Penticton Herald

Trump, Putin don’t meet on Syria

- By The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — As the Islamic State group nears defeat, the United States and Russia are discussing next steps that could prevent the two military powers from inadverten­tly clashing in Syria and improve prospects for an end to the country’s brutal civil war.

Fears about how the messy array of forces active in Syria may collide have grown as IS loses its last major stronghold and the focus shifts back to Syria’s intractabl­e conflict between President Bashar Assad’s government and opposition groups. For the U.S. and ally Israel, a key concern is that foreign powers such as Iran will now dominate the country’s future.

U.S. officials said an agreement under discussion in recent days would focus on three elements: “deconflict­ion” between the U.S. and Russian militaries, reducing violence in the civil war and reinvigora­ting U.N.-led peace talks. The officials weren’t authorized to discuss the deliberati­ons and requested anonymity.

Yet it was unclear whether the U.S. and Russia would ultimately reach any understand­ing.

“Why are you asking me? Ask the Americans,” snapped Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov after a potential meeting Friday between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin was scrapped.

The United States had hoped that if the countries could show significan­t progress on a major global issue, it could serve as the basis for a meeting between Trump and Putin, who could then discuss and announce it during a summit in Vietnam.

In behind-the-scenes negotiatio­ns, the two sides tried to formulate framework of a deal, two administra­tion officials said.

Though North Korea and the Ukraine were discussed, the focus was on a Syria agreement.

“We have been in contact with them, and the view has been if the two leaders are going to meet, is there something sufficient­ly substantiv­e to talk about that would warrant a formal meeting?” Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Thursday in Beijing.

The Russians told reporters such a meeting was likely and that the time and place were being arranged. But talks stalled. Blaming scheduling conflicts, White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that the meeting was off just minutes before Air Force One touched down in Vietnam.

Still, the leaders shook hands Friday on the sidelines of the summit, and Sanders said it was possible Trump and Putin could interact in an informal setting. Both Trump and Putin also plan to be in the Philippine­s later in the week, where it’s possible they could cross paths again.

Russia and the U.S. have maintained a “deconflict­ion” hotline for years to avoid unintended collisions and even potential confrontat­ions as they each operate in Syria’s crowded skies.

A heavy air campaign by Russia has been credited with shoring up the position of Assad, a close ally of Moscow.

With IS nearing defeat, the U.S. and Russia are losing their common enemy in Syria and will remain in a proxy battle in which Russia backs Assad and the U.S. lends at least rhetorical support to armed opposition groups fighting the government. That has increased the need for close communicat­ion between the two powers about where their forces are operating at any given time, officials said.

The agreement also seeks to build on progress in establishi­ng “de-escalation zones” in Syria that have calmed some parts of the country.

In July, when Trump held his first meeting with Putin in Germany, the U.S. and Russia announced a deal that included Jordan and establishe­d a ceasefire in southwest Syria. The United States has said that cease-fire has largely held and could be replicated elsewhere in the country.

A key U.S. concern, shared by close ally Israel, is the presence of Iranian-backed militias in Syria that have exploited the vacuum of power. The United States and Israel have been seeking ways to prevent forces loyal to Iran — Israel’s archenemy — from establishi­ng a permanent presence. One idea hinges on a “buffer zone” along Israel’s border with Syria.

Yet U.S. and Russian interests diverge when it comes to Iran’s role in Syria.

Tehran, like Moscow, has been staunchly backing Assad, as it works to establish a corridor stretching from Iran through Iraq and Syria and into Lebanon.

The United States and Russia have been at odds for years over whether Assad could be allowed to remain in power in a future Syrian government.

Iran threatened last week that Syrian troops will advance toward Raqqa, the former IS capital, which fell to the U.S.backed Syrian Democratic Forces in October, raising the potential for a clash there. The Kurdish-led SDF also controls some of Syria’s largest oil fields, in the oil-rich eastern Deir el-Zour province — an essential resource that the Syrian government also says it will take back.

The question now is whether the U.S. is willing to confront the troops of Assad and Iranian-backed militiamen.

The Kurds are seeking a clear American commitment to help them defend their gains.

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