BRUSSELS (AP) - Nato foreign ministers are meeting on Tuesday in Brussels to discuss the wars in Syria and Afghanistan, and to learn the views of a new member of their club - US Secretary of State John Kerry.
Officials say there is virtually no chance that the 28-nation military alliance will intervene in Syria's bloody civil war. More than 70,000 people have died in the conflict, according to the United Nations.
The violence also has forced more than one million Syrians to seek safety abroad, and more are leaving by the day, burdening neighbouring countries such as Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq.
"We can all see that the situation in Syria is getting worse," Nato Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said on his way into the meeting on Tuesday morning.
"And we cannot ignore the risks of a regional spillover, with possible implications for allied security." Nato has deployed Patriot missiles to Turkey, which shares a border with Syria.
On Monday, the European Union lifted its oil embargo on Syria to provide more economic support to the forces fighting to oust the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
On Afghanistan, Nato and its international allies will continue working on Tuesday to define how it will support Afghan forces after 2014, when Nato will no longer have a combat role.
Mr Kerry made no comment on his way into the meeting, other than to utter a single word - in French. Asked in French by a journalist if he would take one question, Mr Kerry smiled and replied: "Apres" - or "afterward."
He is scheduled to hold a news conference later in the day.