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Tillerson says Assad’s fate up to Syrian people

By AFP - Mar 30,2017 - Last updated at Mar 30,2017

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (left) and Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu shake hands during a joint news conference in Ankara on Thursday (AFP photo)

ANKARA — US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Thursday the fate of President Bashar Al Assad was up to the people of Syria, in the clearest indication yet of the new administration's policy in the war-torn country.

He also insisted during a visit to Turkey there was no difference between Ankara and Washington over the fight against the Daesh terror group, even as his Turkish counterpart reiterated a key point of discord.

"I think the... longer term status of president Assad will be decided by the Syrian people," Tillerson told a news conference with Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. 

Under Barack Obama's administration, the US made Assad's departure a key policy goal, but new US President Donald Trump has put the accent firmly on defeating Daesh in Syria and Iraq.

US-backed forces are battling Daesh as they advance on the extremists’ Syrian stronghold of Raqqa, laying the groundwork for an assault on their so-called "caliphate".

Tillerson's trip comes the day after Turkey announced the end of "Euphrates Shield", its own military offensive in northern Syria launched in August, but did not say if its troops had been withdrawn.

Ties between the NATO allies were strained under Obama, particularly over US cooperation with the Syrian Kurdish militia fighting against Daesh, and the issue of a US-based Turkish preacher blamed by Ankara for orchestrating the attempted coup last year.

 

'Difficult choices' 

 

Ankara views the Syrian Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) as a "terror group" linked to Kurdish separatists waging an insurgency inside Turkey since 1984, but Washington regards them as the best force fighting Daesh.

Turkey has suggested it wants to join any operation to capture Raqa, but without the Kurdish militia.

Tillerson hailed Turkey as a "key partner" in the fight against Daesh extremists. 

"There's no space between Turkey and the US and our commitment to defeat Daesh, to defeat ISIS," he added, using other names Daesh.

 He said options to defeat Daesh "anywhere Daesh shows its face" were difficult. 

"What we discussed today were options that are available to us... These are not easy decisions. There are difficult choices that have to be made," Tillerson said, without elaborating.

"In terms of the future of Raqqa we look forward to the liberation of Raqqa and return of its control to local citizens authorities putting it under local control for security... so that all of the Syrians who had to flee that area can return."

 However, Cavusoglu said Ankara expected "better cooperation" with the Trump administration regarding the YPG.

"It is not good or realistic to work with a terror group while fighting another terror group," he said.

Numerous diplomatic efforts have failed to end the Syrian conflict, which has killed more than 320,000 people and displaced millions since it erupted in March 2011 with protests against Assad's regime.

A fifth round of UN-sponsored peace talks is taking place in Geneva but no breakthrough has been reported and they are scheduled to end on Friday.

Mark Toner, acting State Department spokesman, had said earlier this month that Washington saw Assad as "a brutal man who has led his country into this morass" who could not be "an acceptable leader to all of the Syrian people".

 

"That said, it's up for the Syrian people — that means opposition, moderate opposition — working with... some representation on the part of the regime to try to forge a political transition."

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