Syria Talks End With Agreement to Observe Cease-Fire

The agreement will not make a real difference on the ground, an analyst says.

The statement did not specify how the mechanism would work to monitor the cease-fire that began Dec. 30. The agreement is not likely to make a real difference on the ground, said Haid Haid, an associate fellow specializing in the Middle East at Chatham House, the Royal Institute of International Affairs, a policy institute based in London.

“As long as there are no independent observers and no clear mechanisms to hold those who are violating the cease-fire accountable, we will continue to see cease-fires violated by the parties,” he told ABC News. “The shaky, ongoing cease-fire has been violated for weeks now, and nothing has been done to stop the perpetrators. This will only give a green light to those perpetrators to continue their violations which in the end will end the cease-fire.”

The two-day meeting between Syrian government officials and rebel fighters had a rough start on Monday.

The negotiations in Astana were brokered by Turkey, which backs the rebels, and Russia and Iran, allies of the Syrian government.

A new round of Syria peace talks is to take place in Geneva on Feb. 8.

The Syrian war has so far gone on nearly six years, killing hundreds of thousands of people and displacing millions.

“Syria is one of the largest protection crises of our times,” he said. “Beyond the indiscriminate and targeted attacks against civilians themselves, the essentials of civilian life such as hospitals, schools, markets, electricity and water networks have also not been spared in this conflict.“