Damaged buildings in the streets of Syrian cities (Image: CBC) |
Reuters -MUNICH, WASHINGTON: A Western official said on Wednesday that Russia has made a
proposal to begin a ceasefire in Syria on March 1, but the official said no
agreement has been reached on the Russian offer.
The official
said the United States has concerns about some elements of the Russian
proposal.
Envoy:
Russia strikes boost ISIS
Earlier, the
U.S. envoy to the coalition against ISIS said on Wednesday that Russian
airstrikes in Syria are boosting the militant group because of the toll they
are taking on U.S.-backed opposition fighters.
“What Russia’s
doing is directly enabling ISIL,” the envoy, Brett McGurk, told a hearing of
the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, using an acronym for
Islamic State.
He left the
hearing for a flight to Germany, where world powers are meeting on Thursday to
try to revive the first effort in two years to negotiate an end to the war in
Syria after it faltered last week.
Rebel groups
have been urging U.S. President Barack Obama to do more to stop Russian bombing
raids that have left them on the verge of collapse ahead of the talks.
McGurk said
Washington is committed to securing a ceasefire, but needs to consider options
in case the diplomatic push falls short.
Under
questioning from House members frustrated over the sputtering anti-ISIS campaign,
McGurk said the United States and its allies were making progress against the
group, but face major challenges. “Our progress will not always be linear, and
we should expect setbacks and surprises,” McGurk said.
Committee
members said they wanted Washington to do more.
“These gains
have been too slow to come and too limited,” U.S. Representative Ed Royce, the
panel’s Republican chairman, said.
McGurk also
acknowledged Islamic State’s growing influence outside of Iraq and Syria.
He said its
branch in Libya is the greatest cause for concern, given its attacks in the
chaotic North African country and the threat it poses to U.S. partners such as
Tunisia and Egypt.
He did not rule
out U.S. aid airdrops to help ease the humanitarian crisis in Syria. “We’re
looking at all options on the humanitarian side,” McGurk said.
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