Europe urges US to delay action in Syria

September 07, 2013 01:43 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 09:17 pm IST - VILNIUS

US Secretary of State John Kerry arrives for an informal meeting of EU Ministers for Foreign Affairs in Vilnius on Saturday.

US Secretary of State John Kerry arrives for an informal meeting of EU Ministers for Foreign Affairs in Vilnius on Saturday.

European foreign ministers meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry are expected to urge the United States to hold off any military action in Syria until U.N. inspectors report on the alleged use of chemical weapons.

Syria was a key topic of Mr. Kerry’s discussions Saturday with 16 European foreign ministers attending an informal meeting of the European Union in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. He also was to update them on ongoing peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.

European officials have been sceptical about whether any military action against Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime can be effective.

Britain’s Parliament has already voted against military action. And French President Francois Hollande displayed sudden caution on Friday, saying he would wait for a U.N. report before deciding whether to intervene militarily. It was the first time Mr. Hollande said he would wait for the U.N. report.

The U.N. inspectors’ report is expected later this month, although some European officials are asking the U.N. to speed up the probe or issue an interim report.

France, which firmly backs the Syrian rebels and has strategic and historic interest in the region, had been ready to act last week but held off when President Barack Obama declared last weekend that he would seek the backing of Congress first.

On Mideast peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians, Mr. Kerry is expected to ask the EU to reconsider a funding ban on Israeli institutions operating in occupied territories. The EU decision, announced in July, marked a new international show of displeasure with Israeli settlements built on lands captured in the 1967 Mideast war.

The Palestinians claim some of those territories the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem for their hoped-for state. The EU ban applies to grants, prizes and financial instruments and that the new funding guidelines go into effect in 2014. The EU issues dozens of grants, totalling millions of Euros, to Israeli universities, companies and researchers every year.

In Vilnius, Mr. Kerry also is meeting with top Lithuanian officials and EU High Representative Catherine Ashton before departing for Paris.

On Sunday, he is to meet in France with representatives of Arab nations and travel to London where he will hold talks with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. He meets with British Foreign Secretary William Hague on Monday in London before returning to Washington.

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