U.S. steps up warnings to Russia over actions in Syria - Action News
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U.S. steps up warnings to Russia over actions in Syria

The United States on Wednesday stepped up warnings to Russia over its Syria policy, saying Moscow was trying to challenge the U.S. presence in northeastern Syria by violating the terms of anagreement and was also helping escalate the conflict in the northwestern province of Idlib.

U.N. Security Council to meet Thursday to discuss the situation in Syria

A Russian soldier looks through binoculars on the key M4 highway in Syria's northeastern Hasakeh province on Jan. 20. Russia has been filling the vacuum left by the U.S. after it withdrew troops from some regions of the country. (Delil Souleiman/AFP/Getty Images)

The United States on Wednesday stepped up warnings to Russia over its Syria policy, saying Moscow was trying to challenge the U.S. presence in northeastern Syria by violating the terms of anagreement and was also helping escalate the conflict in the northwestern province of Idlib.

James Jeffrey, U.S. special envoy for Syria engagement and fight against Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), said the U.S. was "very very worried" about the Syrian government assault, backed by Russia, on Idlib, and he repeated calls on Moscow to end the conflict.

"This is a dangerous conflict. It needs to be brought to an end. Russia needs to change its policies," Jeffrey said.

The U.S., France and the United Kingdom called for a United Nations Security Council meeting on Thursday to discuss the situation in Idlib.

U.S. President Donald Trump softened his plans to pull out Americantroops from Syria after backlash from Congress, and has kept around 600 troops in northeastern Syria to continue the fight against ISIS.

However, in northwestern Syria, the U.S. has no troops on the ground and thus little leverage on Russia or the Syrian government in asserting its position.

The Idlib violence has accelerated in recent months despite several ceasefire efforts, including as recently as January.

James Jeffrey, U.S. special envoy for Syria, said Washington was 'very worried' about the Syrian government assault, backed by Russia, on Idlib. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

On Wednesday, Syrian government forces entered Saraqeb in Idlib, a war monitor and eyewitnesses said, in a renewed push by President Bashar al-Assad to recapture the last rebel stronghold.

"We're seeing not just the Russians but Iranians and Hezbollah actively involved in supporting the Syrian offensive. We don't know whether the offensive is just to get to the M4-M5 road, or it may continue further," Jeffrey said, in reference to the strategic highways connecting Syria's Aleppo to Hama and Latakia on the Mediterranean coast.

Jeffrey said Moscow could change its policies and meet the requirements of the international community without ousting Assad.

"Those requirements are not unreasonable. ... They require a change in that [Assad]government's behavior. That government would not survive a week without the Russian assistance."

Moscow filling U.S. vacuum

Northeastern Syria is a complicated battleground with forces of the U.S., Turkey and Russia as well the Syrian government and aligned Iranian militia operating, sometimes in close proximity.

Syrian army soldiers advance in the village of Tall Touqan, in Syria's northwestern Idlib province, about 45 kilometres from Aleppo, on Wednesday. (AFP/Getty Images)

Moscow has been filling the vacuum of U.S. withdrawal from the area and de-confliction agreements between the two sides ensure they avoid any clashes.

But Jeffrey on Wednesday said there have been more incidents of Russia's violating the terms of de-confliction in what he characterized as an attempt to challenge the U.S. presence in there.

"We've seen a limited number of occasions where ... they've tried to come deep into the area where we and the SDF are patrolling well inside the basic lines we have sketched. Those are the ones that are worrying me," he said, referring to Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that works with Washington in northeastern Syria.

He said while the numbers of such incidents were not very high, they were on the rise. "Thus is troubling," he said, and called on Moscow to adhere fully to the de-confliction agreements with the U.S.