Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif arrived in the Russian capital late yesterday on the same jet as Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem.
Zarif met Lavrov today and the Russian foreign minister was due to hold talks with Muallem separately tomorrow. The three sides are working to come up with a joint stance that would keep Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in power after next week's talks.
Iran's ambassador to Moscow, Mehdi Sanaie, told the Interfax news agency that the three diplomats would meet for joint talks later in the day.
"We have nothing to hide," said Lavrov. "We have no hidden agenda."
Zarif will also meet later today with Russian President Vladimir Putin to discuss curbs on Tehran's nuclear programme and the possible purchase of missiles that could fend off punitive strikes by arch-foe Israel.
The talks between the Damascus regime and its two main allies come four days after a "Friends of Syria" meeting in Paris of mainly Western and Gulf nations backing the rebels.
World powers are seeking to bring the warring parties together for their first direct discussions at the so-called Geneva II peace talks beginning on January 22.
"Russia and Iran support Assad and a political settlement to the conflict -- and this is the only thing working right now," said the analyst.
"The West has no other alternative."
Millions have been displaced and at least 130,000 killed in nearly three years. Some 70 nations that gathered in Kuwait on Wednesday raised USD 2.4 billion for what aid organisations describe as the world's worst unfolding humanitarian disaster.
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