Kofi Annan arrived in Damascus yesterday in a desperate bid to rescue his peace plan and prevent Syria from sinking deeper into civil war, but hopes of a united international front were dashed when Russia refused to unequivocally condemn President Bashar al-Assad's regime for the Houla massacre.
The United Nations-Arab League envoy held talks with the Syrian leader while the British Foreign Secretary, William Hague, sat through a tense press conference in Moscow in which his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, insisted all sides shared the blame for the massacres of the past few days.
Russia's backing of a UN Security Council statement condemning the deaths on Friday of more than 100 civilians in Houla had raised hopes that Moscow might finally relax its opposition to putting real pressure on Assad's regime, which Russia views as a key ally in a volatile region.
Lavrov conceded that government forces bore the main responsibility for the massacre, but insisted that the presence of knife and bullet wounds on some corpses meant the opposition was also involved. He also suggested that recent bombings in Syria bore "all the hallmarks of al-Qaeda".
"We are dealing with a situation in which both sides evidently had a hand in the deaths of innocent people."