The
international community will "have to negotiate in the end" with
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, US Secretary of State John Kerry has said.
Speaking
on the fourth anniversary of the civil war, Mr Kerry said the conflict was
"one of the worst tragedies any of us have seen". He said the US was
pushing President Assad to begin negotiations again after two previous rounds
of talks collapsed.
More
than 215,000 people are estimated to have been killed in the conflict. The US
was working hard to "re-ignite" efforts to find a political solution
to end the war, Mr Kerry said in an interview in the Egyptian resort of Sharm
el-Sheikh.
US Secretary of State John Kerry:
"There is no military solution. There is only a political solution". He told
CBS News the US was working with the moderate opposition in Syria as well as
pursuing a diplomatic track with "a number of different critical players
in this tragedy".
"Everybody
agrees there is no military solution; there's only a political solution,"
he said.
The
US has "always been willing to negotiate in the context of the Geneva I
process," he added, referring to a 2012 plan to end the conflict that included
forming a transitional governing body and holding free and fair elections in
Syria.
The
White House has in the past insisted that Mr Assad stand down as part of a
political settlement.
Mr
Kerry has been a leading player in international efforts to kick-start peace
talks, bringing representatives from the Assad regime and the Syrian opposition
together in Geneva for the first time early last year - but the negotiations
collapsed after two rounds.
"To
get the Assad regime to negotiate, we're going to have to make it clear to him
that there is a determination by everybody to seek that political outcome and
change his calculation about negotiating," Mr Kerry said. "That's
under way right now. And I am convinced that, with the efforts of our allies
and others, there will be increased pressure on Assad."
The
civil war in Syria, which is now entering its fifth year, began after President
Assad's forces launched a deadly crackdown on a peaceful uprising against four
decades of his family's rule.
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