Kerry has 'Plan B' for Syria

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Kerry has Plan B for Syria
John Kerry, US Secretary of State

Washington - More direct military involvement by US likely

By AFP

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Published: Wed 24 Feb 2016, 11:00 PM

Last updated: Fri 26 Feb 2016, 7:40 AM

 Secretary of State John Kerry warned on Tuesday that Washington is considering a "Plan B" to deal with Syria if Damascus and Moscow are not serious about negotiating a political transition.
Briefing US lawmakers, Kerry said he had told Russia's President Vladimir Putin the United States would not wait more than a few months to see whether Moscow's ally Bashar Al Assad is serious about talks.
But he would not be drawn on details of any "Plan B" that he would advise President Barack Obama to adopt if efforts to mediate a political deal to end the Syrian civil war fail.
Diplomatic sources and US Press reports suggest the new plan would involve more direct US and allied military involvement, but Washington remains very cautious about being drawn deeper into the conflict.
"When I met President Putin, I said to him very directly that the test is not going to be proven in six months or a year and a half, when the election is supposedly scheduled," Kerry told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
"We're going to know in a month or two whether or not this transition process is really serious."
Kerry met Putin in Moscow in December, and Obama spoke with his Kremlin counterpart on Monday to agree a plan for a "cessation of hostilities" to begin in Syria from Saturday.
The ceasefire will not include actions by or against the Daesh militant group nor Syria's Al Qaeda offshoot, but Kerry hopes it will halt Russian and Syrian attacks on opposition rebel factions.
If it sticks, Kerry and Russian counterpart Foreign Minister Sergi Lavrov - joint organisers of the 17-nation International Syrian Support Group - will push Assad and the rebels to negotiate a political transition, with a new constitution and elections. Some of the US senators expressed skepticism about the plan, but Kerry insisted Putin would not want to see Russian forces bogged down in a drawn out war if his ally Assad refuses to engage politically.
"There is a significant discussion taking place now about 'Plan B' in the event that we don't succeed at the table," he said. -
 


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