Little progress at US, Russia, Saudi, Turkey talks on Syria

Little progress at US, Russia, Saudi, Turkey talks on Syria

VIENNA
Little progress at US, Russia, Saudi, Turkey talks on Syria

From left, Turkey's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Feridun Sinirlioğlu, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Saudi Arabia's Minister of Foreign Affairs Arabia Adel al-Jubeir and Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov pose for a photo, during a meeting in Vienna, Friday, Oct. 23, 2015. AP Photo

Top diplomats from Russia, the U.S., Saudi Arabia and Turkey on Oct. 23 failed to make any major breakthrough on how to end the Syrian conflict, with the sides sharply at odds on the future of Bashar al-Assad.

But Moscow did seem to make progress with getting some more regional players on side, announcing with Jordan that the two countries would begin to "coordinate" their air operations over Syria.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, meanwhile, said he hoped to reconvene another, "broader" meeting on Syria as early as Oct. 30.

The crunch talks at a Vienna hotel brought together Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov with their Saudi counterpart Adel al-Jubeir and Turkey's Feridun Sinirlioğlu.

The foreign ministers met three weeks after Moscow thrust itself into the heart of the crisis by launching a bombing campaign in support of Assad that has drawn sharp condemnation from the west.

Washington, Riyadh and Ankara -- which all back groups fighting Assad -- were sounding out Lavrov after the embattled Syrian strongman made a surprise visit to Moscow to meet President Vladimir Putin this week.

But the atmosphere appeared frosty, and there was scant progress on resolving almost five years of war with the sides at loggerheads over the future of Assad.

"What we agreed to do today is to consult with all parties and aim to reconvene, hopefully as early as next Friday with a broader meeting in order to explore whether there is sufficient common ground to advance a meaningful political process," Kerry told journalists after the meeting.

Lavrov said Moscow wanted the negotiating group to be expanded to include key international and regional players including crucially Iran -- which is also backing Assad's forces on the ground.

But Kerry rejected the suggestion of involving Tehran for now.

"For the moment Iran is not at the table. And there will come a time perhaps where we will talk to Iran but we are not at the moment at this point of time," he said.

Another bone of contention appeared to be the fate of Assad, with Kerry insisting "dozens of countries, if not hundred, understand that Assad creates an impossible dynamic for peace."

Lavrov, however, struck out at the "fixation" with Assad among the other participants and said "the fate of the president of Syria must be decided by the Syrian people."

On Sept. 30, Russia launched a bombing campaign in Syria, which has shifted the dynamics of the brutal four-and-a-half year war -- allowing Assad's battle-weary forces to go on the offensive and overshadowing a U.S.-led coalition bombing the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

The U.S. and its regional allies have decried Russia's strikes, insisting Moscow is not focusing on ISIL as it claims, but on other groups fighting Damascus, and that the Kremlin's intervention will only prolong the bloodshed.

Russia has been frantically trying to get the U.S. and its coalition partners to cooperate with its bombing campaign in Syria, and Putin on Thursday stressed the need for "joint work" to defeat "terrorism" in Syria.

In a potential step forward, Lavrov announced that Russia and Jordan -- another member of the U.S.-led coalition -- had agreed to "coordinate" their military actions in Syria and set up a "mechanism" to facilitate that end after meeting his Jordanian counterpart separately.

While the scope of the coordination was not clear, it appears to outstrip the limited understandings Russia has with Israel and the U.S. to avoid accidental air collisions over Syria.

"I hope this mechanism will be effective in fighting all terrorism in Syria and beyond," Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh said at a joint press conference with Lavrov.

Later Lavrov said that he hoped other countries would participate in the initiative in the Jordanian capital and that if the U.S.-led coalition shared intelligence then Russia could help "patriotic opposition" groups fight ISIL.

"It is also important to agree not only the targets of the adversary, our common enemy -- terrorism -- but to also agree on those areas that are being controlled by the patriotic opposition so that we could also help it fight ISIL," Lavrov said, without specifying which group Moscow deems the "patriotic opposition."