Kerry in London for Syria talks with allies

US Secretary of State John Kerry is holding talks Sunday in London with European and Middle Eastern allies to find a multilateral approach in resolving the Syrian crisis, including a sustained cessation of violence and humanitarian aid deliveries to Aleppo.

Attendees include the UK, the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and the European Union, the British Foreign Office said.

One of Kerry’s key goals is reaching a ceasefire for Aleppo. Up to a quarter of a million people are trapped in the beleaguered city as the Syrian military, backed by Russian warplanes, pounds its streets into rubble.

Kerry flew to London after meeting Saturday in Lausanne, Switzerland, with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov; Staffan de Mistura, UN special envoy for Syria; and officials from regional powers with influence on battlefield outcomes in Syria.

No breakthrough occurred, but Kerry said the parties reached a “broad agreement” on some important points, specifically a “desired outcome on ending conflict,” in his remarks to the press.

Tension between Russia and the United States is making peace in Syria harder to achieve.

Washington called off bilateral talks with Russia this month following the collapse of a short-lived ceasefire in Aleppo and Syria’s renewed offensive against the city’s rebel-held east.

The United States, France and Britain are among the Western powers to suggest in recent days that the Syrian regime and its Russian backers could be guilty of war crimes in Aleppo.

For his part, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad told a Russian newspaper Thursday there was no other option but “to clean” Aleppo and use it as a “springboard” to push rebel forces out of Syria.

Meanwhile, a key development occurred Sunday in Syria, with ISIS losing control of a symbolic stronghold in the country’s north near the Turkish border.

The Free Syrian Army, a Turkish-backed faction, took back the town of Dabiq from ISIS, Turkish state media and a monitoring group said.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based organization, said it received reports that groups of ISIS fighters had withdrawn from Dabiq overnight.

In Iraq, a long-awaited operation to seize Mosul after two years of ISIS control will begin in the coming days, militia groups warned Sunday.

The operation to liberate Mosul is expected to be a “messy and prolonged battle,” CNN senior international correspondent Ben Wedeman said in the Iraqi city of Irbil, adding that the battle would likely come down to “street-to-street fighting.”

Exit mobile version