The Russian Foreign Ministry announced that the peace talks between the Syrian government and the opposition could be held in Moscow next month. The talks are set to take place sometime after Jan. 20, ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said at a briefing on Thursday. The first stage of the talks will bring together representatives of home-based and foreign opposition, and representatives of the Syrian government would join them in the next stage. Lukashevich wouldn't name the opposition leaders and groups who could take part in the Moscow talks, saying Russia is still awaiting reaction from some of them. Lukashevich said that the Syrian government could be represented by Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem or other officials, but Assad himself would be unlikely to participate. "It's hard to exclude anything, but in this case the presidential level doesn't fit the format of the consultative meeting," he said. Lukashevich said it wasn't immediately clear if U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura would join the Moscow talks, adding that his participation couldn't be excluded. De Mistura has attempted to decrease the level of carnage in Syria through a plan for "freezing the conflict" in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo as a step toward a broader settlement. Lukashevich said that the Syrian conflict should be settled by political and diplomatic means, but reaffirmed Moscow's support for the Syrian government's battle against the militants from the Islamic State group and other extremists. He noted that the IS has managed to strengthen its potential despite the U.S.-led airstrikes, pointing at the group's capture of a Jordanian pilot whose warplane crashed in Syria while he was carrying out airstrikes Wednesday.