Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov today accused Washington of blackmailing Moscow over a tough UN resolution against Syria, and said the West is blinded by a desire for regime change in the war-torn country.
"Our American partners are beginning to blackmail us," threatening to stop work on implementing Syria's chemical disarmament deal unless Russia supports a Security Council resolution allowing military intervention, Lavrov told state television.
In the sharply worded interview that exposed a growing rift on Syria policy as Damascus begins disclosing its chemical inventory under the deal, Russia's top diplomat accused the West of trying to strongarm a resolution in the Security Council that would make intervention possible.
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Washington, Paris and London want a strongly worded resolution to ensure compliance, possibly under the UN Charter's Chapter VII authorising the use of force -- a move Lavrov said contradicts his agreement with US Secretary of State John Kerry.
"Our partners are now blinded by their ideological goal of regime change," Lavrov added. "All they talk about is that (Syrian President) Bashar al-Assad must leave."
"They are only interested in proving their own superiority, not in the goal that is guiding us, to solve the problem of chemical weapons in Syria," Lavrov said.
Syria has sent initial information about its chemical arsenal to the Organisation for Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), meeting a deadline set in line with a US-Russian deal reached in Geneva on September 14.
The accord averted military strikes following an August 21 sarin gas attack last month that killed hundreds of people and which Washington blames on the regime.
The plan calls for the arsenal to be destroyed by mid-2014 amid hopes that it could pave the way for peace talks to end the 30-month-long Syrian conflict that has claimed more than 110,000 lives.
Lavrov said that Russia would be willing to send troops to Syria as part of an international presence to secure the work of experts on chemical weapons sites.
"We are ready to allocate our servicemen, military police, to participate in such efforts," he said, while questioning whether "large contingents are necessary... Military observers would be enough."
Lavrov said the OPCW is "about to make a decision" on Syria but the process is threatened by the "arrogant position of some Western partners".
"They need Chapter VII, which presumes applying pressure on violators of international law, including sanctions and the possibility of using force," he said.