afterwards.
Diplomats said the meeting most likely followed up on discussions on Lebanon between Iran and Saudi Arabia in Cairo this week and how to adjust proposals submitted by the Arab League to divided Lebanese politicians to end the deadlock.
They said Syria had privately expressed backing for a new Gulf proposal to solve the crisis ahead of the March 29-30 summit of Arab leaders in Damascus.
"Little information is leaking out. Iran has an interest as well in being seen as playing a positive role," one diplomat told Reuters.
The official Syrian media did not mention the meeting but said Muallem met briefly with Mottaki during a stop at Damascus airport to discuss "developments in Lebanon".
Qatar and Oman have resisted Saudi pressure to boycott the summit to protest at what Riyadh says is Syria's role in prolonging the 16-month political crisis in Lebanon.
Damascus blames Saudi Arabia and the United States for the failure to find a solution in Lebanon -- where political deadlock has blocked the election of a new president -- and says the summit could provide a venue to discuss the issue.
However several Arab leaders, including Saudi Arabia's King
Abdullah, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Jordan's King Abdullah, are expected to stay away unless the crisis in Lebanon is resolved.
Underscoring anger with Syria, Saudi Arabia has not declared a replacement for its ambassador in Damascus, who left at the end of his term last month.
Riyadh and Damascus support rival camps in a power struggle which has left Lebanon without a president since November.
Saudi Arabia backs the parliamentary majority headed by Saad al-Hariri, son of late premier Rafiq al-Hariri, who was assassinated in Beirut in 2005.
Syria and its ally Iran support Lebanon's Shiite movement Hezbollah, which leads the opposition. |
