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Bashar Al Assad Image Credit: REUTERS

Washington: The Obama administration’s best-case scenario for political transition in Syria does not foresee Bashar Al Assad stepping down as the country’s leader before March 2017, outlasting Barack Obama’s presidency by at least two months, according to a document obtained by The Associated Press.

An internal timeline prepared for US officials dealing with the Syria crisis sets an unspecified date in March 2017 for Al Assad to “relinquish” his position as president and for his “inner circle” to depart. That would be more than five years after Obama first called for Al Assad to leave.

The timeline is based on a broad UN-endorsed plan that was initially laid out at an international conference in Vienna in November. Syria, according to that strategy, would hold elections for a new president and parliament in August 2017 — some 19 months from now. In the interim, Syria would be run by a transitional governing body.

Countless hurdles lie ahead for this latest blueprint for ending five years of conflict that has killed more than a quarter-million people, created the worst refugee crisis in Europe since the Second World War and allowed Daesh to carve out a would-be caliphate across parts of Iraq and Syria.

Not the least of those hurdles is the growing rift between Saudi Arabia and Iran, which back opposite sides in the Syria conflict and had to be lobbied heavily to agree to meet in Vienna to craft a way forward for the war-torn country. Saudi Arabia executed a prominent Shiite cleric, and 46 others, and then severed diplomatic relations with Iran this week after its embassy in Tehran was stormed by a mob protesting the death of the cleric.

It is not yet clear what impact those developments might have on the Syria negotiations.

If Saudi-Iranian tensions can be overcome, if peace talks between the Syrian government and opposition go ahead later this month as planned and if they are successful, the biggest challenge to the US timeline is still that no one else has yet agreed to its specifics, particularly those related to Al Assad’s departure.

Al Assad has steadfastly refused to step down while his nation’s terrorist threat, as he sees it, persists. The timeline offers no explanation for exactly how Al Assad would leave or what his post-presidential future might hold.

And his chief backers, Russia and Iran, have resisted all efforts by outside powers to determine Syria’s future leadership, insisting that is a decision for the Syrian people. Russia and Iran may object to the US timeline’s call for Al Assad to leave six months before elections would be held.

In addition, the Syrian opposition wants Al Assad out as soon as possible. The opposition along with US allies like Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey could view the American concept as a betrayal.

The United States is balancing numerous considerations as it seeks to quell Syria’s violence and advance several strategic objectives. Its top priority now is rooting out Daesh from its headquarters in northern Syria.

Still, Obama and other US officials promised for years to end the Al Assad family’s 45-year-grip on Syria, arguing that a leader who uses barrel bombs and poison gas on his own people has lost legitimacy. Ridding Syria of Al Assad could also strip Iran of its foothold in the heart of the Arab world and dramatically change the security equation for neighbours such as Israel, Lebanon and Turkey.

In recent months, Washington and its allies in European capitals have retreated from demands that Al Assad leave power immediately as Daesh gained territory in the region and the priority shifted to defeating the militant group.

The timeline, however aspirational, shows how US diplomats and policymakers are determined to outline an exit plan for Al Assad and not let concerns over Daesh and other extremist groups allow him to cling to power indefinitely.

The document obtained by the AP starts Syria’s new political process next month. An 18-month transition period would be initiated, consistent with the plan endorsed by the UN Security Council last month. The UN’s special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, has set a Jan. 25 date for government-opposition peace talks to begin in Geneva.

The US timeline envisions the Security Council signing off on a framework for negotiations between Al Assad’s representatives and the opposition, leading to the formation of a security committee in April. That would be accompanied by an amnesty for some government and military members, and moderate opposition leaders and fighters. The transitional governing body would then be created.

In May, the Syrian parliament would dissolve, according to the timeline. The Security Council would recognise the new transitional authority and lay out the transition’s next steps. These include major political reforms, the nomination of an interim legislature and an international donors’ conference to fund Syria’s transition and reconstruction.

The next six months, through November 2016 — when Obama’s successor is elected — would be devoted to the sides drafting a new constitution. The Syrian people would get a chance to vote on that document in a popular referendum in January 2017, according to the timeline.

Only then would the process lead to what Washington calls the root cause of the entire conflict and the growing extremist threat across the Middle East and beyond: the end of Al Assad’s rule of Syria.

In March 2017, the timeline reads: “Asad relinquishes presidency inner circle departs.” The document uses the US government’s preferred spelling of Al Assad.

Syria’s new government would assume full powers from the transitional body after the parliamentary and presidential elections in August.