Nearly two dozen
nations gather on Tuesday to plot their fight against the Islamic State
militant group in Syria and Iraq and how to choke off its rise in Libya. The
meeting takes place as talks have begun in Geneva to try to end the
five-year Syrian civil war, which has killed at least 250,000 people,
driven more than 10 million from their homes and drawn in the United
States and Russia on opposite sides. Twenty-three
nations from the wider Global Coalition to Counter ISIL will review
their efforts to regain Syrian and Iraqi territory from the jihadist
group and to discuss ways to curb its wider influence, notably in Libya,
officials said. While Washington
has long said Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has lost the legitimacy
to lead, it has made clear that its first priority is to try to rein in
militants from the Islamic State group, which is also known as ISIL. U.S.
officials said the Pentagon's fiscal year 2017 budget will call for
more than $7 billion to fight Islamic State, up roughly a third from the
previous year's request to Congress. Tuesday's meeting
will cover stabilizing areas such as the Iraqi city of Tikrit, which has
been wrested from the group, as well as broader efforts to undercut its
finances, stem the flow of foreign fighters and counter its messaging,
officials said. The potential
spread of Islamic State to Libya, where rival factions are struggling to
form a united government nearly five years after a Western coalition
helped topple dictator Muammar Gaddafi, will feature prominently, a
senior U.S. official said. "Where
they control territory is where ... it gets on our radar screen," he
told reporters, saying the group was trying to seize parts of Libya,
notably Sirte, and Washington would work with the Libyans and coalition
partners to try to prevent that. Despite the focus on Libya, Syria and Iraq remain the main theaters of action against Islamic State. Syrian
government troops and allied fighters captured hilly countryside near
Aleppo on Monday, putting a key supply route used by opposition forces
into firing range, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
monitoring group. Rebels said the
offensive was being conducted with massive Russian air support, despite a
promise of goodwill steps by the Syrian government to spur the peace
talks, which U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura declared had begun on Monday. Opposition
official Monzer Makhous accused De Mistura of overstepping by declaring
peace talks had begun and said the government must within days declare
its willingness to stop attacking civilians and allow humanitarian
access. "We are here for a few
days. Just to be clear, only a few days," Monzer told Reuters Television
"If there (is) no progress on the ground, we are leaving. ... We are
not here for negotiations, we are here to test the regime's intentions." (Reuters)
Nations gather in Rome to discuss anti-Islamic State push, Libya

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