Assad Making Gains, Kerry Admits
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةU.S. Secretary of State John Kerry admitted Wednesday that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was making gains on the ground, but he denied U.S. policy in Syria was failing.
"It's fair to say that Assad has improved his position a little bit, yes. But he's still not winning. This is a stalemate," Kerry told CNN television in an interview.
But asked whether he believed that America's policy in the war-torn country, which has seen a mounting death toll in its three-year conflict, had failed, he replied "No."
"The policy in Syria is just very challenging and very difficult," he added.
Earlier this week, the State Department denied reports Kerry told U.S. lawmakers in a private meeting that he believed it was time to change strategy in Syria, where some 1360,000 people have died and millions have fled their homes.
"I don't want to make any excuse whatsoever. We want this to move faster. We want it to do better," Kerry told CNN.
"But the point I'm making is that diplomacy is tough, slogging, slow work and hard work."
January marked the deadliest month so far in the conflict with some 6,000 dead, and Kerry said the United States was "always in the process of reevaluating whether there's more we can do, should do."
U.S. President Barack Obama has so far refused to provide heavy weaponry to the moderate rebels battling to topple Assad, amid fears it could fall into the hands of militant groups flooding into the country.
Kerry pledged the administration would work with Congress as well as internally to try to figure out how to push the Russians to use their influence on Assad to help improve conditions on the ground.
US policy in Syria did not fail. Its sole aim is the destruction of Syria and the weakening of its army so that Israel can survive in peace. So far this evil policy is working.