Something Smells Rotten With This!
US,
Russia Announce Syria Cease-fire After
Trump-Putin Talks
By VIVIAN SALAMA, JOSH LEDERMAN and KEN THOMAS
HAMBURG, Germany (AP) — The United States and
Russia struck an agreement Friday on a
cease-fire in southwest Syria, crowning
President Donald Trump’s first meeting with
Russian President Vladimir Putin. It is the
first U.S.-Russian effort under Trump’s
presidency to stem Syria’s six-year civil war.
The
cease-fire goes into effect Sunday at noon
Damascus time, according to U.S. officials and
the Jordanian government, which is also involved
in the deal.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, who
accompanied Trump in his meeting with Putin,
said the understanding is designed to reduce
violence in an area of Syria near Jordan’s
border and which is critical to the U.S. ally’s
security.
It’s a
“very complicated part of the Syrian
battlefield,” Tillerson told reporters after the
U.S. and Russian leaders met for about 2 hours
and 15 minutes on the sidelines of a global
summit in Hamburg, Germany.
Of the
agreement, he said: “I think this is our first
indication of the U.S. and Russia being able to
work together in Syria.”
For
years, the former Cold War foes have been
backing opposing sides in Syria’s war. Moscow
has staunchly backed Syrian President Bashar
Assad, supporting Syrian forces militarily since
2015. Washington has backed rebels fighting
Assad. Both the U.S. and Russia oppose Islamic
State militants and say they’re focused on
rooting out the extremist group.
Russia’s top diplomat, who accompanied Putin in
the meeting with Trump, said Russian military
police will monitor the new truce. All sides
will try to ensure aid deliveries to the area,
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said.
The
deal marks a new level of involvement for the
Trump administration in trying to resolve
Syria’s civil war.
Trump
ordered some 60 cruise missiles to be fired at a
Syrian air base in April after accusing Assad’s
forces of a deadly chemical weapons attack. But
his top military and national security advisers
pointedly said they had no intentions of
intervening to oust Assad. And they stopped
short of endorsing Russian-led or U.N. peace
mediation efforts between Assad’s government and
rebel groups.
Israel
also is part of the agreement, one U.S. official
said, who like others wasn’t authorized to speak
publicly on the matter ahead of Tillerson’s
official announcement and demanded anonymity.
Like Jordan, Israel shares a border with the
southern part of Syria and has been concerned
about a spillover of violence as well as an
amassing of Iranian-aligned forces in the south
of the country.
Jordanian government spokesman Mohammed Momani
confirmed an accord involving his country, the
U.S. and Russia. He made no reference to
Israel’s participation. Syrian government forces
and its allies will stay on one side of an
agreed demarcation line, and rebel fighters will
stick to the other side. The goal is also to
enable aid to reach this area of Syria, Momani
told state media.
The
deal is separate from an agreement that Russia,
Turkey and Iran struck earlier this year to try
to establish “de-escalation zones” in Syria with
reduced bloodshed. The U.S., wary of Iran’s
involvement, stayed away from that effort.
Follow-up talks this week in Kazakhstan were
unable to produce agreement on finalizing a
cease-fire in those zones.
Previous cease-fires in Syria have collapsed or
failed to reduce violence for long, and it was
unclear whether this deal would be any better.
Tillerson said the difference this time is
Russia’s interest in seeing Syria return to
stability. It’s an argument top U.S. officials
such as former Secretary of State John Kerry
cited regularly amid his failed efforts to end a
conflict that has killed as many as a
half-million people, contributed to Europe’s
worst refugee crisis since World War II and
allowed IS to emerge as a global terror threat.
Tillerson also repeated the U.S. position that a
“long-term role for the Assad family and the
Assad regime” is untenable and voiced his belief
that Russia might be willing to address the
future leadership of Syria, in tones reminiscent
of Kerry. Up to now, Assad has rejected any
proposals that would see him leave power,
contributing to an impasse that has prolonged
Syria’s suffering.
Earlier
in the week, Syria’s military had said it was
halting combat operations in the south of Syria
for four days, in advance of the new round of
Russian-sponsored talks in Kazakhstan. That move
covered the southern provinces of Daraa,
Quneitra and Sweida. Syria’s government briefly
extended that unilateral cease-fire, which is
now set to expire Saturday — a day before the
U.S. and Russian deal was to take effect.
The
U.S.-Russian cease-fire has no set end date, one
U.S. official said, describing it as part of
broader discussions with Moscow on lowering
violence in Syria.
The
agreement may also reflect Iran’s increasingly
prominent role in Syria.
Washington has been resistant to letting Iranian
forces and their proxy militias gain strength in
Syria’s south, a position shared by Israel and
Jordan. Friday’s deal could help the Trump
administration retain more of a say over who
fills the power vacuum left behind as the
Islamic State is routed from additional
territory in Syria.
In
recent weeks, U.S. forces have shot down a
Syrian aircraft that got too close to American
forces as well as Iranian-made drones. A renewed
government offensive against Western-backed
rebels and Islamic militants in the contested
province of Daraa also is sparking tensions, and
Iranian-backed Hezbollah fighters have shifted
south to join the fight.
Israel
has also struck Syrian military installations on
several occasions in the past few weeks after
shells landed into the Israeli-controlled side
of the Golan Heights Golan Heights. Ahead of the
deal, media reports in Israel have suggested
unease at any arrangement that relies on Russia
policing areas near its frontier.
Implications for Syria aside, the deal marks the
biggest diplomatic achievement for the U.S. and
Russia since Trump took office. Trump’s
administration has approached the notoriously
strained relationship by trying to identify a
few limited issues on which the countries could
make progress, thereby building trust for a
broader repair of ties.
Salama and Lederman reported from Washington.
Associated Press writer Zeina Karam in Beirut,
Lebanon, contributed to this report.
This article was first published by
AP
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views expressed in this article are solely those
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