Question: What was your reaction to
President Obama's speech this week at the
United Nations?
Sergey Lavrov: It addressed important issues, and we hope that the stated willingness to cooperate on resolving the problems in the
Middle East would help us to find common approaches, which is the key for today's functioning of the international community. Only common action can resolve issues. No one country can solve problems which are becoming transborder, transnational, common threat and challenges for all of us.
Question: President Obama spoke about enforcement, about
Syria and on the chemical weapons agreement you and
Secretary Kerry came up with. Where do you think the
Security Council resolution on Syria will end? Do you see some enforcement mechanism being built into the Security Council resolution or not?
Sergey Lavrov: The chemical weapon problem in Syria is, first of all, the issue for the
Organization for the
Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (
OPCW).
The President of Syria addressed the
Secretary General of the United Nations and the
Director General of the OPCW with a formal request to accede to the
Chemical Weapons Convention.
Question: You're speaking of
President Bashar al-Assad?
Sergey Lavrov:
Yes,
President Assad. He asked formally to accede to the
Convention, and now Syria is under a legal obligation derived from this Convention. So this is already a binding arrangement, and the steps of the
Syrian government indicated clearly that they were fulfilling their obligations under that Convention. The OPCW developed a draft decision -- that was agreed by
John Kerry and myself in
Geneva on
September 14, and the draft decision will be submitted soon for the
Executive Council of the OPCW and this would be the main instrument to resolve the problem of chemical weapons in Syria as a member of the Chemical Weapons Convention. We also agreed in Geneva with John Kerry that we will initiate a Security Council resolution which will support and reinforce the decision of the Chemical Weapons Convention. And we set in that framework which we agreed in Geneva that we would be very serious about any violation of the obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention, we would be very serious about any use of chemical weapons by anyone in Syria and that those issues would be brought to the Security Council under
Chapter VII. This is the framework in which we were working both in
The Hague, in the OPCW headquarters and in the
UN Security Council.
Question: Secretary Kerry claims that an enforcement mechanism under Chapter VII should be part of the
UN resolution and you apparently disagree.
Sergey Lavrov: The Geneva framework is available and anyone can read what's in it. We agreed today with John Kerry that we would follow that understanding in drafting the Security Council resolution.
Question: So there's no
difference between the
American and the
Russian position?
Sergey Lavrov: As these positions are reflected in the Geneva framework of September 14, no.
Question: In President Obama's speech today, he spoke of consequences if the
Syrians fail to comply.
Sergey Lavrov: I cannot speak about individual position of any UN member. I can only speak about arrangements to which
Russia is a party, and we are a party to the Geneva framework of September 14, and are committed to implementing this fully.
Question: So if there were violations you would go back to the Security Council and get another resolution to do something about it?
Sergey Lavrov: Exactly.
Question: How did this chemical weapons agreement come about?
The White House said President
Vladimir Putin and President Obama discussed chemical weapons several times, starting at the
G20 summit in
Mexico last year. Then there's the story that Secretary Kerry just threw out this remark that if President Assad were to agree give up chemical weapons, then the
U.S. wouldn't use force. Then, Russia quickly produced this chemical weapons proposal.
@ source :
http://www.mid.ru/brp_4.nsf/0/F357D88AA0CB547844257BF20028CA04
- published: 26 Sep 2013
- views: 8379