The UNSC resolution: A Chance For Peace
FRONTLINE|January 22, 2016

The UNSC resolution on Syria takes into account the ground realities in the region, but Western leaders persist with their contradictory statements.

John Cherian
The UNSC resolution: A Chance For Peace

The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolution on Syria, passed unanimously on December 18, is the first attempt to offer a road map to end the conflict in that country, which has been dragging on for more than four years and claimed more than 2,50,000 lives. The Obama administration in the United States took the main initiative to move the U.N. resolution after seeing the writing on the wall. The rebel forces supported by Washington have almost completely faded from the war zone. The Syrian army is advancing on all fronts. In the last week of December, opposition fighters were allowed to retreat from parts of Damascus province that they had occupied for the last two years. Most military experts expect Aleppo to be completely liberated by early next year. The historic city of Palmyra, according to Syrian officials, is on the verge of being liberated. Observers of the region have not failed to notice that the American push for a ceasefire only gained momentum after the Russian military intervention and the consequent reverses suffered by rebel groups.

This story is from the January 22, 2016 edition of FRONTLINE.

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This story is from the January 22, 2016 edition of FRONTLINE.

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