U.S., Russia trade blows over Syria as
warplanes pound Aleppo
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[September 26, 2016]
By Michelle Nichols and Suleiman Al-Khalidi
UNITED NATIONS/AMMAN (Reuters) - The United
States accused Russia of "barbarism" in Syria on Sunday as warplanes
supporting Syrian government forces pounded Aleppo and Moscow said
ending the civil war was almost "impossible".
A diplomatic solution to the fighting looked unlikely as U.S. and
Russian diplomats disagreed at a U.N. Security Council meeting called to
discuss the violence, which has escalated since a ceasefire collapsed
last week.
Rebels, who are battling President Bashar al-Assad's forces for control
of Aleppo, said any peace process would be futile unless the "scorched
earth bombing" stopped immediately.
Capturing the rebel-held half of Syria's largest city, where more than
250,000 civilians are trapped, would be the biggest victory of the civil
war for Assad's forces.
They have achieved their strongest position in years thanks to Russian
and Iranian support and launched a fresh offensive for a decisive
battlefield victory on Thursday. Residents and rebels say thousands have
been killed in the new strikes.
"What Russia is sponsoring and doing is not counter terrorism, it is
barbarism," U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, told
the 15-member council.
"Instead of pursuing peace, Russia and Assad make war. Instead of
helping get lifesaving aid to civilians, Russia and Assad are bombing
the humanitarian convoys, hospitals, and first responders who are trying
desperately to keep people alive."
The French and British foreign ministers also took aim at Russia, saying
it could be guilty of war crimes.
But Russia defended its position.
"In Syria hundreds of armed groups are being armed, the territory of the
country is being bombed indiscriminately and bringing a peace is almost
an impossible task now because of this," Russian U.N. Ambassador Vitaly
Churkin told the council.
SCORCHED EARTH
In the first major advance of the new offensive, Syrian forces seized
control of the Handarat Palestinian refugee camp, north of Aleppo.
Rebels counter attacked and said on Sunday they had retaken the camp
before the bombing started.
"We retook the camp, but the regime burnt it with phosphorous bombs,"
said Abu al-Hassanien, a commander in a rebel operations room that
includes the main brigades fighting to repel the army assault.
The army, which is also being helped by Iranian-backed militias,
Lebanon's Shi'ite Hezbollah militant group and a Palestinian militia,
acknowledged rebels had retaken Handarat.
"The Syrian army is targeting the armed groups' positions in Handarat
camp," a military source was quoted on state media as saying.
Planes continued to pound residential areas on Sunday, flattening
buildings, rebels and residents said.
"The Assad regime and with direct participation of its ally Russia and
Iranian militias has escalated its criminal and vicious attack on our
people in Aleppo employing a scorched earth policy to destroy the city
and uproot its people," a statement signed by 30 mainstream rebel groups
said on Sunday.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, said at
least 45 people, among them 10 children, were killed in eastern Aleppo
on Saturday.
The army says it is targeting only militants.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed in the civil war and 11
million driven from their homes.
DIPLOMATIC EFFORTS
Russia and the United States agreed on Sept. 9 a deal to put the peace
process back on track. It included a nationwide truce and improved
humanitarian aid access but it collapsed when an aid convoy was bombed
killing some 20 people.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who hammered out the truce in months
of intensive diplomacy, pleaded with Russia to halt air strikes.
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A man waters his plants in front of damaged buildings in the
rebel-held Douma neighbourhood of Damascus, Syria September 25,
2016. REUTERS/Bassam Khabieh
U.N. Syria mediator Staffan de Mistura appealed to the Council
meeting to come up with a way to enforce a ceasefire.
"I am still convinced that we can turn the course of events," he
said, adding that he would not quit trying to bring peace in Syria.
However, Russia is one of five veto powers on the council, along
with the United States, France, Britain and China. Russia and China
have protected Assad's government by blocking several attempts at
council action.
China's U.N. envoy Liu Jieyi repeated a call for all sides to work
harder to help find a political solution but also said
counter-terrorism was a "very important component" to a resolution,
state news agency Xinhua said.
"The Syrian conflict has led to the rise and spread of terrorism;
without rooting out terrorism, there will be no peace for the Syrian
people, and there will be no security for regional countries," Liu
said.
British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said Russia was guilty of
prolonging the war in Syria and may have committed war crimes by
targeting an aid convoy.
"We should be looking at whether or not that targeting is done in
the knowledge that those are wholly innocent civilian targets, that
is a war crime," he said in a BBC interview aired on Sunday.
The rebels said they could not accept Russia as a sponsor of any new
peace initiative "because it was a partner with the regime in its
crimes against our people".
It said Russian-backed Syrian forces were using napalm and chemical
weapons without censure from the international community.
U.N. investigators are looking into the alleged use of the
incendiary weapons phosphorus and napalm in several cities.
The war has ground on for nearly six years, drawing in world powers
and regional states. Islamic State - the enemy of every other party
to the conflict - has seized swathes of Syria and neighboring Iraq.
World powers appeared to believe that neither Assad nor his
opponents were capable of decisive victory on the battlefield.
But Russia's apparent decision to abandon the latest peace process
could signal it now thinks that victory is in reach, at least in the
western cities where the majority of Syrians live.
Assad's fortunes improved a year ago when Russia joined the war on
his side. Since then, Washington has worked hard to negotiate peace
with Moscow, producing two ceasefires. But both proved short-lived,
with Assad showing no sign of compromise.
Outside Aleppo, anti-Assad fighters have been driven mostly into
rural areas. Nevertheless, they remain a potent fighting force,
which they demonstrated with an advance of their own on Saturday.
(Additional reporting by Yara Bayoumy in New York, and Ben Blanchard
in Beijing; Writing by Anna Willard; Editing by Alison Williams and
Adrian Croft)
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