Oman Daily Observer

Allies claim US backing for political solution in Syria

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BONN: US allies said they had won assurances on Friday from new Secretary of State Rex Tillerson that Washington backed a political solution to the Syria conflict, ahead of UN peace talks.

On the sidelines of a G20 gathering in Germany, Tillerson joined a group of countries who support the Syrian opposition for talks on a way to end the nearly six-year war.

“All the participan­ts want a political solution because a military solution alone won’t lead to peace in Syria,” German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel told reporters in Bonn, adding that “Tillerson became very involved in the debates”.

The meeting of the so-called “like-minded” nations — made up of around a dozen Western and Arab countries as well as Turkey — was the first since President Donald Trump took office.

Diplomats had said before the talks that they were hoping for clarity on whether there had been a change in US policy on Syria, particular­ly on the future of President Bashar al Assad.

The meeting came ahead of a new round of United Nations-led talks in Geneva on February 23 involving Syrian regime and rebel representa­tives.

Under Trump’s predecesso­r Barack Obama, Washington insisted Assad had to go, putting it at odds with Moscow which backs the Syrian leader. But Trump has called for closer cooperatio­n with Moscow in the fight against the IS militants in Syria, downplayin­g what happens to Assad as secondary to US interests.

With Russia’s sway in the conflict growing, Moscow has seized the initiative by hosting separate peace talks in Kazakhstan along with Turkey, to broker a fragile six-week truce between Syria’s warring parties.

Gabriel said the “like-minded” countries had agreed to step up pressure on Russia to back a political solution, reaffirmin­g that there could be no alternativ­e to the UN-led Geneva talks. “Any political solution must be obtained in the framework of the Geneva negotiatio­ns and there should not be any parallel negotiatio­ns,” he said

Tillerson, on his first diplomatic trip abroad, has used the two-day G20 event as a chance to sit down with a string of foreign counterpar­ts unsure about what Trump’s “America policy means for them.

The former Exxonmobil boss on Friday held his first talks with Chinese First” counterpar­t Wang Yi, the highest level Sino-US encounter yet after the two powers got off to a rocky start under Trump.

Trump angered Beijing by questionin­g the “One China” policy agreed in the 1970s as the basis for what has become one of the most important global relationsh­ips.

Wang only agreed to go to Bonn after a conciliato­ry phone call between Trump and President Xi Jinping in which the US president backtracke­d on his earlier comments. Tillerson has also moved. to reassure nervous allies with a cautious approach to Russia, signalling there would be no radical shift despite Trump’s pledges to seek a softer line.

 ?? — Reuters ?? US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (R), Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu (2nd R) and other diplomats listen to German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel (3rd L) speaking during a meeting on Syria at the World Conference Centre in Bonn, western...
— Reuters US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (R), Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu (2nd R) and other diplomats listen to German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel (3rd L) speaking during a meeting on Syria at the World Conference Centre in Bonn, western...

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