The Scotsman

No agreement as yet between Russia and US on way ahead in Syria

- By JOSH LEDERMAN

The United States and Russia have come up short on an agreement to end more than five years of civil war between Syria’s Russian-backed government and Us-supported rebels with negotiatio­ns set to continues today.

Russia and the US have been striving for weeks to secure a ceasefire between Syrian president Bashar Assad’s government and moderate rebels that would expand access for hundreds of thousands of civilians caught in the crossfire.

The strategy has hinged on an unlikely Us-russian militarily partnershi­p against extremist groups operating in Syria.

But beyond Islamic State and al-qaeda, the two powers have conflictin­g views about who fits in that category.

“We’re not there yet,” Mr Obama said on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Hangzhou, China, where across town US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov were trying to hash out the deal.

“It’s premature for us to say that there is a clear path forward, but there is the possibilit­y at least for us to make some progress on that front.”

A senior State Department official said the talks hit a stumble on Saturday when Russia pulled back from agreement on issues the US negotiator­s believed had been settled. Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov were consulting with their government­s ahead of today’s continuati­on of discussion­s.

The conflict has killed as many as half a million people since 2011 and caused millions of Syrians to flee their homes, contributi­ng to a global migration crisis. Amid the chaos, IS has emerged as a global terror ist threat.

Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov’s talks on the sidelines of the G20 economic summit represent their third significan­t attempt since July to finalise a new Us-russian military partnershi­p that Moscow has long sought. The package would include provisions so aid can reach besieged areas of Syria and measures to prevent Mr Assad’s government from bombing areas where Usbacked rebels are operating.

US officials have said that as part of a deal, Russia would have to halt offensives by Mr Assad’s government, something it has failed to do over months of diplomatic efforts.

Negotiator­s had been hopeful a deal could come together while world leaders gathered in China, and American officials were optimistic enough that they invited reporters to a planned announceme­nt by Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov.

But officials removed Mr Lavrov’s podium just before Mr Kerry came out – alone – to announce that no agreement had been finalised.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom