Western Officials Have No
desire to Combat Terrorism: President
al-Assad
March 06, 2015 "ICH"
- "SANA"
- Damascus, SANA-President Bashar al-Assad
gave an interview to Portuguese State
Television, RTP, following is the full text:
Question 1:
In a few days, it will be 4 years since the
protests began in Syria against the
government of Bashar al-Assad. From then on
it has been a massacre. More than 220
thousand people have died, and there are 4
million displaced people. The arrival of
Daesh (Islamic State) has made the situation
more grim. For this reasons, it’s important
to speak to a key figure in all this
process. Today, he gives his first interview
ever to a Portuguese media outlet. The
Syrian President, Bashar Al Assad.
How do you describe your
country today, Mr. President?
President Assad:
Let me start by commenting on the number
that you mentioned in your introduction,
about the number of victims in Syria, which
is 200,000, that’s been mentioned in the
Western media recently, 220,000. That number
is exaggerated. Always the West has
exaggerated the numbers in Syria. Actually,
it is not about whether they are hundreds of
thousands or tens of thousands. Victims are
victims, killing is killing, and terrorism
is terrorism. Actually, it’s not about being
a mere number represented on a graph, on a
chart, like a spreadsheet. It’s about
families that lost members, lost dear ones,
lost relatives. It’s a human disaster we
have in Syria.
This crisis has affected
every part of Syria, every Syrian citizen
regardless of his affiliation or allegiance.
It affected his livelihood, food,
medicaments, medical care, basic
requirements like education. Hundreds of
hospitals were destroyed, thousands of
schools were destroyed, tens of thousands or
maybe hundreds of thousands of students
don’t go to school. All that will create the
fertile habitat and good incubator for
terrorism and extremism to grow. But despite
all this hardship, the Syrians are
determined to continue fighting terrorism,
defending their country, and defying
hegemony.
Question 2:
Syria is not much of
a country nowadays. The Syrian Army does not
control all the borders, you have
international coalition flying in your
skies. On the grounds there are different
entities. Is Syria as we have known it lost
or finished?
President Assad:
You cannot talk about a finished Syria when
the people are unified behind their
government and their army and fighting
terrorism and still have institutions
working. We still have subsidies, we still
pay salaries, we pay the salaries even in
some areas under the control of the
terrorists themselves. We still have the-
Question 3:
You send money to…?
President Assad:
Exactly, we send salaries. Because they are
employees, and have their own salaries. We
send vaccines to those areas for the
children.
Question 4:
So you cooperate with the Islamic State?
President Assad:
No, no. We don’t. We send them, and we deal
with the civilians who are the mediators
with the terrorists, or the militants. But
at the end, all these basic requirements
reach those areas. So, we don’t have “Syria
is finished” and we don’t have a failed
state, actually. But if you want to talk
about something different you mentioned in
your question, which is the breaching of our
airspace illegally by the alliance airplanes
and by terrorists supported or working as
proxy to regional countries-
Question 5:
And borders.
President Assad:
This is a failure of the international
system, this international system that’s
been represented by the United Nations and
the Security Council, and that is supposed
to solve the problems and protect the
sovereignty of different countries and
prevent war. Actually, it has failed in
doing so. So, what we have now is a failed
United Nations; failed to protect
international citizens including in Syria,
Libya, Yemen, and in other countries.
Question 6:
But you also failed. The Syrian Army also
fails, because a lot of Christians have been
abducted recently in the north.
The role of the Syrian Army,
like any national army, is to protect every
single citizen
President Assad:
Actually, the role of the Syrian Army, like
any national army, is to protect every
single citizen, regardless of his
affiliation, religion, sect, ethnicities,
and so on. If you have mentioned this, I
would say yes, we would like to and we wish
that the Syrian Army would be able to help
every Syrian since the beginning of the
crisis. But the main obstacle why the Syrian
army couldn’t do so, and as part of this
couldn’t help the Christians a few days ago
that have been kidnapped by ISIS, is the
unlimited support that’s been offered to
those terrorists by the Western and regional
countries.
Question 7:
What we have seen until now is several
attempts to have a peace conference that all
have failed. What we have until now, it’s
talks about talks. What can break this
deadlock, Mr. President?
President Assad:
Do you mean in Geneva?
Question 8:
Geneva 1, Geneva 2, the Russian initiative
was a fiasco.
President Assad:
The solution is political, but if you want
to sit with someone or a party that doesn’t
influence the situation on the ground, it’s
going to be talk for the sake of talk,
that’s correct. We didn’t choose the other
party in Geneva. It was chosen by the West,
by Turkey, by Saudi Arabia, by Qatar. It
wasn’t a Syrian opposition that we made
dialogue with. You’re right; if you want to
make dialogue, you have to make it with
Syrian opposition, Syrian partner, Syrian
people who represents Syrians in Syria, not
who represent other countries. So, what
happened in Geneva wasn’t the model that we
have to follow.
Question 9:
But, what you are saying, is that an
acceptable opposition for you, or…?
President Assad:
Of course, any opposition that works for the
Syrian, to defend its country, represents
Syrians or part of the Syrian population…
Question 10:
Within the framework of the Syrian state?
President Assad:
No, no. Any opposition who works for the
Syrian people. It’s not related to the
state, it’s not related to the government.
Question 11:
So, you’re excluding the Syrian National
Coalition?
President Assad:
I don’t exclude anyone as long as he’s
Syrian. I’m talking about criteria. Anyone,
or any party, who meet with these criteria,
we can consider him as opposition. If the
coalition is formed in the West or any other
country, it’s not considered Syrian. It
doesn’t represent the Syrian people. The
Syrian people won’t accept him.
Question 12:
But are you able to discuss with them or
not?
President Assad:
Actually, what we have followed since the
beginning of the crisis, we didn’t leave any
stone unturned. We tried every possible
solution in order not to allow anyone to say
“if they didn’t do this, that would have
happened.” So, we discussed even with the
coalition, although we know in advance that
it doesn’t represent Syrians, it represents
the countries that formed it. And second, it
doesn’t have any influence on the ground in
Syria, even with the militants, even with
the terrorists, even with anyone who is
involved in the problem within Syria.
Question 13:
So you’re saying that the “Free Syrian Army”
doesn’t have influence on the ground? That
only al-Nusra and Islamic State have
influence on the ground?
President Assad:
Even Obama said that, he said that the
moderate opposition is a fantasy. Most of
the world now knows, what they called
moderate opposition, they called it “Free
Syrian Army,” they have so many other names,
all of them are fantasy. Actually, who is
controlling the terrorism arena in Syria are
either ISIS or al-Nusra, mainly, and some
other smaller factions.
Question 14:
So, in the end, the solution for Syria is a
military solution, and not a negotiated
peace?
President Assad:
No, actually, what we have been doing
recently, as long as we don’t have a party
to make negotiations with who can influence
the militants on the ground, we went to make
reconciliation with the militants in some
areas, and that worked, and this is a very
realistic political solution. Actually, that
is how you exclude the military solution, by
discussing with them making a safe area.
Question 15:
About the discussions, you have Geneva 1,
Geneva 2, the Russian initiative, in all of
that there are not, how shall I say, things
in common. Is there anything, any issue that
you know it is possible, why not start with
them? Is there anything in common between
you and them?
President Assad:
If you want to talk about what happened in
Moscow, it’s different from what happened in
Geneva, because they invited some of the
opposition, because we can’t talk about one
opposition; we have many different
oppositions. You don’t put them in one
basket. You have some of them represent
Syrians, some of them they don’t represent
anyone, and so on. So, we have common things
with some of the opposition that were
invited to Moscow, so this is just the
beginning of the dialogue. The dialogue may
take a long time. But at the end, if you
want to not talk about dialogue, talk about
the end results on the ground, the question
is, who of those parties that we call
opposition, who of them represent Syrian
people and can influence the militants on
the ground in order to save Syrian blood?
That is the question. We don’t have an
answer yet, because they have to prove, we
don’t have to prove. We know we have our
army, the army will obey the government, if
the government gives an order, it will
follow the order. But what about the others?
Who is going to control the terrorists? That
is the question.
Question 16:
You pointed out that some countries, like
France, don’t want a peace conference to
succeed. Why is that?
President Assad:
Actually, you have two points, or two
reasons, let’s say. First one is not related
only to the French; it’s related to every
official who is complicit and involved in
the propaganda and the aggression against
Syria during the last four years. It’s about
the end of this war will unmask those
officials in front of their public opinion,
in a country where there is public opinion.
I don’t mean Saudi Arabia and Qatar, where
there is no public opinion anyway. But
generally, they will be unmasked about the
question “what is the revolution that you
mentioned, that you talked about? How could
a revolution collapse or fail if you have
the support of the West, the support of
regional countries, all this money and
armaments and so on, and you supposed that
he’s a dictator who is killing his good
people, so the people are against him,
regional countries are against him, and the
West is against him, and he succeeded.It’s
one of two options: you’re either lying to
us, or you’re talking about a superman.
Because you don’t a superman, he’s a regular
president, it means he could withstand for
four years only because he has the public
support. It doesn’t mean full public
support, one hundred percent, or absolute
public support, but definitely have support
from a part, a large amount of the Syrian
people.” So, this is a lie that the public
opinion in the West and in other countries
will ask the officials about. What about the
Arab spring that turned out to be – instead
of budding flowers – blood and killing and
destruction? Is that the spring that you
talked about? This is one reason.
The other reason is more
specific towards France. Not limited, but
more specific, let’s say. It’s about the
financial relation between France and the
Gulf states. Maybe because they have
financial difficulties, I don’t know why.
But this financial relations, and I don’t
have any proof whether this is about the
vested interest of some officials in France
or if it’s about public interest, I don’t
have any proof, but at the end, these
financial interests push those officials in
France to exchange their values of liberty
and fraternity and democracy, all the things
that they used to preach, the exchange those
values for petrodollars. So now those French
officials and some others in the West, they
don’t practice what they preach anymore.
Question 17:
But the tide seems to change a little bit.
You had French MPs here. It was an organized
visit, or it came as a surprise to you?
President Assad:
No, no. It wasn’t a surprise, because it
wasn’t the first delegation to come to
Syria.
Question 18:
French delegation?
President Assad:
French and from other countries. Different
kinds of delegations, activists, mediators,
some officials came to deal with us under
the table, not-
Question 19:
This was organized with your government
and…?
President Assad:
Yes, it was officially organized, and they
had a schedule when they came. It was weeks
before, it wasn’t a surprise.
Question 20:
With French diplomats as well or not?
President Assad:
We had the impression, and it’s a strong
impression, that most of the government, the
main officials in the government, they know
about it in advance, and they didn’t oppose.
Question 21:
So, did they send you any message?
President Assad:
No, there wasn’t a message, and they came to
see the reality on the ground, and I think
that’s the reflection – not just this
delegation; the delegations that came to
Syria recently from different countries,
especially from the West, is a reflection of
not believing, not taking in with the
narrative, the insidious narrative about
Syria in the West by their officials. They
want to know the truth, I mean it’s a kind
of suspicion about the whole propaganda in
the West.
Question 22:
So, in a sense, the tide is changing because
probably there are some people thinking that
even though it’s a bad solution, it’s better
to deal with Bashar al-Assad than to deal
with the worse solution which is going to be
the Islamic State.
President Assad:
I don’t think the general public thinks
about the second part, it’s about the first
part, about what’s happening and how
everything we said in Syria at the beginning
of the crisis they say later. They said it’s
peaceful, we said it’s not peaceful, they’ve
killing – these demonstrators, that they
called them peaceful demonstrators – have
killed policemen. Then it became militants.
They said yes, it’s militants. We said it’s
militants, it’s terrorism. They said no,
it’s not terrorism. Then when they say it’s
terrorism, we say it’s Al Qaeda, they say
no, it’s not Al Qaeda. So, whatever we said,
they say later. That created a lot of
suspicion in the West. They want to come to
understand this part. Why are you saying
whatever Syria was saying in the beginning?
Of course, in the West, the propagandists,
whether officials or media, the added
something only to the real story; that ISIS
and al-Nusra was created of Assad, or it’s
because of his policy, and so on.
Question 23:
But you freed a lot of jihadists from the
prisons that went to ISIS, to the Islamic
State.
President Assad:
No, that’s before the crisis. They were
sentenced for a few years, and when the
sentence ended, they left prison. We didn’t.
We never did. So no, we have institutions,
we have a judicial system in Syria.
Question 24:
Anyway, Europe is facing more and more
threats of terrorism linked to jihadist
movements, some of them with connections
here in Syria, I mean Al Qaeda or the
Islamic State. And the question here: is
Syria able to help the European countries in
fighting these threats of terrorism?
President Assad:
This is like a building; you cannot build a
building without having the foundation, so
what is the foundation that you need in this
this case? First, you need officials in
Europe to have the will to fight terrorism.
This is something that we don’t have to this
moment. Second thing, to have prudent
policies. We cannot have arrogant, stubborn
officials that only adopted egotistical
policies. Third, which is very important,
fighting terrorism should be a value, should
become a value. It cannot be a sort of
opportunism, like because now you are
suffering in Europe from terrorism, you’re
scared, you want to fight terrorism in this
region. What about a few years ago? You
didn’t suffer.
Question 25:
But can you help the…?
President Assad:
If they don’t help themselves first, we
cannot. If they help themselves, we are
ready to help. If you build this foundation,
if you have this foundation, you can go to
the building. This is where you can talk
about how to integrate the community in your
country, how to have exchange of information
with intelligence, you have many ways. Of
course we can, but you need to have the
foundation in order to succeed.
Question 26:
Mr. President, let me quote, “the Syrian
people aspire more freedom, justice, human
rights. They aspire to more plurality and
democracy.” Your Foreign Minister said this
in the Geneva conference. However, the state
of Syria is perceived differently in the
West. Till now, it’s perceived as brutal,
ruthless, dictatorial, and it’s not just a
question of image, so how is it possible to
convince the people that…?
President Assad:
This is illogical and unrealistic, because
how can somebody who kills his people and
oppresses his people be supported by the
same people? How? Tell me about this
contradiction. Look at it from the outside.
Is it palatable, can you understand? It
doesn’t.
Question 27:
But, Mr. President, the reality is that if
you allow me to go backwards, and try to-
President Assad:
Before the crisis.
Question 28:
Let me just try to… you started four years
ago with peaceful demonstrators that were
repressed, then you are blamed, your
government is blamed, for a lot of
allegations of human rights violations in
your own ranks, repression. You have the
Cesar reported, defected from the army, with
photos of massacres, of torture of the
opposition. You have allegations that you
have used chemical weapons. You have
allegations of using the barrel bombs till
now, and so, the human rights reports
watcher about Syria, they are not very good
for you, your government, and the Syrian
Army.
President Assad:
You are talking about massive propaganda for
four years. We cannot answer every one in
one interview, but I will say the
demonstrations never were peaceful, because
in the first week, we lost many of our
policemen. How? How could a peaceful
demonstration kill a policeman? It wasn’t
peaceful, so, this is the beginning of the
lies, it’s the beginning of the propaganda.
Question 29:
All lies, all the time? Four years of lies,
Mr. President?
President Assad:
Exactly, that’s what happened. Because, how
do you have ISIS? Suddenly? You don’t have
ISIS suddenly, you don’t have armaments
suddenly, you don’t have al-Nusra Front
suddenly. It’s a long process, you can’t
have it just in few weeks. Suddenly,
everybody is talking about ISIS. Go back to
our statements from the very beginning, and
you can see that the evolution of the events
was going in that regard from the very
beginning, and we said that. They didn’t
want to listen; they wanted to listen to
their statements.That’s what I say. It’s
impossible to only tell lies in the West.
How can you tell the truth if you don’t have
an embassy in this country? How can you tell
the truth if you listen to Qatar and
Al-Jazeera that were paying the money to
those terrorists?
Question 30:
So you blame Turkey, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia
for being the backbone of the jihadists? You
have the proof?
President Assad:
Very simple; what is the ideology of ISIS?
What is the ideology? It’s the Wahhabi
ideology. Do we have it in Syria? Do we have
it in Morocco? In the western Arab world?
Actually, it existed in Saudi Arabia.
Erdogan is Muslim Brotherhood
Question 31:
It’s the same as in Saudi Arabia.
President Assad:
Saudi Arabia and Qatar. This is the Wahhabi
ideology. Second, Erdogan is Muslim
Brotherhood. He’s a very staunch advocate of
the Muslim Brotherhood ideology which was
the first organization in the history of
Islam, in the beginning of the last century,
who promoted violence in implementing
political agenda. So, you have those, and
that’s enough. Going back to the Western
media, in the Western media, and the
American media in particular, they say 80%
of the terrorists are coming from Turkey.
You have another realistic one, what you
called in your media Kobani which is called
Ayn al-Arab. It took four months to be
liberated, in spite of the attack of the
alliance. Why? Actually, a similar city, the
same size, and the same terrain, it took the
Syrian Army two to three weeks. Why? Because
it was supported logistically through Turkey
on the border. They send them everything,
armaments, all kinds of support. The recent
event when Turkey-
Question 32:
Did you support the Kurds? Did the Syrian
Army support the Kurds?
President Assad:
Of course.
Question 33:
Because they are also fighting the Syrian
Army.
President Assad:
Before the issue of Kobani. Before that, we
did. Before Kobani, we supported the Kurds,
because it didn’t start there. It started
before, and before the alliance started
supporting the Kurds, we did. We sent them
armaments. Of course, they’re going to say
no, because the Americans said “say no, and
we will help you.” If they say yes, the
Americans will be angry, just to be
cautious, to take precautions about any
statement they may say now that we didn’t,
we have all the documents about the
armaments that’s been sent to them, beside
the air raids and so onand the bombardments
and everything else.
Question 34:
New Syrian troops are being trained in the
framework of the “Free Syrian Army”
supported by the Americans to fight against
the Islamic State. Do you think you will
have to fight them as well?
President Assad:
You know, and I know, and everybody knows
that those 5,000 were announced by the
Americans, and this this is my proof that
the Western officials don’t have the will to
fight terrorism. That is the proof. I told
you, the base, the foundation, is to have
the will. It means they don’t have the will.
If Obama said the moderate opposition is
fantasy, so who do you send the money and
armaments to? Reality. You don’t send to the
fantasy, you send it to the reality, and the
reality are the extremists. And those 5,000
are going to be another support to those
terrorists, because the same grassroots of
the organization that’s been supported by
the West, by money and armaments, they
joined ISIS with their armaments and with
themselves.
Question 35:
Two questions to finish this interview. This
is your first interview with a journalist
from a Portuguese-speaking country. Do you
expect anything from these countries?
President Assad:
I don’t expect; I hope. I hope the first
thing, which is very simple, just for the
officials to tell their people the truth,
the unbiased truth, without any
preconceptions. Just tell your people the
truth, and they’ll be able to analyze it.
Second, we hope from Portugal as part of the
EU to look at the Czech Republic. A small
country, ten millions, but it was very wise
in dealing with the crisis in Syria. They
have their embassy, they can tell what’s
going on on the ground, because isolationism
is not a policy. When you isolate yourself,
when you try to isolate a country by
removing your ambassadors or closing your
embassies, you isolate yourself from the
reality. You shouldn’t isolate yourself, as
Europe, from reality. We hope can play that
role in the EU to shift this trend that
started with the American administration of
Bush; when they have a problem with somebody
or some area, instead of being more
involved, they cut their relation with it.
This is not policy.
Question 36:
Just one last question, Mr. President.
You’re a key player for any possible peace
deal. Don’t you feel sometimes doubts,
anguish, with this tremendous
responsibility? Don’t you feel what history
might say about you?
President Assad:
Of course, this is the most important thing
that any politician or leader must think
about, and it’s about, first of all, about
having good will and good intention to help
your country. Whether you do mistakes or you
do right, you do wrong; this is not the
issue. People will judge you by your will,
by how much you were related to your
country, related to your country, how much
you are a patriot, not a puppet or a
marionette that’s being moved from the
outside. This is the most important thing;
how much you do, what’s the best you can do
to protect your country and protect your
people.
Question 37:
Thank you, Mr. President, for this
interview, and thank you for being with RTP.
President Assad:
Thank you.