WASHINGTON (Sputnik), Leandra Bernstein — The United States and Russia should each bear a larger burden of refugees proportional to their roles in the Syrian conflict, Markey said.
"I think we [the United States and Russia] should each take a much higher number of refugees from the conflict, and in that way we will have to live with the consequences of our decisions in that country," Markey said on Wednesday of both countries role in the Syrian crisis.
Within Syria the United States and Russia are "the most powerful outside forces at play," Markey said, adding that the two must work together to bring a political solution to the ongoing conflict.
The White House recently announced the United States would open its doors to 10,000 Syrian refugees, but has so far resettled fewer than 2,000, according to independent estimates.
Earlier this month, the head of the Russian Migration Service, Konstantin Romodanovsky, said that Russia was ready to accept Syrian refugees, granted they do not violate any laws.
Because of the different, but deep interests both the United States and Russia have in Syria, both countries should be "paradoxed by the consequences of proxy-state politics."
Since the 2011 outbreak of the Syrian civil war, the United States has backed the armed opposition to Syrian President Bashar Assad. Many experts have also blamed the 2003 US invasion of Iraq for the creation of the Islamic State, which has fostered major instability throughout the region.
Russia has continued to honor its defense obligations and recently provided the Assad government with military hardware to combat Islamic State extremists.