Los Angeles Times

Airstrikes pound Syrian city

The U.S. and Russia remain at odds over how to repair the broken cease-fire.

- By Laura King and Nabih Bulos laura.king@latimes.com Times staff writer King reported from Washington and special correspond­ent Bulos from Baghdad.

BAGHDAD — As rescuers in the Syrian city of Aleppo searched for survivors between bursts of bombardmen­t, the father of one trapped toddler tore franticall­y at the debris.

An onlooker warned him to be careful to avoid further injuring the child: “He’s crying — go slowly, go slowly!”

And then the little boy chimed in, trying to calm the adults: “All right, Daddy. All right.”

Seconds later, video showed him being lifted free — one of many harrowing images posted Friday by pro-opposition activists as the eastern sector of Syria’s largest city was pounded for a second day by airstrikes.

The onslaught by Syrian government forces and their Russian backers again coincided with talks on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly in New York aimed at reviving a cease-fire that collapsed this week. The United States and Russia, which had brokered the truce this month, appeared to remain at loggerhead­s over how to mend it.

Each blamed the other for the breakdown, but both insisted they wanted to salvage the cease-fire.

In Aleppo, activists and witnesses described powerful explosions that rocked opposition-held neighborho­ods in the divided city, leaving gaping craters. And humanitari­an aid groups were among those hit.

Ammar Salmo, head of the Aleppo branch of the volunteer civil-defense group known as the White Helmets, said several of the group’s centers were hit in the latest round of bombardmen­t and one of its members was killed.

He put overall fatalities at more than 80; other activists said they expected the toll to rise. Medical facilities were overwhelme­d with the injured, and the United Nations reported that the destructio­n of pumping stations had reduced the water supply to a trickle, raising the threat of diseases.

Aleppo, a onetime cultural treasure and commercial center, has become a crucible of suffering — but is also seen by both sides as a strategic prize. If the government were able to regain control of the rebel-held eastern sector, it would mark the war’s most serious setback for the opposition.

Syrian state media, which had announced the start of the Aleppo offensive Thursday, quoted a military official as saying that the bombardmen­t was the prelude to a planned ground incursion — a scenario that observers believe would lead to an urban bloodbath.

The surge of violence in recent days shattered a brief lull brought about by the cease-fire that took effect Sept. 12. The talks in New York had been intended to shore up the truce and lay the groundwork for peace talks, but instead descended into mutual recriminat­ions.

Addressing the General Assembly on Friday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov blamed opposition attacks against Syrian government forces for underminin­g the truce. “This is not the way a cessation of hostilitie­s should be maintained,” he said.

And Lavrov assigned larger blame to the United States and its allies for a “bleeding” Middle East, saying Western policies had spawned chaos and disorder across the region.

Secretary of State John F. Kerry, who met again Friday with Lavrov, has had harsh words in turn for Syrian President Bashar Assad and his Russian backers. In an acrimoniou­s open session of the U.N. Security Council this week, Kerry decried “word games … with respect to war and peace, life and death.”

As has been the pattern in more than five years of brutal warfare in Syria, civilians in Aleppo’s rebelheld areas bore the brunt of the violence, huddling in homes that provided little shelter against what activists described as unrelentin­g strikes by warplanes and helicopter­s. Russian airpower has been a crucial factor in propping up the Assad government.

Moscow has rejected Kerry’s call for a no-fly zone over key aid routes. The renewed conflict also has blocked the delivery of humanitari­an supplies, though one convoy reached a besieged district outside Damascus on Thursday.

 ?? Ameer Alhalbi AFP/Getty Images ?? IN ALEPPO, rescuers hold a child pulled from under the rubble after government missiles struck a rebel-held neighborho­od. At least 80 were reported dead.
Ameer Alhalbi AFP/Getty Images IN ALEPPO, rescuers hold a child pulled from under the rubble after government missiles struck a rebel-held neighborho­od. At least 80 were reported dead.

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