November 01, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
Damascus, SANA-President
Bashar al-Assad stressed that the scenario broadcast
by the US about the killing operation of Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, leader of Daesh organization, is part
of the US tricks and we should not believe what
they say unless they give the evidence.
The President added
in an interview given to Al-Sourea and al-Ikhbariya
TVs on Thursday, that the Russian-Turkish agreement
on northern Syria is temporary one, and it reigns in
Turkish aspirations to achieve more damage through
occupying more Syrian territories and cut the road
in front of the US.
President Al-Assad
affirmed that the entrance of the Syrian Arab Army
into regions of northern Syria is an expression of
the entrance of the Syrian State with all services
it offers, adding that the army has reached the
majority of the regions, but not completely.
The President
underlined that Syria hasn’t offered any concessions
regarding the formation of the committee of
discussing the constitution.
Following is the full
text of the interview:
Journalist:
Hello and welcome to this special interview with the
President of the Syrian Arab Republic, His
Excellency Dr Bashar al-Assad. Thank you for
receiving us Mr President. Your last interview with
Syrian media was several years ago and therefore we
have a lot of questions. We will begin with
political questions and then move into internal
issues.
President
Assad: You are welcome, and as always let
us speak with full openness.
Journalist:
Mr President, thank you very much for receiving us.
Since the political issues are pressing at the
moment we will start with politics, Mr President.
The United States announced a few days ago that the
leader of the terrorist organization ISIS, Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi, was killed. And it thanked Russia,
Syria, Iraq, the Turks and the Kurds for helping
kill Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. Trump thanked Syria, but
we have not heard any comment from Damascus. What is
your take on Trump thanking Syria? Did Syria really
take part in this operation?
President
Assad: Absolutely not, we heard about this
only through the media. Maybe, the reason behind
including a number of countries as participants in
this operation is to give it credibility so these
countries will feel not embarrassed, but have the
desire to be that they are part of a “great”
operation, as the Americans have tried to portray
it. And in this way, they are credited with fighting
terrorism. We do not need such credit. We are the
ones fighting terrorism. We have no relations and
have had no contact with any American institutions.
More importantly, we
do not really know whether the operation did
actually take place or not. No aircraft were
detected on radar screens. Why were the remains of
Baghdadi not shown? This is the same scenario that
was followed with Bin Laden. If there are going to
use different pretexts in order not to show the
remains, let us recall how President Saddam Husain
was captured and how the whole operation was shown
from A to Z; they showed pictures and video clips
after they captured him. The same happened when
they killed his sons several months later; they
showed the bodies. So, why did they hide everything
about the Bin Laden operation and now also the
Baghdadi operation? This is part of the tricks
played by the Americans. That is why we should not
believe everything they say unless they come up with
evidence. American politicians are actually guilty
until proven innocent, not the other way around.
Journalist:
Mr President, if Baghdadi has actually been killed,
does it mean the end of his organization, or is it
as usual that there will be new leaders and new
organizations which are being prepared for the
moment when the cards of their predecessors have
been burned out?
President
Assad: First, Baghdadi represents ISIS,
and ISIS represents a type of doctrine, which is the
extremist Wahhabi doctrine. This type of thought is
more than two centuries old. As long as this
thought is alive and has not receded, this means
that the death of Baghdadi, or even the death of
ISIS as a whole, will have no effect on this
extremist thought.
Regarding Baghdadi as
an individual, it is well-known that he was in
American prisons in Iraq, and that they let him out
in order to play this role. So, he is someone who
could be replaced at any moment. Was he really
killed? Was he killed but through a different
method, in a very ordinary way? Was he kidnapped?
Was he hidden? Or was he removed and given a
facelift? God only knows. American politics are no
different from Hollywood; it relies on the
imagination. Not even science fiction, just mere
imagination. So, you can take American politics and
see it in Hollywood or else you can bring Hollywood
and see it through American politics. I believe the
whole thing regarding this operation is a trick.
Baghdadi will be recreated under a different name,
a different individual, or ISIS in its entirety
might be reproduced as needed under a different name
but with the same thought and the same purpose. The
director of the whole scenario is the same, the
Americans.
Journalist:
Questions have been raised about the Russian-Turkish
agreement, particularly the item related to
maintaining the status quo in the region which was
subject to the Turkish aggression, Tal Abyadh and
Ras al-Ain with a depth of thirty-two kilometers.
What some people understood from this was that it
legitimized the Turkish occupation, particularly
that the agreement did not include any Syrian role
within these areas which were discussed in the
agreement. What is your response to that?
President
Assad: First, the Russian principles have
been clear throughout this war and even before the
Russian base that started supporting the Syrian army
in 2015. These principles are based on
international law, Syrian sovereignty and Syria’s
territorial integrity. This has not changed,
neither before, nor after, nor with changing
circumstances. However, Russian policy deals with
the realities on the ground. These realities on the
ground have achieved two things; the withdrawal of
armed groups from the north to the south in
coordination with the Syrian Army, and as such the
advance of the Syrian Army to the north, to the area
not occupied by the Turks. These two elements are
positive, but they do not cancel out the negative
aspects of the Turkish presence until they are
driven out one way or another. This agreement is a
temporary one, not permanent. If we take for
example the de-escalation areas at a certain period
of time, some people believed that they were
permanent and that they will give terrorists the
right to remain in their areas indefinitely. The
fact was that it was an opportunity to protect
civilians, and also to talk to the terrorists with
the objective of driving them out later. So, we
have to distinguish between ultimate or strategic
goals on the one hand, and tactical approaches on
the other.
In the short term, it
is a good agreement – and let me explain why; the
Turkish incursion, not only reflects Turkey’s
territorial greed but also expresses American
desire. The Russian relationship with Turkey is
positive because it reigns in Turkish aspirations.
On the other hand, it outmaneuvers the American game
in the north. Let me explain this. The recent
German proposal which was immediately supported by
NATO – and the Germans would not make this except on
behalf of the Americans, NATO is the same thing as
America. The proposal talked about restoring
security to this region under international
auspices. This means that the area would be outside
the control of the Syrian state and thus making
separation a reality on the ground. Through this
agreement, the Russians reigned in the Turks,
outmaneuvered the Americans and aborted the call for
internationalization which was proposed by the
Germans. That is why this agreement is a positive
step. It does not achieve everything, in the sense
that it will not pressure the Turks to leave
immediately. However, it limits the damage and paves
the way for the liberation of this region in the
future, or the immediate future, as we hope.
Intervention:
God willing
Journalist:
Since you described the agreement as temporary, but
Turkey, as we have known it, does not abide by
agreements. Consequently, the question is what if
Turkey continued to occupy the areas which it has
controlled as a result of its recent aggression?
You said repeatedly that the Syrian state will use
every possible means to defend itself. But
practically, did not the Russian-Turkish agreement
prevent the ability to try and use such means?
President
Assad: Let us take another example, which
is Idlib. There is an agreement through the Astana
Process that the Turks will leave. The Turks did
not abide by this agreement, but we are liberating
Idlib. There was a delay for a year; the political
process, the political dialogue, and various
attempts were given an opportunity to drive the
terrorists out. All possibilities were exhausted.
In the end, we liberated areas gradually through
military operations. The same will apply in the
northern region after exhausting all political
options.
We must remember that
Erdogan aimed, from the beginning of the war, to
create a problem between the Syrian people and the
Turkish people, to make it an enemy, which will
happen through a military clash. At the beginning of
the war, the Turkish Army supported the Syrian Army
and cooperated with us to the greatest possible
extent, until Erdogan’s coup against the Army.
Therefore, we must continue in this direction, and
ensure that Turkey does not become an enemy state. Erdogan
and his group are enemies, because he leads these
policies, but until now most of the political forces
in Turkey are against Erdogan’s policies. So, we
must ensure not to turn Turkey into an enemy, and
here comes the role of friends – the Russian role
and the Iranian role.
Journalist:
Picking up on this idea, Mr President, the actions
taken by the Turks recently, and by Erdogan, in
particular, like Turkishization, building
universities, imposing the use of certain languages.
These are actions taken by someone who is not
thinking of leaving – just a follow up on your idea,
since you said that they will leave sooner or later.
What about these actions?
President
Assad: If he was thinking of getting out,
he would have left Idlib. You might say that there
is no Turkish army, in the technical sense in Idlib.
But we are in one arena, the whole Syrian arena is
one – a single theatre of operations. From the
furthest point in the south to the furthest point in
the north Turkey is the American proxy in this war,
and everywhere we have fought we have been fighting
this proxy. So, when he does not leave after we
exhaust every possible means, there won’t be any
other choice but war, this is self-evident. I am
saying that in the near future we must give room to
the political process in its various forms. If it
does not yield results then this is an enemy and you
go to war against it; there is no other choice.
Journalist:
Nevertheless, some people said that the American
withdrawal from northern Syria, after which came the
Turkish aggression, and then the Russian-Turkish
agreement. All of that came within an
American-Russian-Turkish agreement. What do you say
to that?
President
Assad: This was meant to show that Russia
accepted the Turkish incursion, or that Russia
wanted to turn a blind eye in the fact that. In
fact, it is not true. For over a year, the Russians
were concerned about the seriousness of such a
proposition. We all knew that the Turkish
proposition was serious, but it was shackled by
American orders or desires. Some people might
criticize the Russians for this outcome, due to
their position at the United Nations. As I said a
short while ago, the Russians deal with realities on
the ground, consequently, they try to ensure that
all political conditions are in place in order to
pave the way for their departure from Syria and
limit the damage by the Turks or reign in the
Turkish recalcitrance aimed at inflicting more
damage and occupying more land. But the Russians
were certainly not part of this agreement – Russian
agreements are always public. The Russian-Turkish
agreement was announced immediately, with all its
items; the agreement between us and the Kurds, with
Russian mediation and support was also made public
right from the very beginning. There is no hidden
agenda in Russian policies, which gives us
assurances.
Journalist:
But the American-Turkish meetings are not announced.
You said repeatedly that Erdogan’s objective, or
creating the buffer zone, was Erdogan’s main
objective from day one of the war on Syria.
President Obama refused to accept this buffer zone,
while today we are seeing certain actions on the
ground. Does this mean that Obama was better than
Trump?
President
Assad: We should not bet on any American
President. First, when Erdogan says that he decided
to make an incursion or that they told the
Americans, he is trying to project Turkey as a super
power or to pretend that he makes his own decisions;
all these are theatrics shared between him and the
Americans. In the beginning, nobody was allowed to
interfere, because the Americans and the West
believed that demonstrations will spread out and
decide the outcome. The demonstrations did not
spread as they wanted, so they shifted towards using
weapons. When weapons did not decide the outcome,
they moved towards the terrorist extremist
organizations with their crazy ideology in order to
decide the outcome militarily. They were not able
to. Here came the role of ISIS in the summer of
2014 in order to disperse the efforts of the Syrian
Arab Army, which it was able to do, at which point
came the Russian intervention. When all bets on the
field failed, it was necessary for Turkey to
interfere and turn the tables; this is their role.
As for Trump, you
might ask me a question and I give you an answer
that might sound strange. I say that he is the best
American President, not because his policies are
good, but because he is the most transparent
president. All American presidents perpetrate all
kinds of political atrocities and all crimes and yet
still win the Nobel Prize and project themselves as
defenders of human rights and noble and unique
American values, or Western values in general. The
reality is that they are a group of criminals who
represent the interests of American lobbies, i.e.
the large oil and arms companies, and others. Trump
talks transparently, saying that what we want is
oil. This is the reality of American policy, at
least since WWII. We want to get rid of such and
such a person or we want to offer a service in
return for money. This is the reality of American
policy. What more do we need than a transparent
opponent? That is why the difference is in form
only, while the reality is the same.
Journalist:
The leader of the dissolved Syrian Democratic
Forces, Mazloum Abdi, made statements to the media
in which he said that Trump promised them that
before withdrawal he will contact the Russians to
find a solution to the Kurdish question by making an
agreement with the Russians and the Syrian state to
give the Kurds an opportunity to defend themselves.
Was there really such an agreement, and what is the
fate of non-border regions in the Syrian Jazeera,
the regions which were under the control of the
armed militias called SDF? Have these regions been
handed over to the Syrian state, and if so in what
way? Is it only in the military sense; or ultimately
has the return of the Syrian institutions to these
regions taken place?
President
Assad: Do you mean an American-Kurdish
agreement?
Journalist:
The Americans promised the Kurds to find a solution
to their cause by influencing the Russians to reach
an understanding with the Syrian state to give them
an opportunity to defend themselves.
President
Assad: Regardless of whether contact has
been made or not, as I said before what ever the
Americans say has no credibility, whether they say
that to an enemy or a friend, the result is the same
– it is unreliable. That is why we do not waste our
time on things like this. The only Russian
agreement with the Kurds was what we talked about in
terms of a Russian role in reaching an agreement
with Kurdish groups – we should not say with the
Kurds, because this is inaccurate and we cannot talk
about one segment – the groups which call themselves
SDF with the Syrian Army to be deployed. Of course,
the Syrian Army cannot be deployed only to carry out
purely security or military acts. The deployment of
the Syrian Army is an expression of the presence of
the Syrian state, which means the presence of all
the services which should be provided by the state.
This agreement was concluded, and we reached most
regions but not completely. There are still
obstacles. We intervene because we have direct and
old relations – before the Turkish incursion – with
these groups. Sometimes they respond, in other
places they don’t. But certainly, the Syrian Arab
Army will reach these areas simultaneously with full
public services, which means the return of full
state authority. I want to reiterate, that this
should take place gradually. Second, the situation
will not return as before. There are facts on the
ground which need to be addressed, and this will
take time. There are new facts related to people on
the ground which took place when the state was
absent. There are armed groups; we do not expect
them to hand over their weapons immediately. Our
policy should be gradual and rational, and should
take the facts into account. But the ultimate goal
is to return to the situation as it used to be
previously which is the full control of the state.
Journalist:
After everything that happened: they targeted the
Syrian state, Syrian citizens, the Syrian Arab Army.
Throughout the war years, they played a bad role and
were American proxies, after all this, are we as
Syrians able to live with the Kurds once again?
President
Assad: To be accurate, this issue is raised
repeatedly, and sometimes in private gatherings.
And I know that part of your role is to repeat what
you hear, regardless of personal conviction. What
happened during this war is a distortion of
concepts; to say that this group has a certain
characteristic, negative or positive, is neither
objective nor rational. It is also unpatriotic.
Among the Kurds there were people who were American
agents or proxies. This is true, but among the
Arabs there were similar cases in the Jazeera area
and in other areas in Syria. This applies to most
segments of Syrian society. The mistake which was
made was that this action was made by a group of
Kurds who made themselves representatives, not only
of the Kurds, but of the Arabs and others segments
of society in al-Jazeera region. The Americans,
through their support with weapons and money – of
course the money is not American, it comes from some
gulf Arab states – helped establish the authority of
these groups over all segments of the society,
leading us to believe that those in the area were
all Kurds. So, we are actually dealing with the
various Kurdish parties. As for the Kurds
themselves, most of them had good relations with the
Syrian state, and they were always in contact with
us and proposed genuine patriotic ideas. In some of
the areas we entered, the reaction of the Kurds was
no less positive, or less joyful and happy than the
reaction of other people there. So, this evaluation
is not accurate. Yes, very simply, we can live once
again with each other. If the answer were no, it
means that Syria will never be stable again.
Journalist:
But what is the problem with the Kurds, even before
the war? Where does the problem with them lie?
President
Assad: Although we stood with these groups
for decades, and we could have paid the price in
1998 through a military clash with Turkey because of
them, we stood with them based on the cultural
rights of these groups or of this segment of Syrian
society. What do they accuse the Syrian state of?
They accuse it of being Chauvinistic, and sometimes
they accuse the Ba’th Party of being a Chauvinistic
party although the census conducted in 1962 was not
under the Ba’th Party, because it was not in power
at the time. They accuse us of depriving this group
of their cultural rights. Let us presume that what
they say is correct. Can I, as an individual, be
open and close-minded at the same time? I cannot.
Can the state be open or tolerant and intolerant
and close-minded at the same time? It cannot. If
we take an example of the latest group which joined
the Syrian fabric, the Armenians. The Armenians have
been a patriotic group par excellence. This was
proven without a shadow of doubt during the war. At
the same time, this group has its own societies, its
own churches and more sensitively, it has its own
schools. And if you attend any Armenian
celebration, a wedding, or any other event – and I
used to attend such events because I used to have
friends among them previously – they sing their
traditional songs but afterwards they sing national,
politically-inclined songs. Is there any form of
freedom that exceeds this? The Syrian Armenians are
the least, among other Armenians of the world,
dissolved in society. They have integrated, but not
dissolved into Syrian society. They have maintained
all their characteristics. Why should we be open
here and unopen with others? The reason is that
there are separatist propositions. There are maps
showing a Syrian Kurdistan as part of a larger
Kurdistan. Now, it is our right to defend our
territorial integrity and to be wary of separatist
propositions. But we do not have a problem with
Syrian diversity. On the contrary, Syrian diversity
is rich and beautiful which translates into
strength. We do not have an adverse view of this;
but richness and diversity are one thing and
separating and fragmenting the country is something
else, something contrary. That is the problem.
Journalist:
Just to pick up on this idea, Mr President, living
with each other. In your answer, you said that we
must ultimately live with each other. The problem
here is not only with the Kurdish component. There
were groups of the population who lived in different
areas outside the control of the Syrian state for
years. What about those? What is the state’s plan to
reintegrate them under the idea of living together,
particularly the children among them, because with
children we are talking about Syria’s future
generation? What is the plan for these people?
President
Assad: Actually, the problem is primarily
with children and then with young people in the
second instance. There are several issues, one of
which is that this generation does not know the
meaning of the state and the rule of law. They have
not lived under the state, they have lived under
armed groups. But the worst and most dangerous
impact is on the children, who in some areas have
not learned the Arabic language, and others who have
learned wrong concepts – extremist concepts or
concepts against the state or the homeland and other
concepts which were proposed from outside Syria and
taught to them in formal school curricula. This was
the subject of discussion during the past few weeks,
particularly during the past few days, because the
deployment of the Syrian Army in large areas in the
northern regions highlighted this problem on a large
scale. Currently ministries, particularly the
Ministry of Education and also the Ministries of
Defence and the Interior are studying this issue. I
believe there will be a statement and a solution
proposed shortly, albeit general in the first phase
which will be followed by administrative measures in
order to assimilate these people within the system
of the Syrian state. For instance, who will enroll
in the Syrian Army, who will enroll in the police,
who will enroll in schools? Somebody who is twelve
years old: how will they integrate into the Syrian
school system if they know nothing of the
curriculum? The same applies to those who are in
primary schools. I believe the solution is to
assimilate all within the national system, but there
should be special measures in order to reintegrate
them into this system, and I believe in the next few
days we will have a final picture of this.
Journalist:
returning to politics, and to the United States, in
particular, President Donald Trump announced his
intention to keep a limited number of his troops in
Syria while redeploying some of them on the
Jordanian borders and on the borders of the Israeli
enemy, while some of them will protect the oil
fields. What is your position in this regard, and
how will the Syrian state respond to this
illegitimate presence?
President
Assad: Regardless of these statements, the
reality is that the Americans are occupiers, whether
they are in the east, the north or the south, the
result is the same. Once again, we should not be
concerned with his statements, but rather deal with
the reality. When we are finished with the areas
according to our military priorities and we reach an
area in which the Americans are present, I am not
going to indulge in heroics and say that we will
send the army to face the Americans. We are talking
about a super power. Do we have the capabilities to
do that? I believe that this is clear for us as
Syrians. Do we choose resistance? If there is
resistance, the fate of the Americans will be
similar to their fate in Iraq. But the concept of
resistance needs a popular state of mind that is the
opposite of being agents and proxies, a patriotic
popular state which carries out acts of resistance.
The natural role of the state in this case is to
provide all the necessary conditions and necessary
support to any popular resistance against the
occupier. If we put to one side the colonial and
commercial American mentality which promotes the
colonization of certain areas for money, oil and
other resources, we must not forget that the main
agents which brought the Americans, the Turks and
others to this region are Syrians acting as agents
of foreigners – Syrian traitors. Dealing with all
the other cases is just dealing with the symptoms,
while we should be addressing the causes. We should
be dealing with those Syrians and try to reformulate
the patriotic state of the Syrian society – to
restore patriotism, restore the unity of opinion and
ensure that there are no Syrian traitors. To ensure
that all Syrians are patriots, and that treason is
no longer a matter of opinion, a mere difference
over a political issue. We should all be united
against occupation. When we reach this state, I
assure you that the Americans will leave on their
own accord because they will have no opportunity to
remain in Syria; although America is a superpower,
it will not be able to remain in Syria. This is
something we saw in Lebanon at a certain point and
in Iraq at a later stage. I think this is the right
solution.
Journalist:
Last week, you made a tour of the front lines in
Idlib with which you surprised the Syrians and the
world. Addressing the soldiers of the Syrian Arab
Army, you said that the battle is in the east, but
Idlib is an advanced outpost of the enemy in the
west which aims at dispersing the forces of the
Syrian Army. Some saw the visit as the go-ahead
sign, or the zero hour for the coming battle of
Idlib. Is it so?
President
Assad: No, there was no link between my
visit and the zero hour. First, I conduct tours
every so often to the areas which are considered hot
spots and dangerous, because these heroes are
carrying out the most difficult of tasks, and it is
natural for me to think of visiting them. This has
been common practice for me; the visit to Idlib in
particular was because the world perhaps believed
that the whole Syria question is summed up in what
is happening in the north, and the issue has now
become a Turkish Army incursion into Syrian
territory, and forgetting that all those fighting in
Idlib are actually part of the Turkish Army, even
though they are called al-Qaeda, Ahrar al-Sham and
other names. I assure you that those fighters are
closer to Erdogan’s heart than the Turkish Army
itself. We should not forget this, because
politically and in relation to Turkey in particular,
the main battle is Idlib because it is linked to the
battle in the north-eastern region or the Jazeera
region. This is the reason – I wanted to stress
that what is happening in the Jazeera region,
despite its importance and despite the wide area of
operations does not distract us from the
significance of Idlib in the overall battle.
Journalist:
You say, Mr President, that there is no link between
your visit to Idlib and the zero hour but is there a
link between your visit to Idlib and the meeting
which took place on the same day between Turkey and
Russia?
President
Assad: Actually, when I was there, I had
forgotten completely that a summit was being held on
the same day. I did not remember that. I knew that
a summit would be taking place and that it would be
on Tuesday but…
Journalist:
But your statements gave the impression that it was
a preemptive rejection or something against the
meeting.
President
Assad: That is true.
Journalist:
Or against this meeting.
President
Assad: Some articles and comments even said
that there was a feeling of anger against the
summit, and that the summit was against us. The
fact is that I was not angry, and my statements
against Erdogan are continuous. I said that he was
a thief, and from the first days he started stealing
everything related to Syria. So, he is a thief. I
was not calling him names; I was describing him.
This is an adjective and this description is true.
What do you call somebody who steals factories,
crops and finally land? A benefactor? He is a
thief, there is no other name. Previously in my
speech before the People’s Assembly, I said that he
is a political thug. He exercises this political
thuggery on the largest scale. He lies to everyone,
blackmails everyone. He is a hypocrite and publicly
so. We are not inventing an epithet; he declares
himself through his true attributes. So, I only
described him
As to the agreement,
as I said a while ago, we believe that Russian
involvement anywhere is in our interest, because our
principles are the same and our battle is one. So,
Russian involvement will certainly have positive
results and we started to see a part of that.
Contrary to what you said, we were happy with this
summit, and we are happy with the Russian-Turkish
relationship in general, contrary to what some
people believe, that the Russians are appeasing the
Turks. It does not matter whether the Russians are
appeasing the Turks or not or whether they are
playing a tactical game with them. What is
important is the strategy. That is why I can say
that there is no link at all between my statements
and the summit.
Journalist:
Remaining with Idlib, but from a different
perspective, the UN Special Envoy for Syria, Geir
Pedersen, and in an interview with a newspaper about
the situation in Idlib, described it as complicated,
and I’ll mention the points he made: he called for a
solution which guarantees the security of civilians.
He also talked about the presence of terrorist
organizations and the importance of avoiding an
all-out military campaign which, in his opinion,
will, far from solving the problem, have a serious
humanitarian consequence. What do you think of what
he said, and will the operation be postponed or
stopped because of international pressure or based
on Pedersen’s remarks?
President
Assad: If Pedersen has the means or the
capacity to solve the problem without an all-out
military operation, it will be good. Why does he
not solve the problem? If he has a clear plan, we
have no objection. It is very simple. He can visit
Turkey and tell the Turks to convince the
terrorists, or ask Turkey to separate the civilians
from the militants. Let the civilians stay in one
area and the militants in another. It would be even
easier if he could identify who is a militant and
who is not. Fighting terrorism is not achieved by
theorizing, making rhetorical statements or by
preaching. As for postponing, had we waited for an
international decision – and by international
decision I mean American, British, French and those
who stand with them – we would not have liberated
any region in Syria since the first days of the war.
These pressures have no impact. Sometimes we factor
in certain political circumstances; as I said, we
give political action an opportunity so that there
is no pretext, but when all these opportunities are
exhausted, military action becomes necessary in
order to save civilians, because I cannot save
civilians when they are under the control of the
militants. Western logic is an intentionally and
maliciously up-side-down logic. It says that the
military operation should be stopped in order to
protect civilians, whilst for them the presence of
civilians under the authority of terrorists
constitutes a form of protection for the civilians.
The opposite is actually true. The military
intervention aims at protecting the civilians, by
leaving civilians under the authority of terrorists
you extend a service to terrorists and take part in
killing civilians.
Journalist:
You are not waiting for an international decision
but are you waiting for a Russian one? Can the
Russians delay the beginning of the military
operation? We saw earlier that military operations
were stopped in Idlib, to the extent that some
people said that the Russians put pressure every
time to stop the operations as a result of special
understandings with the Turks. Is that true?
President
Assad: “Pressure” is not the right word.
We, the Russians and the Iranians are involved in
the same military battle and the same political
battle. We are always in talks with each other to
determine the circumstances which allow for an
operation to go ahead. On several occasions, we
agreed on a specific timing for a certain operation,
which was later postponed because of military or
political developments. This dialogue is normal.
There are issues we see on the internal arena, and
there are issues seen by Iran on the regional arena
and there are those issues seen by the Russians on
the international arena. We have an integrated
approach based on dialogue. In the past month, I
have held five meetings with Russian and Iranian
officials, so less than a week apart. Between each
two meetings there were military and political
developments such that what had been agreed in the
first meeting was then changed or modified in the
second, third and fourth meetings and the last of
which was yesterday. The fast pace of developments
makes it necessary sometimes to postpone operations.
On the other hand, we have contacts with civilians
in those areas. We really try hard to make it
possible for civilians to move from those areas into
our areas in order to save lives; moreover, if a
political solution was possible, and sometimes we
succeeded in finding such a solution, it would save
the lives of Syrian soldiers, which is a priority
that we should not ignore. So, there are many
elements, which are difficult to go into now, which
affect this decision and postpone it; it is not a
matter of pressure. The Russians are as enthusiastic
about fighting terrorism as we are, otherwise why
would they send their fighter jets? The timing
depends on dialogue.
Journalist:
But President Putin announced the end of major
military operations in Syria. Would Russia be with
us in Idlib? Would it take part in the military
operation?
President
Assad: Russia was with us in liberating
Khan Skeikhoon and its environs; announcing an end
to military operations does not mean an end to
fighting terrorism. Indeed, the major battles have
almost finished, because most areas either surrender
voluntarily or are subject to limited operations.
The Khan Sheikhoon operation might look on the map
as a major battle, but there was in fact a collapse
on the part of the militants. So, maybe this is what
was meant by the end of the major operations. Their
statements that Idlib should return under the
control of the Syrian state and their determination
to strike at terrorism have not changed.
Journalist:
Remaining in Idlib and on the same point, because
there is a lot being said about this. Concerning the
terrorists in Idlib, and they are the same
terrorists Pedersen talked about, how are they going
to be handled? Are they going to be deported? There
have been cases like this before: terrorists being
deported from different regions in Syria to Idlib.
Now, terrorists are in Idlib. Would the Turks
accept the terrorists to be deported to Turkey, or
how are they going to be dealt with?
President
Assad: If Turkey does not accept that, it
is Turkey’s problem and it does not concern us. We
are going to deal with them in the same way we have
in the past. Some might ask: in the past there were
areas to which terrorists were permitted to retreat
to, but now there is no other place to which
terrorists might be sent from Idlib. So, where
should they go? If they do not go to Turkey, they
have two options: either return to the Syrian state
and resolve their issues or face war. There is no
other choice, neither for us nor for them. These are
the two only options.
Journalist:
Some media outlets have circulated leaks about
meetings with the Turks. Is that true, on what
level, and what was the outcome of those meetings,
if they had taken place?
President
Assad: All those meetings were held between
security officers but at different levels. Few
meetings, probably two or three, were held in Kasab
inside the Syrian borders or close to the joint
borders, and one or more meetings were held in
Russia. I do not recall the number exactly, because
they took place in the space of the past two years.
But there have been no real results. At least we
had expected to reach a solution concerning the
withdrawal agreed upon in Astana for fifteen
kilometers west and north in the de-escalation zone
in Idlib. It did not happen.
Journalist:
So, you confirm that there have been meetings with
the Turkish side, but that was before the agreement…
President
Assad: Of course, there were tripartite
meetings with Russian mediation and Russian
presence. We insisted on the Russian presence
because we do not trust the Turks, so that there are
witnesses.
Journalist:
not bilateral meetings?
President
Assad: No, trilateral meetings.
Journalist:
Trilateral, with the Russians present? Was that
before the last Russian-Turkish meeting?
President
Assad: Of course.
Journalist:
Are you prepared today to sit with the Turks after
the aggression and after the agreement?
President
Assad: If you are asking me how would I
feel if I, personally, had to shake hands with a
person from the Erdogan group, or someone of similar
leanings or who represents his ideology – I would
not be honoured by such a meeting and I would feel
disgusted. But we have to put our personal feelings
aside when there is a national interest at stake.
If a meeting would achieve results, I would say
that everything done in the national interest should
be done. This is the responsibility of the state.
I do not expect a meeting to produce any results
unless circumstances change for the Turks. And
because the Erdogan-type Turks are opportunists and
belong to an opportunist organization and an
opportunist ideology, they will produce results
according to changing circumstances, when they are
under pressure, depending on their internal or
external circumstances or maybe their failure in
Syria. Then, they might produce results.
Journalist:
The sensitive question in this regard is: the Turks
are occupiers, so if I am willing, or if I have the
chance, or if I believe that I might meet the Turks,
the Turks are occupiers, exactly like Israelis, so
it would be possible to meet the Israelis. This is a
sensitive issue, but it is being raised.
President
Assad: It was actually raised when we
started these meetings: how can we meet occupiers in
Afrin or other areas, even if there are not
occupiers, they support terrorism; they are enemies
in the national sense. The difference between them
and Israel is that we do not recognize the
legitimacy of its existence as a state. We don’t
recognize the existence of the Israeli people. There
is no Israeli people except the one that existed for
several centuries BC, now they are a diaspora who
came and occupied land and evicted its people.
While the Turkish people exist, and they are a
neighbouring people, and we have a common history,
regardless of whether this history is good or bad or
in between; that is irrelevant. Turkey exists as a
state and it is a neighbouring state. The
Alexandretta issue is different from the situation
in which a people without land replace a land and a
people; the comparison is not valid. Even when we
negotiated with Israel in the 1990s, we did not
recognize it. We negotiated in order to achieve
peace. If this was achieved and the rights were
returned, we would recognize it; as I said, the
comparison is invalid. Turkey will continue to
exist and the Turks should remain a brotherly
people. Erdogan was betting at the beginning to
mobilize the Turkish people behind him in order to
create hostility with the Syrian people, and
consequently be given a free hand. We have to be
careful not to look at things in the same way. I
stress again that some people, not the political
forces, but within the Turkish Army and security
institutions are against Erdogan. This was the
reason behind our drive to meet them.
Furthermore, and this
was the subject of discussion with our Russian and
Iranian friends – who said that yes, we are
defending you, but in the end, you are the owners of
the cause. This is true, the land is ours, and the
cause is ours and so we have a duty to carry out by
meeting them directly, even if we do not expect
results. Maybe there will come a day when we can
achieve results, particularly with changing
circumstances inside Turkey, in the world and within
Syria.
Journalist:
Concerning Israel, some people describe it as the
absent present in the events in Syria, the greatest
beneficiary of what happened in Syria. Indeed, it is
more comfortable now than in any other time before
in comparison with weakening Syria, Hizbollah and
Iran, as analysts say.
President
Assad: It is the always-present. It has
never been absent. It might be absent in terms of
language, because we fight its proxies, agents,
flunkies or tools, in different ways, some military
some political. They are all tools serving Israel
directly or through the Americans. Since the battle
on the ground is with these forces, it is normal
that the terminology describes these forces and not
Israel. Israel is in fact a main partner in what is
happening, and as an enemy state, that is expected.
Will it stand by and watch? No. it will be
proactive, and more effective in order to strike at
Syria, the Syrian people, the Syrian homeland and
everything related to Syria.
Journalist:
Benefiting practically from what happened?
President
Assad: This is self-evident. Even if we
do not discuss it, it is one of our national givens
in Syria.
Journalist:
After all the aggressions carried out by the Israeli
enemy on Syria, we have never seen an Arab position,
and the Arab League has never moved. When the
Turkish aggression started, the Arab League met at
the level of Foreign Ministers. The first
impressions were good, and the final communique was
described as positive. In return, we have not heard
a statement from the Syrian state.
President
Assad: Do you recall when Syria’s
membership in the Arab League was frozen? Did we
issue a statement? We did not. So, if we did not
issue a statement as a result of Syria’s departure
from the Arab League, why would we issue one when
they started discussing Syria’s return to the Arab
League? I think the implications of my answer are
clear for all those who want to understand. I do
not think that your viewers believe that raising
this issue merits more than the few sentences I have
just said.
Journalist:
True. If we move to pure politics concerning the
constitutional committee. What is your explanation
of the criticism made by the other side to this
committee, although it has been one of their demands
for years?
President
Assad: Very simply, they believed that we
would reject the formation of this committee, and
maybe they were shocked that we were able to form
it, because they used to raise obstacles and blame
the Syrian government. We dealt with these
obstacles in a specific diplomatic manner, not
making concession on fundamental issues, but on some
issues which we consider related to form. They were
shocked in the end, and that is why they launched a
severe attack on it. That is what happened, in
brief.
Journalist:
The Syrian state made no concessions under Russian
or Iranian pressure?
President
Assad: No. Had we made real concessions,
they would not have attacked it. They would have
praised the formation of the committee. Their
attack shows that we have not made any concessions
and no concessions can be made. The constitutional
committee and the outcomes it might produce later
would be used as a launching pad to attack and
strike at the structure of the Syrian state. This
is what the West has been planning for years, and we
know this. That is why it was not an option to
concede on fundamentals and particular stances
related to Syria’s interest. There were other
details which were insignificant, like the fact that
they camouflaged themselves under the umbrella of
the so-called moderate opposition. In many
instances, they proposed names affiliated to
al-Nusra Front, which we rejected because of this
affiliation.
Journalist:
Terrorists?
President
Assad: They are terrorists. In the end we
agreed to a number of those, which might have come
as a surprise. We determined that the result would
be the same regardless: the same background, the
same affiliation, the same master.
Journalist:
True
President
Assad: And decision maker, and so the
signal for the decision would be from the same
source. So, what difference does it make?
Journalist:
Puppets, no more.
President
Assad: Exactly. We agreed. This is only
an example. There are many other details, but this
is what surprised them. We have not made any
concession on fundamental issues.
Journalist:
Pedersen talked about meetings of the
constitutional committee in Geneva saying that it
would open the door to reaching a comprehensive
solution to the Syrian crisis, and in his view, that
solution includes holding parliamentary and
presidential elections under the supervision of the
United Nations and in accordance with Security
Council Resolution 2254. He also talked about
ensuring the participation of Syrian expatriates.
Would you accept international supervision on
parliamentary and presidential elections? And is
this issue within the preview of this committee?
And who has the right to vote, practically?
President
Assad: For him to say that this committee
prepares the ground for a comprehensive solution,
this is not true. It provides part of the solution,
maybe. But by saying this he ignores the presence
of the terrorists. A constitutional committee while
the terrorists are still there will solve the
problem – how? This is impossible; it is rejected.
The solution starts by striking at terrorism in
Syria. It starts by stopping external interference
in Syria. Any Syrian-Syrian dialogue complements,
contributes and plays a certain role, but it does
not replace the first and second elements. I am
saying this in order not to leave part of the
statement as if we have agreed to it.
If he believes that
Resolution 2254 gives the authority to any party,
international or otherwise, to supervise the
elections, this means that they are returning to the
era of the mandate. I would like to recall that the
first part of the resolution refers to Syria’s
sovereignty, which is expressed by the Syrian state
alone and no one else. The elections that will be
held will be under the supervision of the Syrian
state from A to Z. If we want to invite any other
party – an international body, certain states,
organizations, societies, individuals or
personalities, it will still be under the
supervision of the Syrian state and under the
sovereignty of the Syrian state. The constitutional
committee has nothing to do with the elections it is
only tasked with the constitution. If they believe
that they will return to the days of the mandate,
then that would only be in their dreams.
Journalist:
Again, on Pedersen’s statements, he said that the
mere acceptance to form the constitutional committee
is an implied acceptance of the other side and
constitutes a joined commitment before the Syrian
people to try and agree, under the auspices of the
United Nations, on the constitutional arrangements
for Syria. Some people objected to this implied
acceptance of the other side by the committee, since
it does not represent the Syrian people and is not
elected by the Syrian people. What is your response
to that?
President
Assad: All your questions are valid, at
least from a legal perspective. First, let us
identify the first party and the second; some people
believe the first party is the Syrian state or the
Syrian government. No, this is not the case, the
first party represents the viewpoint of the Syrian
government, however the Syrian government is not
part of these negotiations nor of these discussions.
Journalist:
The first party is supported by the Syrian
government.
President
Assad: Exactly. The government supports
this party because we believe that we share the same
viewpoint. They are people who belong to the same
political climate of the Syrian government. This
does not imply that the government is part of the
negotiations. Legally, we are not a part of the
constitutional committee and this does not imply the
government’s recognition of any party; this issue is
should be clear. So, he is referring to a side
which represents the viewpoint of the Syrian
government. Here we have to question: what does he
mean by “implied acceptance,” what is it we are
accepting?
The first party
initially accepted to be part of Sochi and to sit
down with the second party in Sochi; it later
accepted to set up a constitutional committee and
discuss ideas regarding the constitution. Accepting
to sit down with them, does not imply that we accept
their nature. The first party exists in Syria,
lives in Syria, belongs to all segments of the
Syrian people; similarly, there is a state which has
the same viewpoint, is elected by the Syrian people
and enjoys the support of the majority of people.
The second party is appointed by whom? It is
appointed by Turkey. Why was the formation of the
constitutional committee delayed? For a whole year,
we have been negotiating with Turkey via the
state-guarantors, Russia and Iran. The second party
was not appointed by any Syrian side; a few
represent the terrorists and the majority represent
the states which imposed them; it is exclusively
Turkey, and of course those standing in the
background, the Americans and others. And there is
the other party, which, as I said, represents the
terrorists. So, what is it I am accepting? I accept
the terrorist to be a patriot, or I accept those
appointed by others, or I accept agents to be
patriots. Let us speak frankly. Why should we lie
and speak diplomatically? The reality is that there
is a patriotic party dealing with a party which is
an agent and a terrorist, its as simple as that. But
in order to be diplomatic and to not anger everyone,
I will call it a Syrian-Syrian dialogue, but only in
terms of an identity card, passport and nationality.
But as for belonging, that is a different
discussion, to which we all know the answer too
aside from the diplomatic discourse.
Journalist:
Pedersen considered that the launch of the work of
the committee is actually a return to Geneva. Have
we returned to Geneva after four years? And what
about Sochi and Astana?
President
Assad: No, we have returned to Geneva only
geographically, whereas politically, we are part of
Sochi, and everything that is happening has its
frame of reference as Sochi and is a continuation of
it. There is no Geneva, it is not part of this
process. The fact that the UN is represented and
participates in Sochi gives it an international
dimension, which is necessary; but it does not mean
that Geneva undercuts Sochi. There is no Geneva.
Journalist:
Could Pedersen’s statements, all the statements we
have reviewed here, aim at preempting the work of
the committee, or are they completely outside the
context of its work? And concerning the
constitution, in particular, is what is happening a
complete change of the constitution, a discussion on
the constitution, or the amendment of some
provisions of the constitution?
President
Assad: There will be an attempt to direct
the work of the committee in a certain direction.
This is for sure, and we are fully aware of this
and won’t allow it. That is why everything
announced outside the committee has no value; it is
absolute zero, as simple as that. Therefore, we
should not waste our time on such statements or give
it any importance. What is the second point?
Journalist:
About the nature of the committee’s work: is it
discussing the provisions of the constitution,
amending some provisions or a complete change of the
constitution?
President
Assad: This constitutes a large part of
the discussion on setting up the constitutional
committee: shall we amend the constitution or have a
new constitution? Our position was that when we
amend a provision of the constitution and put it to
a referendum, it becomes a new constitution. So,
there is no real difference between amending the
constitution or having a new one, because there is
nothing to define the new constitution, a completely
new constitution. This is all theoretical and has
no real meaning. What concerns us is that
everything produced by the meetings of this
committee and is in line with national interest –
even if it is a new constitution from A to Z, we
shall approve. And if there is an amendment of a
single provision in the constitution, which is
against national interest, we would oppose it. So,
in order not to waste our time in such sophistry, we
should focus on the implications. We are fully
aware of the game they are going to play. They aim
to weaken the state and transform it into a state
which cannot be controlled from within and,
consequently is controlled from the outside. The
game is clear, as is happening in neighboring
countries which we don’t need to mention. This is
not going to happen; but they will try and we will
not accept. This is the summary of months of future
dialogue, and maybe longer, I don’t know. Of course,
I mean future dialogue.
Journalist:
We discussed at length the constitutional committee
and all the statements made about it. I will move to
talking about the internal situation in Syria, since
we are talking about attempts to influence, what
matters is the internal situation. During the war
years, the Syrian’s suffered from high prices, lack
of production, shortage of job opportunities, many
consequences of terrorism, the sanctions, and the
difficult military situation over large parts of the
Syrian territory. The natural outcome was a
deterioration in the living conditions of Syrian
families. But now, conditions on the ground
militarily have improved, most of the land has
returned to the control of the Syrian state. What
about the living conditions? Are there signs of an
improvement of this situation, or will the situation
remain as it is until all Syrian territory is
liberated?
President
Assad: If the cause was only due to the
situation on the ground, terrorism, etc., then yes,
it is better to wait. But this does not make sense.
As you know, some people tend to blame everything
on the security situation and whilst there is no
doubt that it has a great impact, but it is not
absolute. This answers the last part of the
question. Do we wait? No, because if we were to
wait, even if the situation on the ground changed,
living conditions would not improve. Living
conditions will not improve unless we move, very
simply, as a state and as a society on all levels.
Liberating some areas might have an impact on the
economic situation if these areas were employed and
integrated into the development and economic cycle
in Syria.
Journalist:
Areas in which there are resources in particular.
President
Assad: There might be resources, or it
might be a tourist area. Currently there is no
tourism, so this area will not have an impact on the
economic situation, but an agricultural area like
the northern regions, this is essential; today we
import some of the things which we used to export
and because they are imported in a round-about way
in order to circumvent the sanctions, we are paying
more for them. If we take Aleppo for instance, it
is the heart of Syrian industry, and with Damascus
they are the centre of the Syrian economy. So,
areas are different but if we liberate areas without
taking the necessary measures to invigorate the
economy, things will not improve. So, as a state,
we need to accelerate the rebuilding of
infrastructure – like restoring electricity and
other utilities, and the role of state institutions,
in order to facilitate the return of the
productivity cycle. Here I am not referring to
major industries and large projects. Even before
the war, we had the view that large projects are
important but they are not the solution. For a
country like Syria, the strength of its economy lies
in small and medium-sized enterprises. This will
help invigorate the economy. The problem is that
some people wait; they say that let us wait to see
what happens. If we are to wait, then we should not
expect to see the signs that you referred to. Are
there signs? Yes, of course, there are improvements,
there are industries which have emerged, workshops
that have returned to work. The number of people
who have returned to the country is higher than the
development of the economy, and consequently some
might say these improvements are intangible, this is
correct. The challenge now is to integrate these
people into the economic cycle. The answer to the
question: (can we do it?) of course, we can. We
should not say that circumstances prevent us, no; we
have some laziness, we have some dependencies and
sometimes we do not have the vision of how to move.
And by we, I mean all of us as a society, as a
state and as citizens. The state is responsible to
provide the necessary conditions and the
infrastructure, but it cannot open all the shops,
workshops, and industries.
Journalist:
If we can, why do we not see a real response by the
government to your continued directives to the
ministers to deal transparently with the citizens.
Why is this indifference and improvisation in the
work of government institutions and the absence of
any planning or a preemptive alternative, as some
people say, some people who hold the government
responsible directly for squandering the blood of
the martyrs and the wounded and the sacrifices of
the Syrians.
President
Assad: First, if we want to address
government institutions, and in order to be
objective, I cannot talk about them collectively;
there are those ministries that are working, while
there is laziness and inefficiency in others.
Within ministries, there are institutions which are
functioning properly and others which are not
fulfilling their duties. So, if we want to talk
objectively, we need to identify specific sectors in
order to distinguish between them; any generalities
do not properly reflect reality. In our own private
discussions, we can talk in general terms – the
state is not functioning, the government is not
functioning etc., but I am an official and I cannot
but speak in a scientific, objective and tangible
manner. In reality, there are cases of negligence
and there is the opposite. If I look at the
positive aspects, if all the institutions are not
working, where are we getting salaries from? How do
students go to school? There are martyrs in the
education and electricity sectors. Electricity
plants were targeted and then problems solved and
solutions found. Despite the difficulties due to
the sanctions, we are able to provide basic
commodities like oil, wheat and others. So, there
is work being done. Of course, you will tell me
that it is only normal for talk about pain. This is
natural and I do not expect people to refer to the
positives. It is human nature to talk about pain.
When I am healthy, I do not talk about being in good
health every day, but when I’m sick, I will talk
about my illness; again, this is only natural. But
in order to evaluate properly the situation we
should consider all angles. As to the negatives,
the challenge lies in distinguishing between causes
related to the crisis and the war and causes related
to our dereliction? When people criticize the state,
they speak as if there is no war. Similarly, when
an official speaks, they often blame everything on
the war; the challenge is how to separate the two.
This is what we are doing now. When we had the
gasoline and diesel crisis, the problem was indeed
caused by the sanctions and our ability to provide
these resources. The problem is that the state
itself is under sanction, so it cannot import. It
imports using other channels, which I won’t divulge,
to source these resources. Most of the time we
succeed, but other times we do not; these latter
cases are beyond our control. As for electricity,
the plants and infrastructure are continuously
targeted, do we hold the officials responsible for
the terrorist rockets? We need to be objective
about certain issues, for example we were able to
reclaim some gas wells, which improved the
electricity situation, but the needs of the
returnees and the workshops which have reopened are
much larger than the electricity we were able to
restore. We need to see all these issues. So, we
are able to produce, but we go back to the same
question: how do we distinguish between dereliction
and valid causes. This is what we should be
considering, but we are not discussing the situation
from this perspective. At the level of the state,
we are trying to reach these results, and we have
been able to reach them in relation to dereliction.
Officials who do not fulfill their duties should be
removed; dereliction should not be given an
opportunity to continue. There is also the issue of
corruption. Dereliction of duty is one thing and
corruption is something else. The outcome may be the
same sometimes, but here I am referring to an
official who is not corrupt but is either unable to
carry out their duty or does not have a clear
vision. When it becomes apparent that they do not
have either of these qualities, then they should
leave immediately.
Journalist:
On this subject of having a clear vision, if we
talk about the rate of exchange for the dollar, it
is logical that during the war the exchange rate
increases if not as a result of the war itself, as a
result of the embargo and the economic sanctions on
our country, but recently rises are incomprehensible
and affect the details of the daily life. What is
your explanation of this incomprehensible rise?
President
Assad: As I said some issues are
self-evident, first, sanctions have an impact on
state revenues in dollars or hard currency in
general. This affects the exchange rate, which in
turn affects prices. State revenues have also
receded as a result of fewer exports and the lack of
tourism; no tourists will visit a country during a
war. Countries that we depend on for exports are
contributing to the sanctions in one way or
another. Nonetheless, we have managed to identify
unofficial channels for exports, which has
contributed to the inflow some hard currency. There
is also the speculation game, some of which happens
inside Syria and some of which happens outside;
additionally, there is speculation on social media,
which we get dragged into.
The most dangerous of
these factors is the psychological. When we hear
that the Syrian pound has dropped, we rush to buy
dollars. We believe in this way that we have saved
money by turning our pounds into dollars, but as a
consequence, the exchange rate drops in a severe and
accelerated manner and consequently prices rise
significantly; what citizens have saved by
converting pounds to dollars they have lost due to
higher prices. There are many aspects to this
issue. Now, can the state intervene? Yes it can,
but with limited revenues and tremendous demand –
due to higher prices of basic commodities like
wheat, oil, fuel and others, there is a trade off
between exhausting dollars on speculation or
spending on basic needs. If dollars are exhausted,
this will mean we will have no wheat and oil; this
is our reality. Our revenues are not what they used
to be and as such our priorities have been on
focused on arms and ammunition and squeezing what we
can in order to provide the necessary weapons.
Journalist:
Are there no measures that the state can take to
control the rate of the exchange?
President
Assad: Of course, there are. If you
compare our situation with other countries in our
region, when the dollar exchange rate is affected,
you find that it increases multiple times in a
matter of days. So, it is a miracle that the
exchange rate, which was in the upper forties or
fifties before the war, is still around six hundred
nine years on. This does not make sense; the pound
was expected to collapse at the end of 2012. Had it
not been for particular methods, which unfortunately
I cannot divulge due to their covert nature, the
pound would have collapsed. Let me give you an
example: one factor which people are not aware of,
is that the liberation of an area does not
necessarily serve the Syrian Pound, because by
liberating an area, we are removing its access to
dollars which were paid to the terrorists to cover
their needs and expenses. This is one of the tools
we benefited from. I mean that things are not
absolute, and we cannot say that terrorists were
serving us in this regard. Not every positive step
has a positive impact. That is why I am saying that
the issue is complicated. Some experts say that
there is a process of drying the region up of
dollars and the whole region is paying the price of
the dollar. But notice the difference between us
and neighbouring countries. The Turkish Lira, for
instance, lost about two percent of its value in the
last few days; yesterday I believe, due to a
decision taken by the American Congress. Countries
are totally subject to these fluctuations. Despite
our circumstances, we do not succumb entirely – we
suffer, we defend, we fight all the whilst having a
war waged against us. Whereas these other countries
do not have a war waged against them, yet they can
barely support their currency, and moreover, the
currency is supported by external financial and
political measures. So, there are challenges but
once again the solution is not difficult. The
solution is not the dollar game, but an economic
game. If we go back to your first question and
start to look at the economic cycle as being the
foundation, not speculation. If we are able to get
the economic cycle moving, then we can create more
tools for the monetary authorities and for society
to improve the economic conditions and reduce
dependency on the dollar. Small or medium-sized
industries help us reduce our dependency on
importing materials and hence reduce the pressure on
the Syrian Pound. We have many tools which we can
use, but the speculation game is not the solution.
This is what I believe.
Journalist:
So, I understand from what your excellency said that
these policies or measures might take a longer time
to produce results, but they are more effective and
successful.
President
Assad: What I want to say in answer to all
economic questions is that the solution is there.
There are those who say that when I present all
these factors, it is because we do not have a
solution. No, solutions do exist and are not
impossible and what we have done proves that they
are not impossible; but this does not mean that we
have done our best. This is the starting point and
this requires an economic dialogue, I am presenting
the larger headlines that we are capable of
achieving. Actually, the dollar, the economy and
the living conditions are all part of one cycle.
They are not separate parts. The solution lies in
accelerating state services and facilities to push
projects forward and this is what we are doing; we
are waiting for a response, because there is a lot
of pressure on foreign investors not to invest in
Syria.
Journalist:
And the solution also lies in fighting corruption.
There is a lot of talk about that now. There is talk
about a wide-ranging campaign which included a
number of business men and officials who are
suspected of corruption. Is that true, Mr President?
Is this campaign part of the measures taken to
combat corruption, and would it include other
individuals?
President
Assad: That is true, but it is not a
campaign, because the word “campaign” gives the
impression that we have just started, because a
campaign has a beginning and an end, and is
temporary. This is not true, for either we used to
accept corruption and suddenly we don’t accept it
any longer, or we did not acknowledge it. No, it is
visible, and the beginning is now over three years
old. Why? Because at the start of the war the
internal situation was not a priority at all. We
used to think of providing our basic needs, just to
live, but there was process of tearing up the state
and the homeland by terrorists and, on a larger
scale, by the corrupt. That was the problem. The
country cannot stand it and the state cannot stand
it.
Journalist:
We just wanted to stay alive.
President
Assad: In the first years. Afterwards
when the tearing up increased, we returned to
fighting corruption which we had started before, but
the circumstances were different before the war, and
priorities were different. Now fighting corruption
was given priority because of the economic
conditions we are living and because this reservoir,
which is the state, is punctured in many places, so
any revenues going into it were syphoned out and so
we were not able to benefit from them. Where did we
start? We started with the military establishment.
No state starts accountability at the heart of the
military establishment during a war; this
institution is sacred. However, because it is
sacred especially during the war, and because it
stands for discipline, this establishment doe not
allow itself to be, at the same time, be a symbol of
corruption. So, accountability started in the
military establishment and many high-ranking
officers were put in jail with other officers at
different levels. Those who were proven innocent
were released and there are those who are still
being tried up till now and after many years; so,
there was no favouritism. The question was raised:
is it possible while the military establishment is
involved in a war. We said that the military
establishment is fighting terrorism and fighting
corruption. It fights everything, and because it is
the military establishment it should be at the
forefront in everything. The same process was also
followed in the Ministry of the Interior, the
Ministry of Telecommunications. Many institutions
were involved. But, the issue was raised because
there are aspects of society, personalities and
institutions which are the subject of people’s
attentions, in the spotlight of society, the issue
was given prominence, while in actual fact, there is
nothing new. As to accountability, it is an ongoing
process. In answer to your question, yes, it is
ongoing.
Journalist:
Are we going to see other individuals brought to
account?
President
Assad: As long as there is corruption,
fighting it we will continue. That’s for sure. In
these circumstances and in other circumstance. This
is part of developing the state. We cannot talk
about developing the state in terms of
administration and other aspects without fighting
corruption. This is self-evident.
Journalist:
there are those who floated the idea that the state
needed money, or that our allies asked the state to
pay for debts, so the state appropriated money from
merchants, in a vengeful way, to the extent that
some people described it as Ritz Carlton Syria. How
do you comment on this?
President
Assad: They always describe Syria as a
regime. They do not say a state. Their objective by
saying so is to make us appear as a gang, a junta,
etc. Whereas the state has basic principles, a
constitution, regulations, clear controls. We are a
state, not a sheikhdom as is the case in some
countries. The state has a constitution and a law.
The first thing in the constitution, or one of its
most important provisions, is the protection of
private property. We cannot tell somebody, under
any title, we take this property. There are many
appropriations of properties belonging to
terrorists, which have been appropriated
temporarily, but they have not become state
property, because there is no court decision,
although these individuals are terrorists, there is
still a need for a court decision. It doesn’t mean
that this property goes automatically to the state.
It needs a court decision. In this framework, the
state cannot say, under any title, “you are corrupt,
so give me your money.” This is at odds with the
basic principles of the state.
Journalist:
These are measures taken on legal grounds.
President
Assad: Of course. There are many cases
which people confuse. There was a meeting between a
group of business men and state officials in order
to support the Syrian Pound when it started to drop
quickly because of the state of fear and anxiety.
Otherwise, there was no economic cause for the
collapse of the Syrian pound. They were asked to
help state institutions, particularly the Central
Bank, and they did it. This does not mean that they
made donations to the state, they contributed hard
currencies and took Syrian Pounds in return. Nobody
offers the state anything for free.
Journalist:
Just moving the economy.
President
Assad: Yes, in a certain way and according
to a certain agreed plan. They did it and it gave
quick results. There is also corruption fighting
which you asked about a short while ago. There are
officials and individuals in the private sector,
because corruption is done in partnership. In the
private sector, all those who squandered state money
were asked to return it because the objective is to
get the money without necessarily being vindictive,
before we prosecute and go to the courts for years.
There are documents. Are you prepared to return
state money? Many of them expressed a willingness to
do so. So, there are aspects to the issue.
Journalist:
But why was the issue promoted, or people understood
sometimes the reasons you mentioned to mean that
prosecution or accountability targeted business men
only, but we have not heard about officials. We
heard only about merchants or business men.
President
Assad: And that is why I said that
accountability started in the army, the Ministry of
Interior, the Ministry of Transport and other
institutions and it is still ongoing, all of this
targeted officials in the firs place. And all those
in prison are state officials at different levels.
You cannot prosecute one party when they have
another partner. There is always a partnership, but
sometimes the name of official is not mentioned
because people are not interested or the name of the
person from the private sector is not mentioned
because people don’t know this individual. The
question is that of media marketing, and we have
never relied, and will never rely, on media
marketing or propaganda to say that we are fighting
corruption. We are more interested in actually
fighting corruption rather than making a big fuss
abut it.
Journalist:
That is why there is talk of a law on disclosure of
financial assets of all those working in the public
sector.
President
Assad: Discussions started a few months
ago, and there was a workshop last week under the
auspices of the Ministry of Administrative
Development. It is an important law. In fact, this
is not new. It was raised a year before the war but
at that time it was not formulated as a law. It was
rather in the form of a decision for any individual
employed by the state to disclose their financial
assets so that this declaration becomes a frame of
reference for the assets he gains during his
employment. Many people were asking why state
officials were not being asked about their assets
and how they were acquired. To do so, would require
a legal framework and that is what we are doing at
the moment. The essence in fighting corruption lies
in the laws. By disclosing financial assets means
this law which will constitute an important
reference for any person employed by the state;
after one year or twenty years you can ask them how
they acquired their assets.
Journalist:
What are the measures that will be taken in this
regard?
President
Assad:
The law for the
disclosure of financial assets is part of it,
prosecuting corrupt individuals for certain
wrongdoings is another. However, if you go back to
the discussion about corruption, particularly on
social media, people talk about everything except
the source of corruption. In our case, the source
lies in the laws and the related executive decrees
and measures etc. The legal structure of corruption
is the problem, most of the cases referred to the
courts are found to be an implementation of the law,
which is very vague and has many loopholes. As long
as this is the case, even if you are fully-convinced
that they are corrupt, they are legally innocent,
because they have ‘implemented the law.’ Our laws
give far reaching authorities, and allow for many
exemptions. This is why in my previous meeting with
government, after the reshuffle, I talked about
setting up a committee to amend the laws and in
particular cancelling exceptions. Exceptions are
not necessarily in the form of allowing for
officials to issue them but also in the form that
they may implement in various manner at their own
discretion. I might implement it in good faith and
create discrepancies between people, and I might
implement it in bad faith and receive money and
consequently become corrupt in the financial sense
of the word. That is why we started by focusing on
the exceptions given to the President of the
Republic. By allowing for exceptions, if I wanted
to implement the law fairly, I cannot because I will
give you the opportunity to implement the provision
in a certain way while somebody else is deprived of
this possibility, because I did not encounter him or
he did not have access to me. As I said we started
by canceling the exceptions of the President of the
Republic. Furthermore, any exceptions that are
required in particular areas, for example the
Customs Law; in these instances, there should be
clear boundaries and controls over these exceptions.
They should not be left to the discretion of any
official regardless of their seniority. So, we used
to have so many exceptions without any controls,
including in employment and other areas. Again, our
laws are full of loopholes which need to be fixed by
passing new laws. This has already begun,
particularly with local administration laws because
the violations we see everywhere are partly legal.
This is what we need to do. We are focusing on the
anti-corruption law because what we are doing now in
terms of fighting corruption is merely addresses the
symptoms but does not solve the problem.
Journalist:
So, it is about fighting the corrupt environment and
not the corrupt individuals.
President
Assad: Exactly.
Journalist:
And here I ask about our role in the media,
finally, and thank you for your patience with us, Mr
President, and for answering all these questions.
Mr President:
Not at all, you are welcome.
Journalist:
As the media, within the framework of fighting the
corrupt environment, do we have a role and how do
you see it?
President
Assad: You have a crucial role in two
areas. By the way, my last meeting with the
government was dedicated solely to the role of the
media. First because I know that the media will
have many enemies from within the state, especially
when it addresses the question of corruption. This
is for many reasons, not only because of interests
but also because it is our nature and our culture
that we do not like criticism. Even when it is
general, we turn it into something personalized, and
reactions start to appear, which create a great
number of problems – either through fighting the
media in principle or fighting the information which
you need in order to do your job in this case.
So, the meeting was
dedicated to advancing the state media; first
because it constitutes the most important tool in
fighting corruption. Corruption is wide-ranging and
includes many sectors, the relationship between
people and the state, the relationship of different
sectors within the state is not only a daily
relationship, it is manifested on an hourly basis.
Consequently, we cannot, using any mechanism,
follow up on all these cases. Here comes the role of
the media, since the media are supposed to be in all
corners of society. So, it constitutes a major
auxiliary instrument to expose cases of corruption.
The more important point which I touched on earlier
when I referred to the laws, is the environment
which needs radical reform. The media should lead
the dialogue around this reform. The state has
brought in legal experts to study the flaws, but
legal experts do not necessarily have the vision.
Lawyers can formulate
the laws, which is only part of the process. The
other part is the vision. Who has this vision? The
officials alone – no. There are details that
officials, in their experience and position do not
see. And every individual in society, by virtue of
their presence in a certain domain cannot see the
whole solution, they can see part of the solution.
The media can bring us together to discuss this
solution. From another perspective, we are seeing
the chaos of discussion on social media. Here is
the role of the national media to shift this
discussion from superficiality, personalization,
gloating, revenge and manipulation from the outside,
even unknowingly. The media can create a real
methodology for a serious dialogue, a mature
dialogue, a national and consequently productive
dialogue. In fact, there are great hopes pinned on
you, although you are still at the beginning through
the programmes which you have started recently. The
opportunity to upgrade this dialogue, to fight
corruption, address the laws, and the corrupt – the
horizons for you are broad and open for you to play
an important role. I personally pin great hopes on
you and support the official media in this regard.
Journalist:
Thank you for your support, Mr President, which is
practically empowering but also entrusts us with a
great responsibility.
President
Assad: Thank you. I am happy to have this
dialogue with two important and major national media
institutions. No doubt people have high hopes on
the role of officials and the state in the future of
Syria, whether in fighting corruption, fighting
terrorism or the many other issues which you have
tried to pass through the views of the Syrian
citizens; In turn we pin our hopes on you in the
media to be – as you have been – part of the battle
against terrorism, against corruption and against
any flaw which might take the country backward
instead of moving it forward.
You are welcome.
Journalist:
Thank you, Mr President.
This article was originally published by "SANA"
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