US says Assad’s overthrow no longer a priority

Bill

Malarkeyville
The United States admitted Thursday that it is no longer focused on ousting Bashar al-Assad as it seeks a new strategy to end Syria’s civil war.

American officials have been shifting away from their former insistence that he must go for some time, but now they have made it explicit.

In New York, the US ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley condemned Assad’s history of human rights abuses against his own people.

But she said Washington would focus on working with powers like Turkey and Russia to seek a political settlement, rather than focusing on Assad.

“You pick and choose your battles,” Haley told reporters.

“And when we’re looking at this, it’s about changing up priorities and our priority is no longer to sit and focus on getting Assad out.”

Shortly before Haley briefed a small group of journalists, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson sent a similar signal at a news conference in Turkey.

“I think the… longer term status of President Assad will be decided by the Syrian people,” Tillerson said, standing alongside Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

The Syrian opposition, whose cooperation will be needed in any negotiated solution, reacted furiously to the US shift in stance.

“The opposition will never accept any role for Bashar al-Assad at any phase,” said Monzer Makhos, a spokesman for the HNC, the opposition negotiating group.

“There will be no change in our position,” he warned.

Under Barack Obama’s administration, the US made Assad’s departure a key goal, but new president Donald Trump has put the accent on defeating the Islamic State group.

Tillerson’s reference to the Syrian people’s decision reflected language long used by Assad’s ally Russia, whose assistance Washington is courting.

“Our priority is to really look at how do we get things done? Who do we need to work with to really make a difference for the people in Syria,” Haley said.

“We can’t necessarily focus on Assad the way the previous administration maybe did. Do we think he’s a hindrance? Yes,” she said.

“Are we going to sit there and focus on getting him out? No.”

US officials sought to play down the significance of the change in tone, but experts said the switch in focus was an important admission.

Joseph Bahout, of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington noted that Tillerson had spoken after meeting Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan was once a strong foe of Assad, but recently Turkish-backed rebels in Syria have focused on fighting Kurdish militias and the IS group.

Bahout said Tillerson’s statement was a bit “shameful” after the years of US insistence that Assad’s crimes had rendered him unfit to govern.

“The use of ‘longer term’ allows us to imagine that this issue is no longer on the immediate agenda,” he told AFP.

“And ‘decided by the Syria people’ suggests that there’s no longer any consideration of an international mechanism on this question,” he said.

Previously, the United States has stuck by a UN-backed peace plan that would see Assad “transition” from office while an interim regime is formed.

Now, Bahout suggested, Tillerson and Haley appear not to be ruling out a Russian idea that Assad should stand for re-election in 2020.

“What’s sure, in any case, is that the Russians must be pretty happy,” he said.

Tillerson is due in Moscow next month for talks with Russian leaders, and Trump has long argued the powers should work together against the IS group.

US-backed forces are closing in on the jihadist Islamic State’s Syrian stronghold of Raqa, laying the groundwork for an assault on the capital of their so-called “caliphate”.

Tillerson’s trip came the day after Turkey announced the end of “Euphrates Shield”, its own six-month-old military offensive in northern Syria.

Ties between the NATO allies were strained under Obama, particularly over US cooperation with the Syrian Kurdish militia fighting against IS.

More @ source


Donald-Trump-and-Putin.jpg
 
Because we learned that Arab Spring doesn't work. Some cultures cannot coexist unless they are under the thumb of a dictator.
 
Previously, the United States has stuck by a UN-backed peace plan that would see Assad “transition” from office while an interim regime is formed.
previously the US wasn't shut out of Syrian talks because of Obama's bumbling
 
OMG this is being hyped as some kina "news".. The US has absolutely no say in Syria anymore. get over it
 
aaand . It won't be long before the US has no say in Libya. Thanks Clinton/Obama!

Russia offers Serraj “assistance” to rebuild Libya stability
https://www.libyaherald.com/2017/03/30/russia-offers-serraj-assistance-to-rebuild-libya-stability/
Russia’s deputy foreign minister Mikhail Bogdanov has told Presidency Council head Faiez Serraj that Russia is willing is willing to provide help to Libya to deal with the political crisis in the country. However, the nature of the help has not been publicly disclosed although Bogdanov, who has special responsibility for the Middle East and Africa, is reported saying that Moscow wants to see Libya a prosperous and united country.
 
This thread is lacking a point. You members of the Party of the Jackass can thank Obama for the bungling in Syria.

Dunce.
 
Because we learned that Arab Spring doesn't work. Some cultures cannot coexist unless they are under the thumb of a dictator.

thats not a very liberal thing to say :P are you saying there is something wrong with middle eastern islamic culture? Are we feelign racist today?
 
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