Rejecting the Kremlin claims that attacks on Aleppo have stopped, a US official yesterday said, "the regime has rejected UN requests to deliver aid to Eastern Aleppo -- using starvation as a weapon of war."
The language mirrors the Geneva Conventions' prohibition against starving civilians "as a method of warfare."
Aleppo's quarter of a million residents have been besieged and bombarded for months, prompting international outcry.
Officials hope that Russian President Vladimir Putin may rethink his country's participation in a war that has seen chemical weapons and barrel bombs used against civilians, if Russia is seen as an international pariah.
Earlier yesterday Russia failed to win re-election to the UN Human Rights Commission, a serious diplomatic blow.
"We are taking steps, whether its ramping up public pressure or other forms of pressure," a second senior Obama administration official said.
"We are still looking at the whole arsenal of tools to make them feel the weight of international criticism, not saying that in and of itself is going to work."
"We've also spoken about forms of international accountability when it comes to Russian and regime actions."
The Kremlin said that Putin did not think it was time to resume air strikes on Aleppo after the defence ministry requested that a moratorium on bombing be lifted.
Syrian rebels launched a major assault yesterday aimed at linking opposition-held districts with the outside world.
But a US official gave the Kremlin's claim short shrift.
"Despite Russia's claims, attacks by the regime and its backers have continued in Aleppo," the official said.
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