(Reuters) - Syria's foreign minister said U.S.-led air strikes had failed to weaken Islamic State it in Syria and the jihadist group would not be tackled unless Turkey was forced to tighten border controls. A U.S.-led alliance started attacking Islamic State targets in Syria
in September as part of a wider effort to destroy the al Qaeda offshoot
that has seized large areas of the country and neighboring Iraq. "All
the indications say that (Islamic State) today, after two months of
coalition air strikes, is not weaker," Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem
said in an interview with the Beirut-based Al Mayadeen TV broadcast on
Friday. The Syrian
government has said it was willing to join the fight against Islamic
State, but the United States refuses to deal with President Bashar
al-Assad, who it says has lost legitimacy and must leave power. "If the Security Council and Washington do not force Turkey
to control its borders then all of this action will not eliminate
(Islamic State)," Moualem said, referring to foreign jihadists who have
crossed into Syria from Turkey. Turkey,
which has a 900 km (560-mile) frontier with Syria, has strongly denied
accusations it has supported militant Islamists, inadvertently or
otherwise, in its enthusiasm to help Syrian rebels topple Assad. Thousands
of foreign fighters are believed to have joined the Islamist militants
in their self-proclaimed caliphate, carved out of eastern Syria and
western Iraq. Moualem
said Turkish calls for the establishment of a no-fly zone in northern
Syria would lead to the partition of the country, adding that Turkey had
designs on Syrian territory. Turkey
has repeatedly said a no-fly zone should be put in place to create safe
areas in Syria, allowing Syrian refugees in Turkey to be repatriated.
Turkey's idea has received a cool reception from its allies. A top NATO
general said this week the idea was not being considered. Moualem
held talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov on the Black Sea as part of a renewed Russian diplomatic
push to restart peace talks on Syria. The effort is unlikely to get far because Russia
rejects calls by Assad's Syrian, Western and Arab opponents for his
swift departure. "After our discussions with the Russian side we agreed
that the dialogue will be with the national opposition that is not
linked to the outside," Moualem said.
Syria regime says U.S.-led strikes have not weakened Islamic State
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Reuters
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