US President Barack Obama has warned Moscow and Damascus the "world will be watching" their commitment to a looming ceasefire, as the 17-nation group backing the Syria peace process prepared to fine-tune the deal.
Obama said the next few days would be critical for the partial truce brokered by Moscow and Washington -- due to begin at midnight Friday -- which has been agreed by both President Bashar al-Assad's regime and Syria's top opposition grouping.
The deal -- which excludes the Islamic State (IS) jihadist group and other extremists -- marks the biggest diplomatic push yet to help end Syria's violence, but has been plagued by doubts after the failure of previous peace efforts.
Members of the 17-nation group backing the process are to meet in Geneva on Friday to work out further details of the agreement, which is expected to be endorsed by the UN Security Council on the same day, diplomats said.
There are hopes a successful "cessation of hostilities" will lead to the resumption of peace talks that collapsed in Geneva earlier this month.
"Tomorrow is going to be a very important, I will say a crucial day," the UN's Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura told reporters at the UN's European headquarters in Geneva Thursday.
The agreement allows military action to continue against IS, which seized control of large parts of Syria and Iraq in 2014, as well as against the Al-Qaeda affiliated Al-Nusra Front and other jihadist groups.
Obama said he was certain those groups would continue to fight, but stressed the US-led coalition was winning the war against IS, citing territorial gains.
He also said he was not "under any illusions" about possible pitfalls, but that the ceasefire could help bring about an end to the war.
"A lot of that is going to depend on whether the Syrian regime, Russia, and their allies live up to their commitments," Obama said.
"The coming days will be critical, and the world will be watching."
Russian President Vladimir Putin has promised to do "whatever is necessary" to ensure the ceasefire is implemented.
- Potential spoiler -
Russia and the United States are on opposing sides of the conflict, with Moscow backing Assad and Washington supporting the opposition, but the two powers have been making a concerted push for the ceasefire to be respected.
Iran is also a supporter of Damascus, and US Secretary of State John Kerry said Thursday that Tehran had withdrawn a "significant number" of its elite Revolutionary Guards troops from Syria.
Turkey's position towards Syrian Kurdish forces is a potential spoiler, and Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said Thursday that Ankara would not be bound by the ceasefire if its national security is threatened.
"It must be known that the ceasefire is valid in Syria," Davutoglu said. "When it is a question of Turkey's security, then the ceasefire is not binding for us."
Turkey has shelled Kurdish forces in northern Syria, saying the army was responding to incoming fire.
Ankara regards the main Kurdish militia in Syria, the People's Protection Units (YPG), as an offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.
A YPG spokesman said Thursday that Kurdish forces would respect the ceasefire but fight back if attacked.
- 'High hopes' for aid -
The United Nations has managed to boost aid ahead of the ceasefire deadline and expressed optimism on Thursday of more deliveries.
Jan Egeland, a special advisor to De Mistura, said that more than 180 trucks filled with aid had reached six areas under siege from different sides in the past two weeks.
They have brought assistance to just under a quarter of the 480,000 people estimated to be living in 17 besieged places across Syria.
Egeland said permission had been requested to bring aid to besieged parts of Aleppo, Homs and Eastern Ghouta, all hotspots in the country's conflict.
"We have high hopes that we will be able to get through to these places," he said.
Source: AFP
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