While stopping short of promising US military aid the opposition is seeking, Kerry said he and his counterparts from 10 other nations unanimously remain committed to "changing the dynamics on the ground in Syria." Neither Kerry nor British Foreign Secretary William Hague offered many specifics.
"Our teams are going to come together in very short order now to lay out a specific set of steps that we can and will take together in order to have a greater impact," Kerry said after meeting with other foreign ministers at a "Friends of Syria" meeting of 11 Western and Arab countries.
The meeting comes amid grim conditions in Syria and the resignation of Lakhdar Brahimi as the joint United Nations-Arab League envoy for Syria. Brahimi, an 80-year-old Algerian diplomat, tried unsuccessfully for nearly two years to mediate an end to Syria's 3-year-old civil war.
Syria's conflict began with largely peaceful protests calling for reforms but transformed into an armed uprising and eventually a civil war following a ferocious military crackdown on protesters. More than 150,000 people have died since March 2011, and hundreds of thousands of people have been wounded.
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Kerry denounced the elections, saying they were a "farce" and a "fraud on democracy, on the Syrian people and on the world."
Kerry also said he's seen raw data suggesting that Assad's forces have launched chlorine attacks, but that has not yet been confirmed.
Moreover, he said the US was frustrated that humanitarian aid was not getting to the Syrian people and would work through the United Nations to fix the problem.