Kerry pushes Syria peace talks with Russian FM

US Secretary of State returned his focus to the dormant political track, dubbed Geneva II.


Afp September 05, 2013
United States was "still working through the details" and that it had been among issues discussed by Kerry in a Thursday morning call with Lavrov. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

WASHINGTON: US Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday phoned his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov seeking to give fresh impetus to plans to hold peace talks on Syria, officials said.

After two days of major hearings in the Congress where he pleaded for backing to launch punitive US military strikes against Syria, Kerry returned his focus to the dormant political track, dubbed Geneva II.

During a May visit to Moscow, Kerry and Lavrov hatched proposals to bring the Syrian opposition and the government of President Bashar al-Assad to the table to negotiate a transition of power.

The talks were aimed at building on a ceasefire deal reached in Geneva in June 2012, which has so far failed to be implemented.

Initially due to be held by the end of May, the second round of proposed talks have been repeatedly postponed and have never materialised amid deep divisions among the Syrian opposition and a dispute over exactly which nations should be invited to participate.

The diplomatic track has also languished amid deteriorating ties between Moscow and Washington.

But US officials say they have remained focused on convening the talks despite President Barack Obama's plan for limited strikes on Syrian targets following last month's suspected chemical weapons attack by the Assad regime.

"It's important to note that even though we're focused here and the secretary's focused every day on working with Congress and working on building our international coalition for this specific targeted action, that we still continue to believe that there's no military solution," State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki said.

"We do remain focused on Geneva and using that as a venue for a negotiated political settlement."

She said the United States was "still working through the details" and that it had been among issues discussed by Kerry in a Thursday morning call with Lavrov.

The Obama administration is seeking approval from Congress for military strikes to decimate the Syrian regime's chemical weapons capability.

Whether such action would force Assad to the negotiating table was uncertain, Psaki acknowledged, but stressing that the United States would like the talks to happen as soon as possible.

"I just don't want to predict what's going to bring every side to the table, but that's part of, of course, the ongoing discussion," she told reporters.

It is likely significant however that the UN-Arab League envoy for Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, was in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on Thursday to attend a G20 summit.

And Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem, who recently spoke with Kerry, was to travel to Russia on Monday to discuss the crisis.

Russia has been a key ally of Syria throughout the war now in its third year and has been working to get the regime to sit down with the opposition.

For its part the United States has sought to build a cohesive opposition which would have the authority to negotiate for the fractured rebels seeking to oust Assad.

COMMENTS (1)

Sexton Blake | 10 years ago | Reply

Dear Mr Kerry, All you have to do in order to bring peace to Syria is stop supplying terrorists and stop supplying them with weapons. When everything settles down you can negotiate with the legitimate Syrian Government and ask for a poll in order to find out what the Syrians want. I have a bad feeling that you do not wish to find out what the Syrians want. America appears to be the major world terrorist country, under the total control of a small Eastern Mediterranean country.

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