Chattanooga Times Free Press

G-7 ministers seek unity in bid to press Russia over Assad

- BY JILL LAWLESS AND JOSH LEDERMAN

LUCCA, Italy — Foreign ministers from the Group of Seven industrial­ized nations met Monday to try to forge a common response to the deadly chemical attack in Syria, with new sanctions against Russian backers of President Bashar Assad one of the options on the table.

G-7 diplomats sitting down for talks in the centuries-old Ducal Palace in Lucca, Italy, hope to use outrage over the attack and wide internatio­nal support for the United States’ retaliator­y missile strikes to push Russia to abandon Assad and join a new peace effort for Syria.

Members of the group also hope to gain a sense from U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson of President Donald Trump’s next steps and foreign-policy goals.

Speaking after meeting with Tillerson, British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said ministers “will be discussing the possibilit­y of further sanctions, certainly, on some of the Syrian military figures and indeed on some of the Russian military figures.”

He said Russia had a choice: to continue backing the “toxic” Assad regime, “or to work with the rest of the world to find a solution for Syria, a political solution.”

Last week’s nerve gas attack in the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhoun, which killed more than 80 people, stirred Trump — who was previously cool to the idea of U.S. interventi­on — to strike for the first time at Assad’s forces. U.S. warships fired 59 cruise missiles at the Syrian air base from which the U.S. believes the attack was launched.

The U.S. strikes drew support from other Western leaders who have been uncertain what to make of Trump’s foreign policy. Italian Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano said Sunday that Europe’s broad support for the U.S. military strikes had contribute­d to a “renewed harmony” between the United States and its partners.

In a gesture weighted with symbolism, Tillerson visited the site of a World War II-era Nazi massacre in central Italy on Monday. He said the United States was rededicati­ng itself to hold to account “any and all” who commit crimes against innocent people.

Tillerson accompanie­d Alfano to Santa’Anna di Stazzema, where 560 civilians, including some 130 children, were killed in 1944.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States