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Trump urges Russia to rein in Syrian ally

US President Donald Trump met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and said, “We’re going to stop the killing and the death (in Syria)” © AFP / JIM WATSON

Washington, United States, May 10 – President Donald Trump brushed aside concerns over his wooing of Russia on Wednesday and laid on a White House welcome for Moscow’s top diplomat to seek help to end the war in Syria.

As Washington reeled at the dismissal of FBI chief James Comey, who had been probing Russia’s alleged interference in the US election, a beaming Trump met Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

Lavrov’s American counterpart Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has admitted that US-Russian relations are at their lowest ebb since the Cold War and that there is almost no trust left.

Diplomats are working to thaw ties by resolving small issues, which officials told AFP includes day-to-day battles such as US complaints that its officials posted to Russia are subjected to low level covert harassment.

But Trump remains hopeful that Putin can be convinced to help end the Syrian civil war by reining in Russia’s ally President Bashar al-Assad and his other key foreign backer — Iran.

Trump “emphasized his desire to build a better relationship between the United States and Russia,” the White House said.

Lavrov is the highest-ranking Russian official to visit Washington since Trump came to power in January, and earned a rare invitation to the Oval Office for a head-to-head.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (L) and US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson are to discuss Ukraine and Syria © AFP / MANDEL NGAN

This followed a similar visit last month by Tillerson to Moscow, where he was received at the Kremlin by Putin.

Before visiting the White House, Lavrov and Tillerson huddled to discuss the crises in Syria and Ukraine — talks qualified by the veteran Russian diplomat as “constructive.”

“We had a very, very good meeting” Trump said shortly after seeing Lavrov. “We’re going to stop the killing and the death.”

Trump, the White House said, told Lavrov Moscow should “rein in the Assad regime, Iran and Iranian proxies.” Lavrov said he had sought support for a plan to create safe zones in Syria.

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“As active players in the diplomatic process regarding Syria, we are going to pursue these contacts together and with other key countries, especially those in the region,” Lavrov said.

Lavrov, who last set foot in Washington in August 2013, dismissed all claims of election meddling as “fabrications” — echoing Trump’s claim that they amount to “fake news”.

“President Trump clearly confirmed his interest in building mutually beneficial, business-like pragmatic relations,” he told journalists.

– Tense ties –

In Moscow, Putin met with his security council to discuss US-Russian relations in the context of Lavrov’s meeting with Trump, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

A protest demanding an independent investigation of the Trump administration’s possible ties to Russia on May 10, 2017 © AFP / JIM WATSON

Relations between the two former Cold War foes soured under former president Barack Obama over Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and its unyielding support for Assad.

Since March 2011, the Syrian conflict has caused more than 320,000 deaths and forced millions of refugees to flee.

A car loaded with belongings of a displaced Syrian family drives past destroyed buildings in a rebel-held area of the southern city of Daraa © AFP / Mohamad ABAZEED

Neither Washington, which backs the opposition, nor Moscow, a longtime ally of the Syrian regime, have managed to find a solution to the conflict.

Since the end of Obama’s presidency in January, the United States has gradually withdrawn from the diplomatic process, leaving Russia to take the lead.

The US was not part of a deal by Damascus backers Russia and Iran, and rebel supporter Turkey, signed Thursday in the Kazakh capital Astana on establishing safe zones in Syria.

– ‘De-escalation zones’ –

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The agreement calls for the creation of four “de-escalation zones” to shore up a ceasefire, ban flights and allow for humanitarian aid deliveries.

Washington gave the deal a skeptical welcome, rejecting Tehran’s proposed role as a guarantor even as it expressed hope the agreement could set the stage for a later settlement.

“We will look at the proposal, see if it can work,” Pentagon chief Jim Mattis said Monday.

Several ceasefires have been agreed on since Syria’s conflict broke out, but they have failed to stem the fighting.

After the talks, Lavrov and Tillerson set off for Alaska and a meeting of the Arctic Council, a forum for cooperation on the environment, oil and mining, shipping, fisheries and tourism.

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