US offers Russia closer co-operation to save Syria plan

Top US diplomat John Kerry met Russia's President Vladimir Putin on Thursday to offer him closer military co-operation in the hope of salvaging the stalled Syria peace process. Ahead of the meeting, pessimistic US officials were careful to say it was not a last chance for diplomacy to work, but stressed they were running out of patience with Moscow.

The new proposal, as revealed in a leaked document, was an offer for the US military to work with Russia against the al-Nusra Front and Islamic State (IS) jihadist groups. In exchange, Russia would have to convince or strong-arm its ally Bashar al-Assad into grounding his own planes and halting attacks on civilians and moderate opposition groups.

The meeting broke up at 1.00 am (2200 GMT) Friday after three hours of closed-door talks.

"The secretary expressed concern about repeated violations of the cessation of hostilities by the Syrian regime," US spokesman John Kirby told reporters. "The two also discussed the need to need to increase pressure on terrorist groups like Daesh and the al-Qaida affiliate in Syria, Jabhat al Nusra." But "diplomatic efforts could not continue indefinitely" in the absence of concrete, near-term steps, Kirby reported Kerry as saying.

Speaking before the Kremlin meeting, Putin gave little away.

"I would like to note our mutual effort in the settlement of conflicts that we deem important to resolve," Putin said, conveying his regards to President Barack Obama. "My last conversation with President Obama has convinced me that we are indeed striving not only to establish a process of co-operation but also to achieve important results."

Sitting across from him, the US secretary of state agreed Obama had found the recent telephone call "constructive".

Kerry said Obama and he believed the US and Russia were in a position to make "an enormous difference" in the course of events not just in Syria but also in Ukraine. Later on Friday, after a night at a Moscow hotel, Kerry was to "explore initiatives in more detail" with his immediate counterpart Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. But the diplomatic words could not conceal US concern and Washington said two major issues to be addressed were Assad's ceasefire violations and al-Nusra's growing role.

"We need a solution to this that addresses both of these problems," a senior US official said. "If we cannot get to a solution that resolves both of those problems we're going to be in a very different place, and the reality is that time is short here," he warned.

US officials downplayed the significance of the military offer, reported by The Washington Post, arguing they would have gone after al-Nusra, an al-Qaida affiliate, anyway. But critics of US policy are bound to see any offer to aid Putin's campaign in Syria – even against jihadists – as a victory for the Kremlin's intervention in Syria. And there was no sign in Damascus that Assad feels under any pressure to agree to talks on a new government, the next stage in the process if a ceasefire is restored.

Speaking to NBC News in Damascus, Assad insisted Putin and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov had never raised the issue of his departure or a political transition.

"Only the Syrian people define who's going to be the president, when to come, and when to go. They never said a single word regarding this," he said.

Moscow and Washington, and the 22-nation contact group they co-chair, have called for a nationwide ceasefire and Geneva-based talks on a "political transition". A landmark partial ceasefire they brokered in February – which did not include IS or al-Nusra – has since all but collapsed amid continued heavy fighting.

UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura urged Moscow and Washington to push for a resumption of the talks next month. De Mistura said the talks "have a target date of August" and need to be "a credible beginning of a roadmap towards a political transition".

Russian forces are fighting in support of Assad's regime against a variety of rebel factions while a US-led coalition focuses its fire on the Islamic State group.

The Washington Post, citing a draft proposal from the United States, reported that the US and Russia could set up a joint command and control centre in Jordan. This body would direct intensified air strikes against al-Nusra, which is mainly fighting Assad's forces. In return, Moscow would limit its strikes to agreed targets and the Syrian air force would halt attacks in certain "designated areas." 

Syria's civil war erupted in 2011 when Assad brutally suppressed anti-government demonstrations and has evolved into catastrophe that has left more than 280,000 dead.

Efforts to bring an end to the war have taken on greater urgency since the emergence of IS, which seized control of large parts of Syria and neighbouring Iraq in mid-2014.    (AFP)

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