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New envoy to Syria says civil war getting worse

BEIRUT - The diplomat tasked with ending Syria's civil war said that the conflict was worsening Thursday, the same day he traveled to the country for the first time since taking up a job he has called "nearly impossible."

BEIRUT - The diplomat tasked with ending Syria's civil war said that the conflict was worsening Thursday, the same day he traveled to the country for the first time since taking up a job he has called "nearly impossible."

Lakhdar Brahimi, the U.N.-Arab League envoy, was expected to meet Friday with Syrian President Bashar Assad. He also was to meet members of the Syrian opposition.

"We came to Syria to consult with our Syrian brothers," Brahimi said on arrival at the airport in Damascus. "There is a crisis in Syria, and I believe it is getting worse."

Brahimi replaces Kofi Annan, who left the job in frustration in August after his efforts failed to stem a conflict that started in March 2011. Activists estimate 23,000 people have been killed in the bloodshed.

The visit comes as violence convulses the country's largest city, Aleppo, and the outskirts of the capital, Damascus. Activists said regime forces shelled Aleppo, and clashes with rebels were reported outside Damascus.

The two cities were once seen as largely immune to the violence in other parts of Syria, but have been hit by fighting as rebels tried to bring the fight to symbols of Assad's power.

Although the regime is better armed than the rebels, the government has not been able to crush the rebellion. The rebels also have failed to overthrow the regime, leading to a bloody stalemate.

The violence has left the Assad government isolated internationally, although Iran, China, and Russia support it. Brahimi met Thursday with Mohammad Riza Shibani, the Iranian ambassador to Syria - a meeting the ambassador described as "good and fruitful."

He also met Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem, who stressed that any initiative should "focus on the Syrian people's interest," said the state-run news agency, SANA.

In Baghdad, U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague said Assad's regime was "doomed" and should not be allowed to survive after committing crimes against its people. He said a transition of power was the only way forward.

"That is the only way to avoid protracted civil war, or the collapse of the Syrian state, or an even greater flow of refugees and loss of life," Hague said at a joint news conference with his Iraqi counterpart, Hoshyar Zebari.