US-Saudi ties enduring: Kerry

Secretary of State John Kerry was hastily dispatched to Riyadh to patch things up after rare complaints from Riyadh over US policies on Syria and Iran.

US Secretary of State John Kerry boarding his plane

US Secretary of State John Kerry was dispatched to Riyadh to resolve complaints over US policies. (AAP)

Secretary of State John Kerry says US ties with Saudi Arabia are "strategic and enduring", even as differences on Syria remain after a visit aimed at easing tension.

The top US diplomat was hastily dispatched to Riyadh to patch things up after rare complaints from Riyadh over Washington's policies on Syria and Iran.

"Our relationship is strategic, it is enduring and it covers a wide range" of issues, he told reporters as he wound up a visit on Monday, including a two-hour meeting with King Abdullah.

He insisted the two allies agreed on the "goal in Syria".

"There is no difference in our mutually agreed upon goal in Syria," Kerry told a joint news conference with his Saudi counterpart, Prince Saud al-Faisal.

He insisted Washington "will not stand idly by as (Syrian President Bashar al-) Assad continues to use weapons" against his own people.

But Prince Saud, while stressing the strength of ties with the US, slammed the "international community's failure to stop the war against the Syrian people".

Negotiations to solve any crisis "shouldn't just go on indefinitely", he said in reference to a US-Russian proposed peace conference.

He insisted that some "grave issues desperately need decisive and resolute intervention that should put an end to the human tragedies they produced".

Saudi Arabia expressed anger after US President Barack Obama stepped back after threatening a punitive strike against Syria over a chemical attack in August on a rebel-held district near Damascus.

Kerry reiterated that Washington opposes military intervention to end the 31-month conflict.

"Absent a negotiated solution we don't see a lot of ways to end the violence that are implementable or palatable to us, because we don't have the legal authority, or the justification or the desire at this point to get in the middle of a civil war," he said.

"I think that's been made very, very clear, " he added.

"Our hope is we can bring the parties together. It won't be the first very complicated conflict, where very emotional highly separate entities are brought together by an international community and ultimately find their way forward," he said.


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Source: AAP



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