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Obama and Turkey's Erdogan demand Assad step down

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Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Photo: AP

US President Barack Obama and Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisted on Thursday that Syria’s Bashar al-Assad must quit power as part of moves to end Syria’s bloody civil war.

The leaders met in Washington amid a flurry of shuttle diplomacy between world and regional powers, amid manoeuvreing ahead of a planned international conference that Washington and Moscow have proposed to halt the violence.

At a joint White House news conference, the Turkish and US leaders restated their position, but Obama admitted: “There is no magic formula for dealing with an extraordinarily violent and difficult situation like Syria’s.”

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The talks came a day before another key player, Russian President Vladimir Putin, was to meet UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, and one day after UN members voted to condemn an “escalation” by Assad’s forces.

And even as Obama and Erdogan were meeting, Israeli officials said that John Brennan, director of the US Central Intelligence Agency, had arrived in Israel for talks on the Syrian crisis.

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Obama has made strenuous efforts to court the Turkish leader but, while they agree that Assad must be ousted, there are signs of frustration in Ankara at Obama’s cautious approach towards the Syrian rebels.

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