Los Angeles Times

U.S. NOT YIELDING ON FATE OF ASSAD

- By Michael A. Memoli michael.memoli@latimes.com

MANILA — President Obama insisted Thursday that any political solution to end Syria’s civil war must include President Bashar Assad stepping down from power, rebutting Russian suggestion­s that the U.S. should bend on a key demand in the interests of aligning efforts to take on Islamic State.

Even if he were willing to consider such a scenario, Obama said, the Syrian people would never accept it.

“It is unimaginab­le that you can stop the civil war here when the overwhelmi­ng majority of people in Syria consider him to be a brutal, murderous dictator,” Obama said. “He cannot regain legitimacy.”

Bloomberg reported Thursday that Russian officials were increasing­ly confident the U.S. and France were ready to agree on coordinati­ng efforts to fight Islamic State, perhaps including Assad’s forces.

Obama has said that Assad’s status remained a sticking point deterring such coordinati­on with Russia, and that the U.S. would continue to evaluate whether Russia was serious about focusing its military strikes against Islamic State instead of also targeting other opposition forces battling Assad.

As talks continue in Vienna aimed at defining the political solution, Obama said Assad’s backers in Russia and Iran need to make a final choice, whether to continue to “prop up Assad” or to “save the Syrian state and work with the internatio­nal community … to find a government that can be truly legitimate.” He said it could take months for Russia, Iran and the Syrian government to recognize that a political solution including Iran was untenable.

The president’s comments came as he sat down for the first time with Canada’s new prime minister, Justin Trudeau, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit in Manila.

The young premier reiterated that he would fulfill his campaign pledge to end his country’s limited air campaign against Islamic State, but that Canada would do “more than its part to defend against” the militant group, including an increased deployment of forces to train local fighters.

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