25-11-2024 01:28 AM Jerusalem Timing

Kerry Insists Assad must not Be Part of Transitional Gov’t

Kerry Insists Assad must not Be Part of Transitional Gov’t

US Secretary of State John Kerry insisted Thursday Syrian President Bashar al-Assad could play no role in a transitional government, on a third day of diplomatic talks seeking to help end the conflict.

Jordanian FM Nasser Judeh (L), US Secretary of State John Kerry (R)US Secretary of State John Kerry insisted Thursday Syrian President Bashar al-Assad could play no role in a transitional government, on a third day of diplomatic talks seeking to help end the conflict.

Kerry's comments came as he met Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh in Rome to shore up US support for Amman, struggling under the weight of some 525,000 refugees who have fled across the border from Syria.

Jordan was working with the United States to "effect a transition government by mutual consent of both sides, which clearly means that in our judgment President Assad will not be a component of that transitional government," Kerry said.

He also officially unveiled $100 million (76 million euros) in additional US humanitarian aid for Syrian refugees, some $43 million of which will go to support UN programs in Jordan.

Washington has now pledged in public $250 million in non-lethal aid to the Syrian insurgents fighting to oust President Assad.

Ten percent of the population in Jordan was now Syrian refugees, Judeh said.

US Secretary of State John Kerry"It is expected to rise to about 20 to 25 percent given the current rates by the end of this year, and possibly to about 40 percent by the middle of 2014."

"No country can cope with the numbers as huge as the numbers I've just described," Judeh warned, adding he was to fly to Moscow later Thursday for talks on the Syrian crisis.

Plans for an international conference on Syria were also continuing, Kerry said, after agreeing Tuesday in Moscow that he and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov would work in tandem on the issue.

There is a "very positive response and a very strong desire" to find a way forward, he said after a round of telephone calls with foreign ministers.

It is hoped the conference, aimed at finding a path towards a transitional government in Syria based on the six-point Geneva accord agreed last June, could be held by the end of the month.

US ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, meanwhile also met with the Syrian opposition in Istanbul on Wednesday to discuss the way forward, Kerry said.

Kerry and Judeh were also set to discuss efforts to revive the Middle East peace process, with the US secretary of state expected to return to the Occupied Palestinian territories for his fourth visit at the end of the month.

Jordan, one of only two countries to have signed a peace treaty with the Zionist entity, would play a key role going forward, Kerry said, adding it had also been instrumental in bringing together the Arab League to help kickstart the process.