Russia wants the Syrian government and opposition to agree on launching a constitutional reform process of up to 18 months, followed by early presidential elections, a draft document obtained by Reuters showed yesterday.

The eight-point proposal, drawn up by Moscow before multi-lateral talks on Syria this week, does not rule out President Bashar al-Assad’s participation in the early elections, something his foes say is impossible if there is to be peace.

“[The] popularly elected president of Syria will have the functions of commander-in-chief of the armed forces, control of special services and foreign policy,” the document said.

The proposal said the Syrian sides should agree on such steps at a future conference organised by the United Nations and added that the reform process would not be chaired by Mr al-Assad, but by a candidate agreed by all sides.

Russia and Iran have been President al-Assad’s top allies during Syria’s nearly five-year war. The United States, its Gulf allies and Turkey have said he must leave power for there to be peace. After initially dismissing Syrian opposition groups fighting Mr al-Assad, Moscow has stepped up diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict that has killed some 250,000 and displaced millions.

The document does not suit a lot of people

At a first round of peace talks in Vienna late last month, where Russia was a leading player, Moscow said it wanted opposition groups to participate in future discussions on the Syria crisis and exchanged a list of 38 names with Saudi Arabia.

The document said the Syrian opposition which takes part in the political process must form a “united delegation”and be agreed beforehand.

“[They should] share the goals of preventing terrorists from coming to power in Syria and of ensuring sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of Syria, as well as [the] secular and democratic character of the state.”

Western diplomats said it would be difficult for countries opposed to Mr al-Assad to agree on the draft Russian proposal.

“The document does not suit a lot of people,”one Western diplomat said, adding that those who disagreed with Russia’s approach were working to make sure the text would not be the basis of the talks.

The document also proposed agreeing on a list of terrorist groups. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said earlier yesterday that Moscow wanted to see such an agreement at the Vienna talks.

The text also said that for a Syrian ceasefire, “operations against Isil [Islamic State] and other terrorist groups must be excluded”.

A second Western diplomat said Moscow wanted to use this definition to cover all insurgent groups, not just jihadists such as Islamic State and al Qaeda’s Nusra Front.

“Russia wants this list to include all the groups that fight anything else except Islamic State, so that means groups against the regime,” the diplomat said.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.