Russia today said it regretted a decision by the United States to shelve a meeting on the Syria crisis this week, as expectations mount of military action against the Damascus regime.
The scrapping of the planned meeting in The Hague is the latest sign of a new peak in tensions between Moscow and the West over the possibility of military strikes against President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
"It arouses regret that our partners decided to cancel the bilateral meeting" involving senior diplomats from both sides, Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov wrote on Twitter.
He added such talks would have been particularly useful at a time "when military action is hanging over this country".
Western countries including the United States are considering their response to an alleged chemical weapons attack by Assad's regime on August 21.
In a new diplomatic feud between Moscow and the West, Russia has said it believes rebels were behind the incident and has warned any military action without UN approval would violate international law.
US Under Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Ambassador Robert Ford were due to meet with a Russian delegation in The Hague to discuss progress towards organising a peace conference on Syria.
A senior US State Department official said that the sides would work to "reschedule" the meeting although Gatilov said the encounter had simply been cancelled.
"Working out the parameters of a political solution in Syria would have been especially helpful right now, when military action is hanging over this country," Gatilov said on Twitter.
The comments came a day after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov condemned the "hysteria" over the claimed chemical attack and said Western countries have yet to come up with any proof that the Assad regime was behind it.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told British Prime Minister David Cameron in a telephone call yesterday that there was no evidence yet that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons against rebels, Cameron's office said.
Pro-Kremlin Russian newspaper Izvestia yesterday published an interview with Assad who ridiculed as "nonsense" the idea that his regime used chemical weapons and warned the United States of failure if it attacked Syria.
The scrapping of the planned meeting in The Hague is the latest sign of a new peak in tensions between Moscow and the West over the possibility of military strikes against President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
"It arouses regret that our partners decided to cancel the bilateral meeting" involving senior diplomats from both sides, Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov wrote on Twitter.
He added such talks would have been particularly useful at a time "when military action is hanging over this country".
Western countries including the United States are considering their response to an alleged chemical weapons attack by Assad's regime on August 21.
In a new diplomatic feud between Moscow and the West, Russia has said it believes rebels were behind the incident and has warned any military action without UN approval would violate international law.
ALSO READ: US postpones meeting with Russia on Syria
US Under Secretary of State Wendy Sherman and Ambassador Robert Ford were due to meet with a Russian delegation in The Hague to discuss progress towards organising a peace conference on Syria.
A senior US State Department official said that the sides would work to "reschedule" the meeting although Gatilov said the encounter had simply been cancelled.
"Working out the parameters of a political solution in Syria would have been especially helpful right now, when military action is hanging over this country," Gatilov said on Twitter.
The comments came a day after Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov condemned the "hysteria" over the claimed chemical attack and said Western countries have yet to come up with any proof that the Assad regime was behind it.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told British Prime Minister David Cameron in a telephone call yesterday that there was no evidence yet that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons against rebels, Cameron's office said.
Pro-Kremlin Russian newspaper Izvestia yesterday published an interview with Assad who ridiculed as "nonsense" the idea that his regime used chemical weapons and warned the United States of failure if it attacked Syria.
ALSO READ: Syria faces the heat after chemical attack