(CNN) -- As a second round of peace talks ended Saturday with little progress in ending Syria's civil war, U.S. President Barack Obama and Jordan's King Abdullah spoke about Syria's distressing humanitarian crisis during an earlier meeting in California.
Jordan is a refuge for
war-battered Syrians, and both leaders urged an end to the warfare that
has caused such a mass exodus. They also discussed a possible United
Nations sanction to pressure the Syrian regime of President Bashar
al-Assad.
Meanwhile, in Geneva,
U.N. mediator Lakhdar Brahimi apologized to the Syrian people, saying he
was "very, very sorry" that, despite two rounds of talks, "we haven't
done very much."
In minimal progress, the
two warring sides have agreed to an agenda for a third round of talks,
but they have not agreed on how to tackle it, Brahimi said. Continue.
In Britain, U.K. Foreign
Minister William Hague described the latest developments as "a serious
setback in the search for peace in Syria." Hague blamed the Syrian
regime because it refused to discuss a transitional government.
Brahimi said the key
sticking point is that the Syrian government wants to talk about
tackling terrorism, while the opposition wants to discuss forming a
transitional governing body.
Brahimi said he had
suggested starting the next round of talks with one day of discussion on
each issue, but the government would not agree.
"Unfortunately the
government has refused, which raises the suspicion of the opposition
that, in fact, the government doesn't want to discuss the (transitional
governing body) at all," he said. Brahimi said such intransigence was
"not good for the process," nor was it good for Syria.
Negotiators should go
back to their leaders and reflect on a way forward, he said. "Do they
want this process to take place or not?"
Louay Safi, of the
opposition umbrella group Syrian National Coalition, said: "We want to
progress on the two sides. We want to be assured that the regime is
really wanting a political solution, not delay tactics, and we didn't
get that, for reasons that were described by Mr. Brahimi.
"Our heart is in pain,
our delegation is in pain, that as we speak here searching for a
political solution the regime has chosen to bombard towns and cities
killing civilians."
Syrian Ambassador to the
United Nations Bashar Jaafari, in turn, accused the opposition of
trying to mislead observers and undermine the process.
"We are committed to serving the interests of our own people, in stopping the bloodshed," he told reporters in Geneva.
"We don't have an impasse. We are still in negotiations; we didn't say that we have failed."
Jordan and the United States
In California, Obama and
King Abdullah held a meeting Friday that lasted until almost midnight
in the desert community of Indian Wells, near Palm Springs.
Obama said the United States would seek ways to bring peace.
"We're going to continue
to strategize on how we can effectively change the calculus inside the
country so that we can have a Syria that is intact, that is respectful
of all groups, that ends the killing, and that allows for a
representative government that can provide peace and prosperity for
everybody there," Obama said.
"There will be some
intermediate steps that we can take to apply more pressure to the Assad
regime, and we're going to be continuing to work with all the parties
concerned to try to move forward on a diplomatic solution."
Obama noted that Jordan
has just taken a rotating seat on the United Nations Security Council.
In a background briefing with pool reporters after the meeting, a senior
administration official said Obama and King Abdallah discussed a
possible U.N. resolution that could pressure the Syrian regime and
"create a legal precedent for cross-border operations."
The White House added
that a strong resolution on Syria didn't necessarily need to include
threats of force but could be "strong in terms of the obligations and
expectations that it would impose on the regime to improve the
humanitarian access."
Jordan, a key U.S. ally
in the Middle East, is hosting almost 600,000 refugees from Syria, and
on Saturday, the President announced new loan guarantees for Jordan
totaling $1 billion.
The senior official
targeted Russia in his remarks, urging the Russians to play a "more
constructive role" in finding a solution.
"As long as they remain
wedded to the status quo, this is going to be a difficult problem to
resolve," the official said, speaking of Russia's continued support for
the Syrian regime.
Russia "can't have it
both ways," the official said. "They can't say they're in favor of
negotiations in Geneva and a transitional government guided by full
executive authority and humanitarian access and have a happy Olympics,
and then be part and parcel of supporting this regime as it kills people
in the most brutal way."
The Olympics remark referred to the Winter Games now being held in Sochi, Russia.
"I don't think any of us
have any expectation that they are going to turn on a dime," the
official conceded. He said the administration would not exclude the
possibility of reaching "a humanitarian resolution" despite Russia's
"sorry record" of vetoing U.N. sanction resolutions.
King Abdullah said one
of his main concerns, "is the rise of extremism in Syria, the sectarian
violence, and if we don't find a solution, the spillover in the region
and the effect that will have."
The two leaders
considered ways their countries could support what they described as the
"moderate opposition" movement, the senior official said.
Elsewhere in the United States, Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, said "failure is looming" in the U.N.-mediated peace talks.
McCain also criticized Russia.
"The entire strategy for
success at Geneva now relies on Russia putting pressure on the Syrian
government to engage in a serious and constructive way," McCain said.
"Yet, Russia has recently prevented the passage of a much-needed U.N.
resolution on bringing aid to desperate Syrian civilians and continues
to provide the means by which President Bashar al-Assad carries out his
assault on the Syrian people.
"Such actions indicate
that the Russian government is simply not a partner for peace in Syria
and cannot be relied on to help secure a successful outcome," McCain
said.
More violence
In Syria, rebels posted a
video on social media purporting to show small group of fighters
planting explosives in a tunnel underneath what they claim is the
Carlton Hotel in Aleppo. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said
the hotel serves as an anti-insurgency headquarters for government
security forces.
CNN could not independently confirm the video's authenticity.
"We are putting our last
touches and doing some measuring so we can make sure that we are under
the Carlton Hotel," a rebel says in Arabic. "We are going to add the
explosives after we finish everything, and you are going to hear good
news, Aleppo people."
The video then cuts to
an outdoor scene where billowing smoke rises over buildings, an apparent
indication that the hotel was blown up Saturday.
The Syrian government didn't immediately respond to the rebels' claims in the video.
Peace talks
The snail-paced peace
talks, which started last month with Brahimi serving as an intermediary
between the two delegations sitting in the same room, have failed to
produce an agreement on a first step for resolving the conflict, which
has dragged on for nearly three years.
More than 140,000
Syrians have died since March 2011, according to the Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights, a London-based opposition group.
About half of them were civilians, and more than 7,000 were children and more than 5,000 were women, it said.
It put Syrian military
losses at more than 30,000 and pro-regime elements at more than 20,000.
Those figures do not include the 18,000 Syrians who were jailed and are
missing, it said.
Relief for besieged city
Brahimi said he would
consult next with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and called upon him
to hold discussions with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian
Foreign Minster Sergey Lavrov.
Brahimi said he would
also likely brief the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council,
known as the P5 -- the United States, Russia, Britain, France and China
-- and the full Security Council.
The talks' only sign of
progress has been a cease-fire to allow some evacuations from and aid
relief to the besieged city of Homs.
U.N. Emergency Relief
Coordinator Valerie Amos said Friday that 1,400 people were evacuated
from the Old City of Homs and 2,500 still there got relief supplies, but
she lamented the bleak humanitarian situation that prevails throughout
the country.
"The little that has
been achieved in Homs," Brahimi said, has given the Syrian people hope
that they might finally be "coming out of this horrible crisis they are
in."
But the warring sides are still far apart.
Opposition: We want progress, not delaying tactics
Brahimi said he hoped
that, after a period of reflection, the two sides would return to the
table "ready to engage seriously" over how to implement the so-called
Geneva communique that led to the talks. It calls for ending the
conflict and establishing a transitional government.
The opposition has
proposed a transitional government that would oversee a halt in the
fighting, releasing prisoners of conscience, maintaining law and order,
bringing to justice those responsible for violence and protecting human
rights.
Its plan excludes al-Assad from continued leadership, an outcome unacceptable to the longtime Syrian leader.
But Syrian Deputy
Foreign Minister Faisal Makdad said Friday that the opposition has "an
unrealistic agenda," and he insisted the first step must be "stopping
the violence and ending terrorism."
The government refers to
the rebels as foreign-backed terrorists, so Makdad's stance in essence
calls for the opposition to unilaterally lay down its arms.
"We confirm we are
willing to discuss the issue of the transitional government after we
reach an agreement regarding ending terrorism," he said.
French diplomat slams regime, praises opposition
Laurent Fabius, the French foreign minister, blamed the Syrian government for the lack of advancement.
"I condemn the attitude
of the Syrian regime that has blocked any progress on the establishment
of a transitional government and increased violence and acts of terror
against the civilian population," he said. "I salute the courage and
sense of responsibility of the Syrian National Coalition that has
adopted a constructive position throughout the negotiations."
He urged those people
and entities that have influence with the al-Assad government to "bring
it to more quickly respect the demands of the international community."
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