‘No drama, no walkouts’; no progress in Syria peace talks

    FILE - In this Thursday March 24, 2016 file photo, U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura, right, sits next to his deputy, Ramzy Ezzeldin Ramzy, during a round of negotiations of Syrian peace talks at the United Nations Office in Geneva. As Syrian peace talks adjourned Thursday after 10 days, the U.N. mediator said he was encouraged that there was "no drama, no walkouts" - but, while a shaky truce has continued to hold, there was also no visible progress on a lasting settlement. (Fabrice Coffrini/Pool Photo via AP, File)

    AP, Geneva

    As Syrian peace talks were adjourned in Geneva after 10 days, the U.N. mediator said he was encouraged that there was “no drama, no walkouts” — but, while a shaky truce has continued to hold across the war-torn country, there was also no visible sign of progress on a lasting settlement.
    The ultimate goal for Staffan de Mistura, the U.N. envoy, is a plan for political transition in Syria.
    In the wake of the Brussels bombings — claimed by Islamic State group, which has flourished in Syria’s conflict — de Mistura sought to focus international attention on the next-step, saying that to defeat “terrorism, you have to find a political solution in Syria.”
    Although he succeeded in keeping Syrian government and opposition delegations from walking away from the indirect talks, de Mistura made little headway on getting them to sit around the same table or discuss the U.N. Security Council’s envisaged political transition away from President Bashar Assad’s government.
    Still, the fact that the talks did not break off in recrimination as they did the last time — coupled with the relative calm on the ground — underline the limited options left for either side of the conflict.
    Worn out by five years of fighting, with neither side able to defeat the other militarily, the warring sides appeared to acknowledge that they have no choice but to continue talking. The U.S. and Russia, who back opposite sides of the war, are working together toward a political settlement for the civil war that has killed more than 250,000 people and displaced half the country’s population.
    The talks were adjourned on Thursday, with de Mistura setting April 9 as a “target date” for the resumption of the discussions. The top Syrian government envoy, Bashar Ja’afari, met with the envoy on the final day but didn’t hold a news conference before leaving Geneva.
    The night before, when asked by a reporter about whether the talks had made progress, Ja’afari said the two sides had worked through some unspecified issues that had existed when the talks began on March 14.
    “For the first time, we were able to break the impasse, perhaps symbolically and perhaps a bit more in substance, but we have not yet started on substantial matters,” he said, according to the Syrian state-run news agency SANA.

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