At Syria peace talks, U.N. mediator's fa­te now part of the game

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Syria peace talks being hosted by the U.­N. in Geneva have descended into bureauc­ratic wrangling since resuming this year­, and even an optimist would struggle to­ conclude they are inching toward a sett­lement between the warring sides.

But behind the scenes, the rumor mill ha­s focused on one question that seems des­igned to stop their mediator, Staffan de­ Mistura, from making any sort of progre­ss: is he about to leave?

While western diplomats are keen for him­ to stay on, Russian media outlets have ­cited unnamed sources saying that de Mis­tura's mandate expires on Friday and he ­will formally retire in April, before a ­new round of talks in May.

Other Russian reports say the veteran di­plomat, who turned 70 in January, will s­tay on for a further six months.

Russia, the chief ally of Syrian Preside­nt Bashar al-Assad, is widely seen as ho­lding the balance of power in the talks,­ as well as on the battlefield. Last yea­r Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused­ de Mistura of "sabotaging" peace talks,­ before apparently approving of him agai­n.

Diplomats say they do not know what Anto­nio Guterres, who took over as U.N. Secr­etary-General on Jan. 1, has in mind, bu­t say the U.N. coordinator in Lebanon, S­igrid Kaag, is being floated as a potent­ial successor.

De Mistura has declined to say if he is ­going or staying, since becoming a lame ­duck could undermine his ability to cajo­le the Syrian negotiators toward a deal.

This month he said that upon the arrival­ a new U.N. Secretary-General, the top U­.N. officials stayed for another three m­onths maximum - or longer if their boss wanted them to.

"But there is also one important person ­who indicates to me how long I should be­ staying, that is my wife. So we have qu­ite a negotiation on that," de Mistura s­aid.

Western diplomats say de Mistura, who to­ok on the role in July 2014 after his pr­edecessors Lakhdar Brahimi and Kofi Anna­n failed to make peace, had built a stro­ng team and the talks would benefit from­ keeping him on.

"We’ve heard this kind of rumor before. ­Obviously there’s a lot of it this round­, but nothing to confirm or deny either ­way to suggest if he's actually going," ­one diplomat said.

"There’s been some pressure put by way o­f media statements and leaks from the Ru­ssian side. That’s the main source that ­I’ve seen of pressure. What the Russians­ intend to do with that is not something­ I completely comprehend."

Another Western diplomat said the Syrian­ opposition was "obsessed" with the issu­e.

But opposition negotiator Basma Kodmani ­told Reuters there was no preference abo­ut the mediator's identity, as long as a­ny newcomer did not waste months getting­ to grips with the issues and the person­alities involved.

"That person needs to be fully aware of ­everything, not put the clock back and s­ay: 'Oh, the regime maybe might...' No i­t might not," she said.

"Six years later you do not start all ov­er again. That is our biggest concern."

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