Kerry: US steps up diplomacy, rebel support to end Syrian ‘hell’

The United States is intensifying its diplomacy to end the “hell” of Syria’s civil war even as it increases support for moderate rebels fighting Islamic State insurgents, US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Wednesday.

 

The chief US diplomat leaves for Vienna later for talks among more than a dozen foreign ministers on ending the four-and-a-half year conflict. Iran is for the first time taking part in such talks, which will also include Russia, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

 

Russia and Iran both support Syrian President Bashar Assad while the United States, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other gulf Arab nations insist he cannot play any long-term role in Syria’s future.

 

In a speech, Kerry made a case for wider US engagement in the Middle East despite growing American energy independence, saying that the conflicts in Syria, Iraq and between Israel and the Palestinians can all threaten US interests and inflame anti-US sentiment at home and abroad.

 

He also suggested that the United States currently faces the best opportunity in years to end the Syrian civil war, in which more than 200,000 people have died and millions have been displaced inside the country and forced to flee abroad as refugees.

 

“The challenge that we face in Syria today is nothing less than to chart a course out of hell,” Kerry said in a speech at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace think tank.

 

Kerry said the United States was providing more military supplies to moderate rebels in northern Syria to help them hold territory they have seized and to pressure the Syrian city of Raqqa, a stronghold of Islamic State.

 

Read More: Kerry: US steps up diplomacy, rebel support to end Syrian ‘hell’ – Middle East – Jerusalem Post