France Is Making a Grave Mistake Trusting Putin

France Is Making a Grave Mistake Trusting Putin

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has asked France to draw up a map of where groups fighting Islamic State militants operate in Syria in order not to bomb them, France’s foreign minister said on Friday. France is making a grave mistake trusting Putin whose sole goal is to prop us the Assad regime, not destroy ISIS.

French President Francois Hollande and Putin agreed during talks in Moscow on Thursday to exchange intelligence on Islamic State and other rebel groups to improve the effectiveness of their aerial bombing campaigns in Syria.

“He asked us to draw up a map of forces that are not terrorists and are fighting Daesh (Islamic State). He committed to not bombing them once we’ve provided that,” Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on RTL after accompanying Hollande to Moscow. Fabius is making a grave mistake trusting Putin with this information. He may strike these positions soon.

The West has accused Moscow of targeting mostly Western- backed rebel groups fighting Syria’s psychopath Baschar al-Assad instead of Islamic State.

France has stepped up it aerial bombing campaign of Islamic State targets in Syria since the group claimed responsibility for attacks in Paris on Nov. 13 that killed 130 people.

The militants have also claimed the downing of a Russian airliner that broke up over Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula on Oct. 31, killing all 224 people on board.

“There is now one point which everyone agrees and that is the objective of destroying Daesh,” Fabius said referring to the Arabic acronym for Islamic State. “I think on that we are progressing.”

He added that immediate priorities for both sides in the coming weeks would be to free Raqqa, Islamic State’s Syrian stronghold, as well as targeting oil infrastructure controlled by the group.

“It is the neurological center of Daesh, where attacks, especially those in France, originated,” he said.

However, in what could prove a stumbling block to cooperation between Moscow and the West, Putin and Hollande remained at odds on Thursday over the fate of Syria’s psychopath Baschar al-Assad.

Assad is an ally of Russia but Western countries, Turkey and Sunni Arab states such as Saudi Arabia blame him for Syria’s nearly five-year civil war and the crimes against humanity his regime committed.

Fabius said:

“If we want to move towards a free, united … Syria, it cannot be that he (Assad) who is at the origin of 300,000 deaths and millions of refugees can lead (Syria) … Assad cannot be the future of his people.”

The United States has already sent special forces and Fabius said France could follow suit.

“There is a rule as regards committing special forces and that (is that) in general we don’t say it,” he said. “So we could do it without saying it and if we do, it would by definition be a small number.”

Reuters contributed to this article.

France Is Making a Grave Mistake Trusting Putin

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