But critics continued to ask why the list of the guests had a room for despots while the former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Tony Blair, both from the Labour Party, have been excluded.
Human rights groups had criticized the decision to invite Ambassador Syrian Sami Khiyami to Prince William and Kate Middleton wedding at Westminster Abbey on Friday.
More than 450 people have been killed since mid-March to revolt against the authoritarian regime of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, with 120 dead over the weekend.
The Government said ambassadors of the countries with which Britain has "normal diplomatic relations" was invited to the marriage - some 185 in all - and that an invitation not tolerate the behaviour of regimes.
But the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Thursday that "the attacks this week against civilians by the Syrian security forces, which we have condemned, the Minister for Foreign Affairs has decided that the presence of the Syrian Ambassador to the royal wedding would be unacceptable and that he should not attend to the."
He said that Buckingham Palace shared this point of view.
Khiyami said that he was not surprised by the decision, he attributed to "the effect of media on the decisions of the Government."
"I think it is a little annoying but it it did not consider a question that would jeopardize any ongoing relations and discussions with the British Government", he told the BBC.
Britain has been strongly critical of the violence in Syria and Wednesday convened Khiyami for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for a dressing down.
Other diplomatic omissions from the list of guests include the ambassadors of the Libya - where Britain is involved in the NATO action against the regime of Muammar al-Gaddafi - and Malawi, whose Envoy was expelled from London this week in a diplomatic tit-for-tat rivalry.
Among the guests of the royal marriage criticized by rights activists are absolute monarch of Swaziland, King Mswati III. the Ambassador of the regime of President Mugabe to the Zimbabwe; and the Prince Mohamed bin Nawaf bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia.
Demonstrators planned a demonstration outside the Palace of Buckingham Thursday to condemn the role of Saudi Arabia in quashing dissent to the nearby Bahrain.
Crown Prince of Bahrain Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa, has declined an invitation from marriage, saying: it is not disorders of the nation in the Gulf to tarnish the celebration. The Bahrain leaders have imposed martial law and are supported by a military force led by Saudi Arabia to try to quell a revolt that began in February.
Commentators have also noted the failure of Blair and Brown. The two ex-premiers of the work are not invited to the marriage, while their conservative counterparts John Major and Margaret Thatcher. Thatcher has decreased because of poor health.
Suggestions of Palace rejected the royals felt closest of conservative politicians for working ones. But some have suggested that Queen Elizabeth II cooled to Blair when he informed the Royal family to show more emotion the death of Princess Diana in 1997. His wife, Cherie, have also refused to bow to the Queen and revealed in a memorandum that the son Leo was designed during a visit to the Royal estate at Balmoral.
Representatives of the Palace, said that the decision was not a snub, but a case or the Protocol. Brown and Blair are not Knights of the Garter, order of knighthood ceremony, while Major and Thatcher are.
Blair insisted that he was not offended. On a visit to Colombia, he said the absence of an invitation was "is not a problem at all" and wished the prince and his fiancée every happiness, the British Press Association news agency reported.
But former Foreign Minister Jack Straw said it was strange that Blair and Brown had not been invited while the Ambassador of the Syria had.
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