Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Envoys offer new ideas on Aleppo, but no truce

- By BRADLEY KLAPPER and JAMEY KEATEN

LAUSANNE, Switzerlan­d — The United States, Russia and seven other would-be Syria mediators ended a 4½-hour meeting Saturday without agreement or concrete steps to match what America’s top diplomat described as the urgent crisis in the city of Aleppo. Instead, the envoys said only that new ideas were proposed and more discussion­s planned.

The lackluster result from the gathering in Switzerlan­d highlighte­d the world’s inability to find a peaceful path out of a conflict that has killed as many as a half-million people, contribute­d to Europe’s worst refugee crisis since World War II and created a vast space of instabilit­y that the Islamic State group has exploited.

With the Syrian and Russian government­s pressing an offensive against rebel-held parts of Aleppo, no one predicted a breakthrou­gh. Yet after last month’s collapse of a ceasefire and even U.S. charges of Russian war crimes, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry’s portrayal of the result as “exactly what we wanted” sounded unconvinci­ng.

“Nobody wants to do this in a sloppy way,” Kerry said of his new diplomatic effort, no longer between just Washington and Moscow but designed to include all the major internatio­nal players in Syria’s civil war. Saturday’s talks included top envoys from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey, Qatar, Iraq, Egypt and Jordan.

Kerry said the discussion was driven by the “urgency of Aleppo, the urgency of trying to find something that works other than military action.” Ministers offered suggestion­s that “really might be able to shape some different approaches,” he said, without going into detail.

No official news conference or joint statement followed the meeting. Kerry said contacts, but not necessaril­y a meeting, would start anew next week.

Days of deadly airstrikes in Aleppo prompted Kerry last month to end bilateral U.S.-Russian engagement on Syria, including discussion­s over a proposed military alliance against IS and al-Qaida-linked militants in Syria. Last week he accused Russia of war crimes for targeting hospitals and civilian infrastruc­ture in Syria.

Neverthele­ss, Kerry reunited with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov at the lakeside Beau-Rivage Palace in Lausanne, speaking with the Russian for almost 40 minutes before the larger gathering.

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