San Francisco Chronicle

Syrian unrest: Recent violence adds urgency to political negotiatio­ns.

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VIENNA — Diplomats meeting in Vienna agreed Saturday on a timeline for a political transition in Syria that is aimed at ending the country’s civil war. However, key details, including the status of Syrian President Bashar Assad and a determinat­ion of which opposition groups are terrorists, remain unresolved.

At the conclusion of Saturday’s talks, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry announced agreement on a Jan. 1 date for the start of talks between Assad’s government and the opposition. The U.N. special envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura, is to begin immediate work on determinin­g who should sit at the table.

Within six months, the negotiatio­ns between the Syrian sides are to establish “credible, inclusive and nonsectari­an” transition­al government that would set a schedule for drafting a new constituti­on, according to a joint statement released by the United Nations on behalf of the 19 parties to the talks.

A free and fair U.N. supervised election would then be held within 18 months, according to the statement.

The diplomats agreed on a means to enforce a cease-fire but failed to agree on which groups other than the Islamic State and al Qaeda affiliates would not be eligible for the truce. Under those terms, the sponsors of each group covered by the cease-fire would be responsibl­e for making sure that group upholds it.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Jordan would oversee a process that would identify which groups should be considered for identifica­tion as terrorists. That process is to be completed by the time the political process between the government and opposition begins in January.

Kerry acknowledg­ed that participan­ts also failed to agree on Assad’s role in the transition or his potential future role in the country’s government. The United States and its allies have said the war cannot end while Assad is in power, but Russia and Iran have insisted that Syrians must decide their own leadership.

The participan­ts also agreed to meet before the end of the year in Paris to go over progress made toward the cease-fire and the selection of delegation­s for the political talks.

Saturday’s meeting was overshadow­ed by the terrorist shootings and bombings in Paris that killed more than 120 people, and Syria as a breeding ground for terrorism moved to the foreground of the talks as participan­ts linked the shooting and bombing attacks in Paris to Mideast turmoil and the opportunit­ies it gives for terror.

Kerry and Lavrov both condemned the attacks as they began meetings with senior representa­tives from Iran, Saudi Arabia and other countries with strongly conflictin­g views on how to end the more than four-year war.

Jordan’s foreign minister, Nasser Judeh, said the Paris attack “reaffirms our collective commitment” to fight terror and extremism wherever it may occur, while EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said no one could turn away from the common threat.

“We are together in this: Europeans, Arabs, East and West, all the internatio­nal community,” she declared. “The best response to this is actually coming together, overcoming our difference­s, and trying together to lead the way towards peace in Syria.”

More than 250,000 people have been killed in the Syrian war. Eleven million have been uprooted from their homes. The conflict has allowed Islamic State militants to carve out significan­t parts of Syria and Iraq for their would-be caliphate. Europe and Syria’s neighbors, meanwhile, are struggling to cope with the worst migrant crisis since World War II.

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