Politics

Syria crisis: 'We're working very hard' for peace, says U.S.

U.S.-led talks on the Syria conflict in Lausanne on Saturday had a good consensus on a number of possibilities that could lead to a ceasefire in Syria, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said.

U.S. secretary of state discusses diplomatic solution with foreign ministers of Russia, Saudi Arabia

Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, left, and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry were among negotiators at a meeting where they discussed the crisis in Syria, in Lausanne, Switzerland. (Jean-Christophe Bott/Reuters)

U.S.-led talks on the Syria conflict in Lausanne on Saturday had a good consensus on a number of possibilities that could lead to a ceasefire in Syria, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said.

Kerry added to reporters, however, that there were some difficult, tense moments in the talks and that the next contact between sides at the talks would be on Monday to discuss future steps.

He said the parties "might be able to shape some different approaches" from Saturday's meeting.

The United States, Russia and others have been trying to help mediate Syria's civil war and are searching for a diplomatic process that could succeed where last month's collapsed ceasefire failed.

With the Syrian and Russian governments pressing an offensive against rebel-held parts of the city of Aleppo, no one was predicting a quick breakthrough.

Kerry was leading the renewed talks but was joined by a familiar cast that included Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and the top envoys from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey, Qatar, Egypt and Jordan.

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 Islamic State and al-Qaeda-linked militants in Syria. Last week he accused Russia of war crimes for targeting hospitals and civilian infrastructure in the Arab country.

The conflict has killed as many as a half-million people since 2011, contributed to Europe's worst refugee crisis since World War II, and allowed the Islamic State to carve out territory for itself and emerge as a global threat.

A Syrian boy receives treatment at a hospital in the regime-held part of Aleppo on Thursday. Syrian state television said four children were killed by rebel rocket fire on a school in a western regime-held neighbourhood. (George Ourfalian/AFP/Getty Images)

Residents of opposition-held eastern Aleppo have faced daily violence as Syrian President Bashar Assad's government seeks to take full control of the country's largest city.

On Saturday, Syrian and Russian airstrikes hit several rebel-held neighbourhoods amid clashes on the front lines in Syria's largest city and onetime commercial centre, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the Aleppo Media Center, an activist collective.

Fighting would not end with Aleppo resolution

In an interview this week with a Russian media outlet, Assad said a military victory in Aleppo would provide the Syrian army a "springboard" for liberating other parts of the country.

Despite fiercely criticizing Syria and Russia, the United States doesn't seem to have an answer.

U.S. President Barack Obama and the Pentagon have made clear their opposition to any U.S. military strikes against Assad's military. The U.S. is uneasy with providing more advanced weaponry to the anti-Assad rebels because of their links to extremist groups. And sanctions on Moscow are seen as unlikely step, given their limited impact after Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimea territory in 2014 and the weak appetite among America's European partners for such action.

With no apparent Plan B, Obama directed his national security team on Friday to renew diplomatic efforts to reduce the bloodshed in Syria. The White House said it hoped the larger discussions with Russia and other key governments would "encourage all sides to support a more durable and sustainable diminution of violence."

Russia says it also wants a ceasefire, but describes the U.S. and its partners as the problem.

Efforts to weaken alliances 

In an interview Friday with The Associated Press, Vitaly Churkin, Russia's UN ambassador, said this weekend's talks are focused on getting U.S.-backed, "moderate" opposition forces to break ranks with al-Qaeda-linked fighters.

Given the collapse of several ceasefires in Syria in recent months, Washington doubts Moscow's seriousness. And with rebel-held Aleppo poised to fall, potentially in a matter of weeks, there is deep skepticism that the Syrian and Russian governments want to stop the fighting just yet.

Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said he had instructed his foreign minister to make a proposal in Lausanne about fighting the group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

Talks on Yemen also expected

Saturday's gathering also was bringing together many of the major protagonists in Yemen's war, and discussions on that are likely.

An investigation team with the Saudi-led coalition said Saturday that wrong information led to the bombing of a packed funeral in Yemen's capital last weekend that killed some 140 people and wounded more than 600.

The U.S. struck radar sites belonging to Yemen's Iran-backed Houthis this week after a U.S. Navy ship took fire from the rebels.