The US and Russia have offered starkly differing assessments of the situation in Syria at the UN Security Council session, underscoring the global body's inability to unite around a strategy to end the Arab country's civil war.
Whereas US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton decried Syrian President Bashar Assad's "murdering of his own people," Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov accused the US and other countries of encouraging terrorism.
Clinton appealed on Wednesday for the "paralyzed" council to make a new attempt to reach an accord on taking measures over the conflict.
"The atrocities mount while the Security Council remains paralyzed and I would urge that we try once again to find a path forward," Clinton said.
Russia's Foreign Minister, however, showed no sign of changing tack and said violence by the government and opposition had to be condemned.
"A significant share of the responsibility for the continuing bloodshed rests upon the states that instigate the opponents of Bashar al-Assad to reject a ceasefire and dialogue and demand an unconditional capitulation of the regime," Sergei Lavrov told the Middle East meeting.
Mulling intervention force
Meanwhile, Arab ministers met with UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly and Tunisia's President Moncef Marzouki said later his country could support an Arab peacekeeping force in Syria. Others have doubts though.
"A peacekeeping operation by Arab nations is something we could well imagine," Marzouki told AFP, calling President Bashar al-Assad "a bloodthirsty dictator."
"We have really pushed for a peaceful solution, but if it is necessary, it must be an Arab peacekeeping force, yes."
On Tuesday, the emir of Qatar called at the UN General Assembly for an Arab intervention in Syria.
Arab League secretary general Nabil al-Arabi told reporters he did not believe the emir intended a "fighting force."
But he told a Security Council meeting on the Middle East that the council must support Brahimi by making its resolutions on Syria "binding on all parties."
The impasse
Russia and China have used their powers as permanent members of the council three times to block resolutions which could have led to potential sanctions.
Western diplomats say they do not expect Russia, Syria's main ally, to weaken its defense of Assad. But they say China, which does not have the same strategic interests, may now be feeling pressure from Arab and other nations over its position.
France's Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said it was "shocking" that the council had been unable to act in the 18 months since the uprising against Assad started.
"As the international community, we must be united to stop the violence and help initiate a process of political transition. We must find a common response. We owe it to the people," said Germany's Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle.
None of the ministers have specifically mentioned Russia or China, but diplomats said the targets are clear and that the campaign is also being waged on a wider stage.
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron told the UN General Assembly on Wednesday that the tens of thousands of deaths in Syria conflict had become a "terrible stain" on the reputation of the United Nations.
"The future for Syria is a future without Assad," Cameron told the 193-member assembly, highlighting a report this week that outlined the horror suffered by children who have seen killings and been tortured in the conflict.
"The blood of these young children is a terrible stain on the reputation of this United Nations," Cameron said.
"And in particular, a stain on those who have failed to stand up to these atrocities and in some cases aided and abetted Assad's reign of terror."
China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi was more defensive.
"China has faithfully fulfilled its obligations and acted as a positive force in seeking a political solution to the issue," he said.
"China is ready to join the rest of the international community in an unremitting effort to resolve the Syrian issue in a just, peaceful and appropriate way."
PHOTO CAPTION
Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani (L), Amir of Qatar, shakes hands with United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon (R) before their meeting on September 25 during the General Assembly at UN headquarters in New York.
Aljazeera