President al-Assad: Europe was the main
player in creating chaos in Syria
The interview that Italian Rai News 24
refused to broadcast
By President al-Assad
December 10, 2019 "Information
Clearing House"
-
Damascus, SANA-President
Bashar al-Assad said that Syria is going to
come out of the war stronger and the future
of Syria is promising and the situation is
much better, pointing out to the
achievements of the Syrian Arab army in the
war against terrorism.
The
President, in an interview given to Italian
Rai News 24 TV on November 26,2019 and was
expected to be broadcast on December 2nd and
the Italian TV refrained from
broadcasting it for
non-understandable reasons, added that
Europe was the main player in creating chaos
in Syria and the problem of refugees in it
was because of its direct support to
terrorism along with the US, Turkey and many
other countries.
President al-Assad stressed that since the
beginning of the narrative regarding the
chemical weapons, Syria has affirmed it
didn’t use them.
The
President affirmed that what the OPCW
organization did was to fake and falsify the
report about using chemical weapons, just
because the Americans wanted them to do so.
So, fortunately, this report proved that
everything we said during the last few
years, since 2013, is correct.
Following is
the full text of the interview;
Question 1: Mr. President,
thanks for having us here. Let us know
please, what’s the situation in Syria now,
what’s the situation on the ground, what is
happening in the country?
President Assad: If we
want to talk about Syrian society: the
situation is much, much better, as we
learned so many lessons from this war and I
think the future of Syria is promising; we
are going to come out of this war stronger.
Talking about the situation on the ground:
The Syrian Army has been advancing for the
last few years and has liberated many areas
from the terrorists, there still remains
Idleb where you have al-Nusra that’s being
supported by the Turks, and you have the
northern part of Syria where the Turks have
invaded our territory last month.
So,
regarding the political situation, you can
say it’s becoming much more complicated,
because you have many more players that are
involved in the Syrian conflict in order to
make it drag on and to turn it into a war of
attrition.
Question 2: When you
speak about liberating, we know that there
is a military vision on that, but the point
is: how is the situation now for the people
that decided to be back in society? The
process of reconciliation, now at what
point? Is it working or not?
President Assad: Actually,
the methodology that we adopted when we
wanted to create let’s say, a good
atmosphere – we called it reconciliation,
for the people to live together, and for
those people who lived outside the control
of government areas to go back to the order
of law and institutions. It was to give
amnesty to anyone, who gives up his armament
and obey the law. The situation is not
complicated regarding this issue, if you
have the chance to visit any area, you’ll
see that life is getting back to normal.
The
problem wasn’t people fighting with each
other; it wasn’t like the Western narrative
may have tried to show – as Syrians fighting
with each other, or as they call it a “civil
war,” which is misleading. The situation
was terrorists taking control of areas, and
implementing their rules. When you don’t
have those terrorists, people will go back
to their normal life and live with each
other. There was no sectarian war, there
was no ethnical war, there was no political
war; it was terrorists supported by outside
powers, they have money and armaments, and
they occupy those areas.
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Question 3: Aren’t you
afraid that this kind of ideology that took
place and, you know, was the basis of
everyday life for people for so many years,
in some ways can stay in the society and
sooner or later will be back?
President Assad: This is
one of the main challenges that we’ve been
facing. What you’re asking about is very
correct. You have two problems. Those
areas that were out of the control of
government were ruled by two things: chaos,
because there is no law, so people –
especially the younger generation – know
nothing about the state and law and
institutions.
The
second thing, which is deeply rooted in the
minds, is the ideology, the dark ideology,
the Wahabi ideology – ISIS or al-Nusra or
Ahrar al-Cham, or whatever kind of these
Islamist terrorist extremist ideologies.
Now we
have started dealing with this reality,
because when you liberate an area you have
to solve this problem otherwise what’s the
meaning of liberating? The first part of
the solution is religious, because this
ideology is a religious ideology, and the
Syrian religious clerics, or let’s say the
religious institution in Syria, is making a
very strong effort in this regard, and they
have succeeded; they succeeded at helping
those people understanding the real
religion, not the religion that they’ve been
taught by al-Nusra or ISIS or other
factions.
Question 4: So basically,
clerics and mosques are part of this
reconciliation process?
President Assad: This is
the most important part. The second part is
the schools. In schools, you have teachers,
you have education, and you have the
national curriculum, and this curriculum is
very important to change the minds of those
young generations. Third, you have the
culture, you have the role of arts,
intellectuals, and so on. In some areas,
it’s still difficult to play that role, so
it was much easier for us to start with the
religion, second with the schools.
Question 5: Mr. President,
let me just go back to politics for an
instant. You mentioned Turkey, okay? Russia
has been your best ally these years, it’s
not a secret, but now Russia is compromising
with Turkey on some areas that are part of
Syrian area, so how do you assess this?
President Assad: To
understand the Russian role, we have to
understand the Russian principles. For
Russia, they believe that international law
– and international order based on that law
– is in the interest of Russia and in the
interest of everybody in the world. So, for
them, by supporting Syria they are
supporting international law; this is one
point. Secondly, being against the
terrorists is in the interest of the Russian
people and the rest of the world.
So,
being with Turkey and making this compromise
doesn’t mean they support the Turkish
invasion; rather they wanted to play a role
in order to convince the Turks that you have
to leave Syria. They are not supporting the
Turks, they don’t say “this is a good
reality, we accept it and Syria must accept
it.” No, they don’t. But because of the
American negative role and the Western
negative role regarding Turkey and the
Kurds, the Russians stepped in, in order to
balance that role, to make the situation… I
wouldn’t say better, but less bad if you
want to be more precise. So, in the
meantime, that’s their role. In the future,
their position is very clear: Syrian
integrity and Syrian sovereignty. Syrian
integrity and sovereignty are in
contradiction with the Turkish invasion,
that is very obvious and clear.
Question 6: So, you’re
telling me that the Russians could
compromise, but Syria is not going to
compromise with Turkey. I mean, the relation
is still quite tense.
President Assad: No, even
the Russians didn’t make a compromise
regarding the sovereignty. No, they deal
with reality. Now, you have a bad reality,
you have to be involved to make some… I
wouldn’t say compromise because it’s not a
final solution. It could be a compromise
regarding the short-term situation, but in
the long-term or the mid-term, Turkey should
leave. There is no question about it.
Question 7: And in the
long-term, any plan of discussions between
you and Mr. Erdogan?
President Assad: I
wouldn’t feel proud if I have to someday. I
would feel disgusted to deal with those
kinds of opportunistic Islamists, not
Muslims, Islamists – it’s another term, it’s
a political term. But again, I always say:
my job is not to be happy with what I’m
doing or not happy or whatever. It’s not
about my feelings, it’s about the interests
of Syria, so wherever our interests go, I
will go.
Question 8: In this moment,
when Europe looks at Syria, apart from the
considerations about the country, there are
two major issues: one is refugees, and the
other one is the Jihadists or foreign
fighters coming back to Europe. How do you
see these European worries?
President Assad: We have
to start with a simple question: who created
this problem? Why do you have refugees in
Europe? It’s a simple question: because of
terrorism that’s being supported by Europe –
and of course the United States and Turkey
and others – but Europe was the main player
in creating chaos in Syria. So, what goes
around comes around.
Question 9: Why do you say
it was the main player?
President Assad: Because
they publicly supported, the EU supported
the terrorists in Syria from day one, week
one or from the very beginning. They blamed
the Syrian government, and some regimes like
the French regime sent armaments, they said
– one of their officials – I think their
Minister of Foreign Affairs, maybe Fabius
said “we send.” They sent armaments; they
created this chaos. That’s why a lot of
people find it difficult to stay in Syria;
millions of people couldn’t live here so
they had to get out of Syria.
Question 10: In this
moment, in the region, there are turmoil,
and there is a certain chaos. One of the
other allies of Syria is Iran, and the
situation there is getting complicated.
Does it have any reflection on the
situation in Syria?
President Assad:
Definitely, whenever you have chaos, it’s
going to be bad for everyone, it’s going to
have side-effects and repercussions,
especially when there is external
interference. If it’s spontaneous, if you
talk about demonstrations and people asking
for reform or for a better situation
economically or any other rights, that’s
positive. But when it’s for vandalism and
destroying and killing and interfering from
outside powers, then no – it’s definitely
nothing but negative, nothing but bad, and a
danger on everyone in this region.
Question 11: Are you
worried about what’s happening in Lebanon,
which is really the real neighbor?
President Assad: Yes, in
the same way. Of course, Lebanon would
affect Syria more than any other country
because it is our direct neighbor. But
again, if it’s spontaneous and it’s about
reform and getting rid of the sectarian
political system, that would be good for
Lebanon. Again, that depends on the
awareness of the Lebanese people in order
not to allow anyone from the outside to try
to manipulate the spontaneous movement or
demonstrations in Lebanon.
Question 12: Let’s go back
to what is happening in Syria. In June,
Pope Francis wrote you a letter asking you
to pay attention and to respect the
population, especially in Idleb where the
situation is still very tense, because there
is fighting there, and when it comes even to
the way prisoners are treated in jails. Did
you answer him, and what did you answer?
President Assad: The letter
of the Pope was about his worry for
civilians in Syria and I had the impression
that maybe the picture in the Vatican is not
complete. That’s to be expected, since the
mainstream narrative in the West is about
this “bad government” killing the “good
people;” as you see and hear in the same
media – every bullet of the Syrian Army and
every bomb only kills civilians and only
hospitals! they don’t kill terrorists as
they target those civilians! which is not
correct.
So, I
responded with a letter explaining to the
Pope the reality in Syria – as we are the
most, or the first to be concerned about
civilian lives, because you cannot liberate
an area while the people are against you.
You cannot talk about liberation while the
civilians are against you or the society.
The most crucial part in liberating any
area militarily is to have the support of
the public in that area or in the region in
general. That has been clear for the last
nine years and that’s against our interests.
Question 13: But that kind
of call, in some ways, made you also think
again about the importance of protecting
civilians and people of your country.
President Assad: No, this
is something we think about every day, not
only as morals, principles and values but as
interests. As I just mentioned, without
this support – without public support, you
cannot achieve anything… you cannot advance
politically, militarily, economically and in
every aspect. We couldn’t withstand this
war for nine years without the public
support and you cannot have public support
while you’re killing civilians. This is an
equation, this is a self-evident equation,
nobody can refute it. So, that’s why I
said, regardless of this letter, this is our
concern.
But
again, the Vatican is a state, and we think
that the role of any state – if they worry
about those civilians, is to go to the main
reason. The main reason is the Western role
in supporting the terrorists, and it is the
sanctions on the Syrian people that have
made the situation much worse – and this is
another reason for the refugees that you
have in Europe now. You don’t want refugees
but at the same time you create the
situation or the atmosphere that will tell
them “go outside Syria, somewhere else,” and
of course they will go to Europe. So, this
state, or any state, should deal with the
reasons and we hope the Vatican can play
that role within Europe and around the
world; to convince many states that you
should stop meddling in the Syrian issue,
stop breaching international law. That’s
enough, we only need people to follow
international law. The civilians will be
safe, the order will be back, everything
will be fine. Nothing else.
Question 14: Mr.
President, you’ve been accused several times
of using chemical weapons, and this has been
the instrument of many decisions and a key
point, the red line, for many decisions. One
year ago, more than one year ago, there has
been the Douma event that has been
considered another red line. After that,
there has been bombings, and it could it
have been even worse, but something stopped.
These days, through WikiLeaks, it’s coming
out that something wrong in the report could
have taken place. So, nobody yet is be able
to say what has happened, but something
wrong in reporting what has happened could
have taken place.
President Assad: We have
always – since the beginning of this
narrative regarding the chemical weapons –
we have said that we didn’t use it; we
cannot use it, it’s impossible to be used in
our situation for many reasons, let’s say –
logistical reasons.
Intervention: Give me one.
President Assad: One
reason, a very simple one: when you’re
advancing, why would you use chemical
weapons?! We are advancing, why do we need
to use it?! We are in a very good situation
so why use it, especially in 2018? This is
one reason.
Second, very concrete evidence that refutes
this narrative: when you use chemical
weapons – this is a weapon of mass
destruction, you talk about thousands of
dead or at least hundreds. That never
happened, never – you only have these videos
of staged chemical weapons attacks. In the
recent report that you’ve mentioned, there’s
a mismatch between what we saw in the video
and what they saw as technicians or as
experts. The amount of chlorine that
they’ve been talking about: first of all,
chlorine is not a mass destruction material,
second, the amount that they found is the
same amount that you can have in your house,
it exists in many households and used maybe
for cleaning and whatever. The same amount
exactly. That’s what the OPCW organisation
did – they faked and falsified the report,
just because the Americans wanted them to do
so. So, fortunately, this report proved
that everything we said during the last few
years, since 2013, is correct. We were
right, they were wrong. This is proof, this
is concrete proof regarding this issue. So,
again, the OPCW is biased, is being
politicized and is being immoral, and those
organisations that should work in parallel
with the United Nations to create more
stability around the world – they’ve been
used as American arms and Western arms to
create more chaos.
Question 15: Mr. President,
after nine years of war, you are speaking
about the mistakes of the others. I would
like you to speak about your own mistakes,
if any. Is there something you would have
done in a different way, and which is the
lesson learned that can help your country?
President Assad:
Definitely, for when you talk about doing
anything, you always find mistakes; this is
human nature. But when you talk about
political practice, you have two things: you
have strategies or big decisions, and you
have tactics – or in this context, the
implementation. So, our strategic decisions
or main decisions were to stand against
terrorism, to make reconciliation and to
stand against the external meddling in our
affairs. Today, after nine years, we still
adopt the same policy; we are more adherent
to this policy. If we thought it was wrong,
we would have changed it; actually no, we
don’t think there is anything wrong in this
policy. We did our mission; we implemented
the constitution by protecting the people.
Now,
if you talk about mistakes in
implementation, of course you have so many
mistakes. I think if you want to talk about
the mistakes regarding this war, we
shouldn’t talk about the decisions taken
during the war because the war – or part of
it, is a result of something before.
Two
things we faced during this war: the first
one was extremism. The extremism started in
this region in the late 60s and accelerated
in the 80s, especially the Wahabi ideology.
If you want to talk about mistakes in
dealing with this issue: then yes, I will
say we were very tolerant of something very
dangerous. This is a big mistake we
committed over decades; I’m talking about
different governments, including myself
before this war.
The
second one, when you have people who are
ready to revolt against the order, to
destroy public properties, to commit
vandalism and so on, they work against their
country, they are ready to go and work for
foreign powers – foreign intelligence, they
ask for external military interference
against their country. So, this is another
question: how did we have those? If you ask
me how, I would tell you that before the war
we had more than 50,000 outlaws that weren’t
captured by the police for example; for
those outlaws, their natural enemy is the
government because they don’t want to go to
prison.
Question 16: And how about
also the economic situation? Because part of
it – I don’t know if it was a big or small
part of it – but part of it has also been
the discontent and the problems of
population in certain areas in which economy
was not working. Is it a lesson learned
somewhere?
President Assad: It could
be a factor, but definitely not a main
factor. Some people talk about the four
years of drought that pushed the people to
leave their land in the rural areas to go to
the city… it could be a problem, but this is
not the main problem. They talked about the
liberal policy… we didn’t have a liberal
policy, we’re still socialist, we still have
a public sector – a very big public sector
in government. You cannot talk about
liberal policy while you have a big public
sector. We had growth, good growth.
Of
course, in the implementation of our policy,
again, you have mistakes. How can you
create equal opportunities between people?
Between rural areas and between the cities?
When you open up the economy, the cities
will benefit more, that will create more
immigration from rural areas to the cities…
these are factors, that could play some
role, but this is not the issue. In the
rural areas where you have more poverty, the
money of the Qataris played a more actual
role than in the cities, that’s natural.
You pay them in half an hour what they get
in one week; that’s very good for them.
Question 17: We are almost
there, but there are two more questions that
I want to ask you. One is about
reconstruction, and reconstruction is going
to be very costly. How can you imagine to
afford this reconstruction, who could be
your allies in reconstruction?
President Assad: We don’t
have a big problem with that. Talking that
Syria has no money… no, actually Syrians
have a lot of money; the Syrian people
around the world have a lot of money, and
they want to come and build their country.
Because when you talk about building the
country, it is not giving money to the
people, it’s about getting benefit – it’s a
business. So, many people, not only
Syrians, want to do business in Syria. So,
talking about where you can have funds for
this reconstruction, we already have, but
the problem is that these sanctions prevent
those businessmen or companies from coming
and working in Syria. In spite of that, we
started and in spite of that, some foreign
companies have started finding ways to evade
these sanctions and we have started
planning. It’s going to be slow, without
the sanctions we wouldn’t have a problem
with funding.
Question 18: Ending on a
very personal note, Mr. President; do you
feel like a survivor?
President Assad: If you
want to talk about a national war like this,
where nearly every city has been harmed by
terrorism or external bombardment and other
things, then you can talk about all the
Syrians as survivors. I think this is human
nature: to be a survivor.
Intervention: And you
yourself?
President Assad: I’m a
part of those Syrians. I cannot be
disconnected from them; I have the same
feeling. Again, it’s not about being a
strong person who is a survivor. If you
don’t have this atmosphere, this society, or
this incubator to survive, you cannot
survive. It’s collective; it’s not a single
person, it’s not a one-man show.
Journalist: Thank you very
much, Mr. President.
President Assad: Thank
you.
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