Secretary of
State John Kerry, ahead of a meeting with Vladimir Putin, said the
United States and Russia must work together to end the war in Syria
despite their differences, and called for a further reduction in
violence and more aid deliveries. Russia
and the United States have emerged as the two outside powers with a
decisive say in what happens next in Syria's five year-old civil
conflict. Ahead of talks with the
Russian leader in Moscow, Kerry said a fragile partial truce had cut
levels of violence, but he wanted to see a further reduction plus
greater flows of aid. Kerry's visit
came as Syrian state television said government forces had fought their
way into Palmyra, with the army backed by Russian air cover seeking to
recapture the historic city from Islamic State insurgents. Syrian
government and opposition parties at peace talks in Geneva are expected
to agree on Thursday to a document drawn up by a U.N. special envoy
outlining basic principles, in what one diplomat described as a "baby
step" forward. Kerry is also
expected to press Putin and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on the future
of President Bashar al-Assad. While the United States wants Assad to
step aside, Russia says only the Syrian people can decide his fate at
the ballot box. Washington believes that Moscow, closely allied to Assad, can nudge Damascus to make important concessions. Kerry
said it was encouraging that Russia and the United States had
cooperated "despite differences ... in the face of this urgency to do
what is necessary to meet the challenge." He
said there was a hope that his meetings in Moscow could "further find
and chart the road ahead so that we can bring this conflict in Syria to a
close as fast as possible". The
United States and its allies have been backing armed groups that rose up
against Assad's rule, while Moscow has asserted its role with a
five-month military campaign that turned the tide of the fighting in
Assad's favor. In their brief
remarks at the start of the meeting, Lavrov and Kerry did not directly
address the Geneva talks, which are being brokered by the United
Nations. Talks are due to adjourn on Thursday after almost two weeks and
to resume in April. SLOW PROGRESS The
Geneva talks are part of a diplomatic push launched with U.S. and
Russian support to end the war in Syria that has killed more than
250,000 people, created the world's worst refugee crisis and bred the
rise of Islamic State. Progress
has been slow, with government officials avoiding any talk on the
divisive issue of a political transition or the fate of Assad, who
opposition leaders say must leave office. But
U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura has said he aimed to establish if there
were any points held in common by the different parties and if
successful, to announce them. "Basic principles
have been laid out. De Mistura wants to announce that all sides have
agreed so that he can move on to the transition issue at the next
round," said a senior Western diplomat. "It's a baby step, but a
necessary step. It's not a bad result." A
summary of the document seen by Reuters contains points including
reforming state institutions, rejecting terrorism unequivocally and
implementing United Nations Security Council resolution 2254 that
guarantees a political transition of power. It
also calls for no tolerance of acts of revenge from either side,
rebuilding the Syrian army on national criteria, ensuring a democratic
non-sectarian state and preserving women’s rights in fair
representation. BATTLE FOR PALMYRA On
the battlefield, the battle was raging for Palmyra, which fell to
Islamic State militants last year and which the Syrian army launched a
concerted effort to recapture this month. A monitoring group
said the fighting was still outside the city, after a rapid advance the
day before brought the army and its allies right up to its outskirts. The Russian and U.S.-backed cessation of hostilities in place elsewhere in Syria does not cover Islamic State. The
state-run news channel Ikhbariya broadcast images from just outside
Palmyra and said government fighters had taken over a hotel district in
the west. A soldier interviewed by Ikhbariya said the army and its
allies would press forward beyond Palmyra. "We
say to those gunmen, we are advancing to Palmyra, and to what's beyond
Palmyra, and God willing to Raqqa, the center of the Daesh gangs," he
said, referring to Islamic State's de facto capital in northern Syria. The
state news agency SANA showed warplanes flying overhead, helicopters
firing missiles, and soldiers and armored vehicles approaching the city. Civilians
began fleeing after Islamic State fighters told them via loudspeakers
to leave the center as fighting drew closer, the Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said. The Observatory monitors the war
using a network of sources on the ground. Islamic
State has blown up ancient temples and tombs since capturing Palmyra in
what the U.N. cultural agency UNESCO has called a war crime. The city,
located at a crossroads in central Syria, is surrounded mostly by
desert. The capture of Palmrya and
further eastward advances would mark the most significant Syrian
government gain against Islamic State since the start of Russia's
military intervention last September.
Kerry vows to work with Moscow for peace in Syria despite differences

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