Davos forum founder sees Syria, Iran in spotlight at this week’s event


Associated Press

DAVOS, Switzerland

Talks over the future of Syria and Iran will occur on the sidelines of the annual gathering for political and financial elites in the Swiss ski resort of Davos, the founder of the World Economic Forum said Monday.

Klaus Schwab said in an interview with the Associated Press that there will be crossover between the forum’s 2,500 participants and the officials from the U.S., Russia and close to 40 other countries that are attending the start of the Syria peace conference several hours away in Montreux, Switzerland.

Syria’s main, Western-backed opposition group agreed Monday to attend this week’s peace conference only after threatening to sit it out because of a last-minute U.N. invitation for Iran to join in.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was forced to withdraw the invitation Monday because the Syrian National Coalition had objected to Iran’s participation because it keeps “troops and militias” in Syria and failed to endorse a 2012 U.N.-brokered road map to establish a transitional government.

But Iran still will be able to interact at Davos with many of the key players trying to end Syria’s devastating civil war.

“Here you have some of the true leaders with the influence on the region, so I am sure the results will have an impact on our own discussions,” said Schwab, a German-born economist and engineer who founded the Davos forum in 1971. Since then, the five-day gathering, which attracts heads of state, royalty and top executives, has grown into a massive networking event — what some consider speed-dating for the political and corporate elites.

Iranian leaders’ presence at Davos also coincides with the implementation of the deal agreed to in Geneva that is intended to rein in their nuclear program in exchange for easing sanctions, enabling Iran to pursue new business opportunities particularly in its oil and gas sector.