Russia urges coordinated terrorism fight as airstrikes begin

Map locating Homs Province Syria where Russia carried out first airstrikes.
Map locating Homs Province Syria where Russia carried out first airstrikes.


Secretary of State John Kerry responded by announcing that the United States is prepared to welcome Russiaactions in Syria if they are directed at the Islamic State group and al-Qaeda.

He promised the U.S.-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group in Syria would "dramatically accelerate our efforts," and he said the U.S. is prepared to hold what he described as "de-confliction" talks with Russia over the two airstrike campaigns "as early as possible," even this week.

"We will ensure through precision airstrikes that ISIL do not have any sanctuary, anywhere, on the ground in Syria," Kerry said, using an acronym for the Islamic State group.

Russia spoke a day after President Barack Obama made his own pitch on countering the threat of the Islamic State and other groups to a gathering of world leaders at the United Nations.

With Obama gone on Wednesday, it was the turn of Russia, which this month holds the presidency of the Security Council, the U.N.'s most powerful body.

Lavrov said Russia is ready to "forge standing channels of communication to ensure a maximally effective fight." He listed countries with a key role to play in resolving the chaos in Syria, including Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Qatar , the U.S. and even China.

"What we require are collective agreed approaches backed by Security Council," Lavrov said.

The foreign minister of France, which began its own airstrikes in Syria a few days ago, told the council that his country is ready to cooperate with Russia and others in the fight against the Islamic State group in Syria, but under three conditions that include an end to violence against Syria's civilians and the exit of President Bashar Assad.

Laurent Fabius said the collective way forward must include a "broad-based negotiation toward a political transition that doesn't lead to maintaining in power Syria's hangman."

The French minister said another condition for cooperating with other states is having "absolute clarity" about who the countries are fighting.

Frustrated by years of deep divide in the Security Council on Syria, with Russia and China using their veto power to block several proposals, Fabius called the body a "council of impotence." France was chairing a meeting Wednesday on its campaign to have the council's five permanent members restrain their use of the veto in cases of mass atrocities. Russia has rejected that idea.

British Foreign Minister Philip Hammond said his country welcomes Russia's new "focus" on using force but warned it's "very important that Russia be able to confirm that military action it has undertaken this morning" doesn't target Syria's moderate opposition. He urged Russia to use its influence on Syria to make it stop using barrel bombs and chemicals on civilians.

Other U.S. allies were clearly worried by Russia's new moves in Syria, with Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni telling reporters, "There's no rapid military solution to this enormous humanitarian tragedy."

Also Wednesday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas declared in a speech to the U.N. General Assemby that he is no longer bound by agreements signed with Israel. The Palestinians then were celebrating the raising of their flag at U.N. headquarters for the first time as a non-member observer state — a move the General Assembly overwhelmingly approved earlier this month.

Many stood and applauded in the chamber after the speech by Abbas, who had promised a "bombshell."

Amid those developments, the so-called Quartet of Mideast mediators — the United Nations, the United States, the European Union and Russia — meeting alone first and then with key Mideast nations to discuss reviving long-stalled peace negotiations.

Migration also was subject of a high-level session Wednesday on the sidelines of the General Assembly's annual ministerial meeting.

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