The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kerry: ‘Clarity’ achieved with Russia on Syria

Officials meet for nearly 10 hours to restore truce in civil war.

- By Matthew Lee and Jamey Keaten

GENEVA — Secretary of State John Kerry said Friday that he and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov “achieved clarity” on a path to restore a truce in Syria but that details remain to be worked out.

After meeting off-and-on with Lavrov for nearly 10 hours in Geneva, Kerry said the “vast majority” of technical discussion­s on steps to reinstate a ceasefire and improve humanitari­an access had been completed. Kerry said experts would remain in Geneva with an eye toward finalizing the unresolved steps in the coming days.

Lavrov echoed him and pointed to the need to separate fighters from the al-Nusra Front, which has ties to al-Qaida, from U.S.backed fighters who hold parts of northwest Syria.

Lavrov insisted that a resumption of U.N.-mediated talks between the Syrian government and the U.S.-backed opposition, suspended in April, should help reduce hostilitie­s that have flared in recent months. He also hailed improved relations between Moscow and Washington.

“We have continued our efforts to reduce the areas where we lack understand­ing and trust, which is an achievemen­t,” Lavrov said. “The mutual trust is growing with every meeting.”

Friday’s meeting came a month after the two men met in Moscow and agreed on a number of unspecifie­d actions to get the allbut-ignored truce back in force.

“We are close,” Kerry said. “But we are not going to rush to an agreement until it satisfies fully the needs of the Syrian people.”

In a nod to previous failed attempts to renew the ceasefire, Kerry stressed the importance of keeping the details secret.

“We do not want to make an announceme­nt ... that is not enforceabl­e, that doesn’t have details worked out, that winds up in the place that the last two announceme­nts have wound up,” Kerry said. “Until we have, neither of us are prepared to make an announceme­nt that is predicated for failure. We don’t want a deal for the sake of the deal, we want a deal that is effective.”

Underscori­ng deep difference­s over developmen­ts on the ground, Kerry noted that Russia disputes the U.S. “narrative” of recent attacks on heavily populated areas being conducted by Syrian forces, Russia and the Iranian-backed Hezbollah militia. Russia maintains the attacks it has been involved in were against legitimate terrorist targets, while the U.S. says they have hit moderate opposition forces.

Expectatio­ns had been low for the talks, particular­ly given how efforts to forge a new U.S.-Russia understand­ing have fallen short virtually every month for the past five years.

 ?? MARTIAL TREZZINI / KEYSTONE ?? Secretary of State John Kerry (center) arrives ahead of a new round of bilateral talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, about the Syrian crisis, in Geneva, Switzerlan­d.
MARTIAL TREZZINI / KEYSTONE Secretary of State John Kerry (center) arrives ahead of a new round of bilateral talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, about the Syrian crisis, in Geneva, Switzerlan­d.

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