"The Syrian Crisis Can Be
Solved" President Assad
Full text President Assad’s full
interview with Russian news network
March 29, 2015 "ICH"
-
Damascus, SANA – President
Bashar al-Assad gave an interview to Russian
media in which he hailed the Russian
initiative for inter-Syrian dialogue as
positive and denied any direct dialogue
between Syria and the US, stressing that
there has been no real change in the
American or Western policies on Syria so
far.
The following is
the full text of the interview:
Question 1:
Thank you, Mr.
President. I am Gregory from TASS News
Agency. What is you assessment of the next
round of Syrian-Syrian talks scheduled to be
held in Moscow next April, and who will
represent Syrian in these talks? In your
opinion, what is the essential factor to
ensure the success of Syrian-Syrian
dialogue?
President Assad:
Our assessment of this new round of talks,
and of the Russian initiative in general, is
very positive, because the initiative is
important; and I can say that it is
necessary. As you know the West, or a number
of Western countries, have tried, during the
Syrian crisis, to push towards a military
war in Syria and the region sometimes under
the title of fighting terrorism, and at
other times under the title of supporting
people who rose for freedom, and other lies
which have been circulating in Western
media.
The Russian initiative was
positive because it emphasized the political
solution, and consequently preempted the
attempts of warmongers in the West,
particularly in the United States, France,
and Britain, as they have done in the
Ukraine. You know that warmongers have been
pushing towards arming different parties in
Ukraine in order to change regimes, first in
Ukraine, then in Russia. That’s why the
principle behind this initiative is good and
important. We have always believed and spoke
publicly that every problem, however big,
should have a political solution. This is in
principle. However, its success depends very
much on the substance genuinely reflecting
the title which you have spoken about. The
title is: a Syrian-Syrian dialogue. In order
for this dialogue to succeed, it should be
purely Syrian. In other words, there
shouldn’t be any outside influence on the
participants in this dialogue. The problem
is that a number of the participants in the
dialogue are supported by foreign Western
and regional countries which influence their
decisions. As you know, only a few days ago,
one of these parties announced that they
will not participate in the dialogue. They
didn’t participate in the first round.
So, for this dialogue to
succeed, the Syrian parties taking part in
it should be independent and should express
what the Syrian people, with all their
political affiliations want. Then, the
dialogue will succeed. That’s why the
success of this initiative requires that
other countries not interfere, as Moscow
proposed in the first round; for the
dialogue to be among the Syrians with the
Russians facilitating the dialogue among the
Syrians without imposing any ideas on them.
If things happen this way, I believe this
dialogue will achieve positive results for
stability in Syria.
Question 2:
Abu Taleb al-Buhayya from RTV Arabic. Mr.
President, within the framework of the steps
taken to achieve a political solution, there
is an initiative proposed by the UN Special
Envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura concerning
a fighting freeze in Aleppo. After a number
of meetings and trips, and there is
information that some of de Mistura’s staff
in Damascus went to Aleppo, but in the end,
there were statements made by some outside
opposition factions which rejected this
initiative. Nevertheless, there are safe
neighborhoods in Aleppo which have come in
recent days under a fierce attack and mortar
shelling on safe neighborhoods. In general
terms, Mr. President, how do you see the
prospects of this initiative proposed by de
Mistura and is it going to succeed in the
coming days?
President Assad:
Since the first meeting with Mr. de Mistura,
we supported his ideas. And when we agreed
with him on the basic elements of the
initiative, which he announced later, Mr. de
Mistura’s team started working in Syria in
order to implement this initiative. We
continued our support and continued our
discussions with him about the details of
this initiative. In principle, the
initiative is good because it deals with
reality on the ground. It is similar to the
reconciliation deals which have been
achieved in Syria. The objective is to
alleviate pressure and avert the dangers
facing civilians specifically in the city of
Aleppo, as a first stage for his mission.
But de Mistura’s initiative depends on more
than one party. Obviously, it depends on the
Syrian state’s cooperation, as a major party
to this initiative, including the state’s
institutions. But, on the other hand, it
depends on the response of the terrorists or
the armed groups who operate in different
neighborhoods in Aleppo.
Another problem is similar
to that concerning the Syrian-Syrian
dialogue. Some of these armed groups are
controlled by other countries. In the city
of Aleppo in particular, all the armed
groups or terrorist forces are supported
directly by Turkey. That’s why these forces,
and from the beginning of de Mistura’s
initiative, declared that they refuse to
cooperate with him and rejected the
initiative altogether. They confirmed their
rejection of the initiative about a week
ago, and enforced their rejection by
shelling civilians in the city of Aleppo and
a large number of martyrs fell as a result.
De Mistura’s initiative is important in
substance, and we believe that it is very
realistic, and it has significant prospects
of success if Turkey and the other countries
supporting and funding the armed groups stop
their interference. One of the most
important factors of its success is that
most Syrians want to get rid of the
terrorists. Some of these terrorists will
return to their normal lives or leave the
neighborhoods in which civilians live, so
that civilians can come back to these
neighborhoods.
Question 3:
Mr. President, on the political solution,
the Syrian government took significant steps
which have been applauded by Syria’s friends
and allies concerning national
reconciliation attempts. These attempts have
been successful, from what we hear from the
Syrian population, and from our coverage in
Damascus and other Syrian governorates. In
general, Mr. President, what is your vision
for the prospects of these national
reconciliation attempts, whether in Damascus
Countryside or in other governorates,
particularly that we have been informed that
the Syrian government released, a few days
ago, over 600 prisoners, in order to ensure
the success of national reconciliation?
President Assad:
We started the national reconciliation
endeavors over a year ago, or maybe two
years ago. It is a parallel track to the
political solution. As I said, every problem
has a political solution. But the political
solution is usually long, and might be slow,
and there might be obstacles which hinder
the process or push it towards failure,
although this failure might be temporary.
But every day innocent people die in Syria,
and we cannot wait for the political
solution to materialize in order to protect
people’s lives. So, we have to move on other
tracks. Of course, there is the track of
fighting terrorists and eliminating them.
But there has been a third track which
consists of national reconciliation
attempts. They include returning people to
their neighborhoods, and for armed men
leaving these neighborhoods, or remaining
without their weapons in order for them to
return to their normal lives.
In this case, the state
offers amnesty to those and brings them back
to their normal lives. Part of this process
is releasing a number of prisoners. So, this
is part of national reconciliation. What
happened yesterday is part of this endeavor
which has proved so far that it is the most
important track. The truth is that national
reconciliation in Syria has achieved great
results, and led to the improvement of
security conditions for many Syrian people
in different parts of the country. So, what
happened yesterday comes within this
framework, and we will continue this policy
which has proved successful until progress
is achieved on the political track which we
hope will be achieved in this consultative
meeting in Moscow next April.
Question 4:
Yevgeny Reshetnev from Russia 24. In the
context of the civil war and armed conflict,
some politicians made statements to the
effect that your days as president were
numbered, and some expected that you will no
longer be there in a few months’ time. But
you have stood fast for a long time, and
here we are sitting and talking with you.
There are European politicians who say that
the peaceful political solution in Syria
will be without President Bashar al-Assad.
In your opinion, how will it be possible to
establish peace in Syria and to achieve
reconciliation among the Syrians?
President Assad:
The statements we have been hearing since
the beginning of the crisis reflect the
Western mentality, which is colonialist by
nature. The West does not accept partners.
If they don’t like a certain state, they try
to change it, or replace its president. When
they use this reasoning, they do not see the
people. As far as they’re concerned, there
is no people. They don’t like the president,
so they replace him. But when they made
these statements, they based them on wrong
assumptions. This way of thinking might have
suited the past, but is not fit for this
age. Today, people do not accept for their
future or destiny or rulers to be decided by
the outside world.
The same thing is
happening now in Ukraine. And this is what
they aim for in Russia. They don’t like
President Putin, so they demonize him. The
same applies everywhere. However, I would
like to stress that what determines these
things in the end is the Syrian people. All
the statements made by Western countries or
their allies in the region about this issue
did not concern us in the least. We do not
care if they say the president will fall or
remain in power, nor do we care whether they
say that the president is legitimate or
illegitimate. We derive our legitimacy from
the people, and if there is any reason for
the state’s steadfastness in Syria, it is
popular support. We shouldn’t waste our time
with European statements, because they are
prepared to make statements which contradict
each other from day to day.
The Syrian crisis can be
solved. It’s not impossible. If the Syrians
sit and talk to each other, we will achieve
results. We talked about national
reconciliation, which is the most difficult
thing: when two parties which used to carry
guns and fight each other sit down and talk.
This is much more difficult than sitting
with those who are involved in political
action. In the first case there is blood,
there is killing; nevertheless, we succeeded
in this endeavor. We succeeded when we
conducted these reconciliation attempts
without foreign interference.
I say that for the Syrians
to succeed, foreign intervention should
stop. Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and some
European countries should stop arming the
terrorists. This was actually acknowledged
publically by the French and by the British.
They said they have been sending weapons to
the terrorists. They should stop funding the
terrorists, particularly Saudi Arabia and
Qatar. Then, the political solution will be
easy, and reconciliation with the armed
groups will be easy, because the Syrian
society supports reconciliation now and
supports all these solutions. The Syrian
society has not disintegrated as they
expected. What is happening in Syria is not
a civil war; in a civil war there should be
lines separating the parties, either on
ethnic, religious, or sectarian grounds.
This doesn’t exist in Syria. People still
live with each other, but most people escape
from the areas in which the terrorists
operate to the safe areas controlled by the
state. This is what we believe to be the
foundation for reaching this solution. This
is in addition to initiatives made by our
friends like the consultative meeting which
will be held in Moscow next month.
Question 5:
Mr. President, in every state, in general, a
pretext can be found to create sectarian or
ethnic conflict, and Syria and the Ukraine
are examples of that. How can we stop this?
President Assad:
If you have in the beginning a sectarian
problem which creates a division in society,
it will be easy for other countries to
manipulate this division and lead to unrest.
You know that this is one of the things
which some foreign countries have tried to
manipulate, even in Russia, by supporting
extremist groups which are conducting
terrorist acts. Their objective is not to
kill some innocent people. They rather aim
at creating a division in Russian society
which leads to weakening the country and the
state and maybe dividing Russia itself. This
is what they had in mind for Russia and this
is what they had in mind for Syria. This is
why I think there are many similarities.
So it has to be based on
the state’s performance before the crisis:
preserving the unity of the homeland,
religious freedom, freedom of belief. No
group in any country should feel they are
forbidden to exercise their religious
rituals and hold their beliefs. This is the
case in Syria; and this is one of the most
important factors behind the steadfastness
of Syrian society in facing this attack.
Nevertheless, the titles
used at the beginning of the Syrian crisis
by foreign media or by the terrorists called
for dividing Syria, particularly along
sectarian lines. Some people in Syria
believed this propaganda in the beginning.
But through the dialogue we conducted in the
state, and by using different forms of
awareness raising, particularly through the
religious establishment, we were able to
overcome this. People discovered quickly
that this has nothing to do with sects or
religions. They concluded that the problem
is a form of terrorism supported by foreign
countries. Here we succeeded and were able
to overcome this very dangerous problem
which you have suggested in your question.
Question 6:
Mohammad Maarouf from Sputnik news agency.
In the beginning, Mr. President, allow me on
behalf of my colleagues at Sputnik news
agency and Rossiya Segodnya to thank Your
Excellency for availing us of this
opportunity to meet you. Mr. President, you
indicated previously that had you accepted
what was offered to you before the crisis,
you would have been the most favored and
most democratic president in the region.
Could you please explain to us what you were
offered at the time, and what is required by
the West of Syria, for the West to stop
arming the Syrian opposition and start the
political solution?
President Assad:
Let me go back to the Western mentality,
which I described as colonialist. The West
does not accept partners. It only wants
satellite states. The United States does not
even accept partners in the West. It wants
Europe to follow the United States. They
didn’t accept Russia, although it was a
superpower. They didn’t accept it as a
partner. Russian officials talk all the time
about partnership with the West, and talk
positively about the West. In return, the
West does not accept Russia as a great power
and as a partner on a global level. So, how
could they accept a smaller state like Syria
which could say no to them? When anything
contradicts Syrian interests, we say no. And
this is something they do not accept in the
West. They asked us for a number of things
in the past.
They used to put pressure
on us to abandon our rights in our land
occupied by Israel. They wanted us not to
support the resistance in Lebanon or
Palestine which defends the rights of the
Palestinian people. At a later stage, a few
years before the crisis, they put pressure
on Syria to distance itself from Iran. In
another case, some of them wanted to use
Syria’s relationship with Iran to influence
the nuclear file. We have never been a part
of this issue, but they wanted us to
convince Iran to take steps against its
national interests. We refused to do that.
There were other similar things.
That’s why they wanted in
the end to make the Syrian state a satellite
state which implements Western agendas in
this region. We refused. Had we done these
things, we would have become, as I said, a
good, moderate, and democratic state. Now,
they describe our state as being
anti-democratic, while they have the best
relations with the Saudi state which has
nothing to do with democracy or elections
and deprives women of their rights, in
addition to many other things well known to
the world. This is Western hypocrisy.
Question 7:
So, what does the West require of Syria
today in order to stop arming the Syrian
opposition and start the political solution?
President Assad:
Simply, to be a puppet. And I’m not
convinced that the West has a political
solution. They do not want a political
solution. When I say the West, I mean a
number of countries like the United States,
France, and Britain. The other countries
play a secondary role. For them, the
political solution is changing the state,
bringing the state down and replacing it
with a client state, exactly like what
happened in Ukraine. As far as they are
concerned, what happened in Ukraine was a
political solution. But, had the former
president, who was elected by the people,
remained, they would have said that this
president is bad, dictatorial, and kills his
people. It is the same propaganda. So, the
West is not interested in a political
solution. They want war, and they want to
change states everywhere in the world.
Question 8:
Mr. President, you are confirming that there
were no American under-the-table requests
from you?
President Assad:
No, there has
been nothing under the table.
Question 9:
Konstantin Volkov from Rossiyskaya Gazeta.
Mr. President, a few days ago, the U.S.
Secretary of State, John Kerry, said in an
interview with CNN television, I believe,
that he is prepared to negotiate with the
Syrian authorities. But other officials at
the State Department contradicted these
statements. Concerning U.S attempts to
initiate negotiations with you, have there
been any such attempts, and if so, what does
Washington want?
President Assad:
As for the American statements, or
statements made by American officials, I
think the world has become used to American
officials saying something today, and saying
the opposite the next day. We see this
happening all the time. But there is another
phenomenon which is for one official to say
something and another official, in the same
administration, saying the exact opposite.
This is an expression of conflicts inside
the American administration and also within
the lobby groups working in the United
States. These lobbies have different
perceptions of different issues. We can say
that the most important conflict today for
Syria and Ukraine is between two camps: one
which wants war and direct military
intervention in Syria and Iraq. They might
also talk about sending armies to Ukraine,
through NATO, or sending arms to the
subversive party within Ukraine. There is
another camp which opposes intervention
because it learned the lessons of previous
wars.
As you know, from the
Vietnam war to the Iraq war, the United
States has never succeeded in any war. It
succeeded in one thing, which is destroying
the country. But in the end, it always came
out defeated after having destroyed the
country. But it seems that these groups are
still in the minority. In any case, and
despite these statements, so far we haven’t
seen any real change in American policies
and it seems that the hardliners still
define the direction of American policies in
most parts of the world. As far as we in
Syria are concerned, the policy is still
going on. There is no direct dialogue
between us and the Americans. There are
ideas sent through third parties but they do
not constitute a serious dialogue and we
cannot take them seriously. We have to wait
until we see a change in the American policy
on the ground. Then we can say that there is
a policy shift and clear demands. So far,
the U.S. demands are what I described
earlier concerning their wish to bring down
the Syrian state and replace it with a
client state which does their bidding.
Question 10:
I am from Rossiya Segodnya. My question will
be on the same subject and the same context.
There are certain ideas which are being
discussed in the West these days like having
a peacekeeping force or a military force
deployed on Syrian territories to fight
ISIS. A number of ‘hawks’ in the U.S., whom
you talked about suggested this. This might
be just an idea, but today we see that there
are airstrikes against ISIS. What is your
opinion and assessment of the effectiveness
of these airstrikes? And I would like to
point out that these airstrikes may not only
target ISIS, but positions of the Syrian
Arab Army. Thank you.
President Assad:
When you follow media reports on daily or
weekly basis, you see that the rate of the
airstrikes conducted by what they call a
coalition against terrorism is sometimes
less than ten strikes a day or a little
more, in Syria or in Iraq, or in both Syria
and Iraq. We are talking about a coalition
which includes 60 countries, some of which
are rich and advanced. On the other hand,
the Syrian air force, which is very small in
comparison to this coalition, conducts in a
single day many times the number of the
airstrikes conducted by a coalition which
includes 60 countries.
Although you are not a
military man, it is self evident that this
doesn’t make sense. This shows the lack of
seriousness. Maybe some of these countries
do not want ISIS to grow larger than it has
become in Syria and Iraq, but at the same
time they don’t want to get rid of ISIS
completely. They want to retain this
terrorist force to be used as a threat to
blackmail different countries. That’s why we
say simply that there is no serious effort
to fight terrorism, and what is being
achieved by the Syrian forces on the ground
equals in one day what is being achieved by
these states in weeks. Once again, this
shows that these countries are not serious,
not only militarily, but politically
speaking. An anti-terrorist coalition cannot
consist of countries which are themselves
supporters of terrorism. So, there is a
political side and a military side, and the
two are linked to each other. The result is
the same: ISIS still exists. It is struck in
one place but expands in another.
Question 11:
I would like to check again about the
positions of the Syrian Arab Army. Have they
incurred any damage? And also about the
peacekeeping force or a military presence in
the area on your territories.
President Assad:
No. No positions of the Syrian Army have
been bombarded. What has been bombarded is
infrastructure belonging to the Syrian
people, and the results have been bad for us
as a people and a state. But, as to
deploying peacekeeping forces, such forces
are usually deployed between warring states.
So, when they talk about deploying
peacekeeping forces in the fight against
ISIS, this means that they recognize ISIS as
a state, which is unacceptable and
dangerous, particularly that terrorists,
whether ISIS or al-Nusra, are terrorist
organizations linked to al-Qaeda. These
organizations infiltrate communities. Most
of the communities and the areas are against
these extremist and terrorist ideas. So,
there is no state on the other side in order
to deploy peacekeeping forces between two
parties. This doesn’t make sense.
Question 12:
Igor Lutzman from Sputnik radio. Mr.
President, when I talked to the Press
Secretary of the President of the Chechen
Republic, Alvi Karimov, he said that Mr.
Ramzan Kadyrov shares your interpretation of
the Quran, the basics of Islam, culture, and
traditions. He tells young people that
terrorists do not belong to any race or any
religion. He warns Chechens that if they
turn into terrorists and join the ranks of
ISIS or other terrorist organizations, they
will never be allowed to go back to the
Chechen Republic. Can you please tell us how
you deal with young people and how you
explain to them that Islam is a religion of
peace, as Mr. Kadyrov does?
President Assad:
What is being done from a systematic
perspective is correct and accurate. The
problem is ideological in the first place.
Some states deal with terrorism as if it
were a gang operating somewhere and should
be eliminated. This is a final solution.
However, the real solution for terrorism is
an intellectual and ideological one, and
consequently the involvement of those
responsible directly is essential and I
support it.
Of course, this is not the
first time we confront this ideology. We
started confronting it since the early 1960s
through our confrontation with the Muslim
Brotherhood who were the real predecessors
of al-Qaeda in the Muslim world. The apex of
these confrontations happened in the 1980s.
At that time, we conducted an educational
campaign and fought the Muslim Brotherhood
ideologically by promoting the true Islam.
But today, the situation is different,
because in those days there was no internet,
no social media, and no satellite TV
stations. It was easy to control the
cultural aspect of the problem. What we face
today and what you face in your country, and
most Muslim countries and the other
countries which have Muslim communities, is
the problem of extremist satellite TV
stations which promote Wahhabi ideology and
are funded by Wahhabi institutions and the
Saudi state, which is allied to the Wahhabi
establishment.
The same applies to the
social media on the internet. That’s why the
danger we are facing now is tremendous and
that’s why we in Syria focused first of all
on religious institutions which have played
an important role by developing religious
curricula and produced religious leaders who
promote the real Islamic thought which is
moderate and enlightened. We worked on
satellite TV stations and established one
which promotes moderate Islam and addresses
not only the Muslim public but Muslim
scholars as well. Religious leaders in Syria
have also conducted different activities in
the mosques and in their classes by
communicating with people and explaining the
reality of what is happening.
Terrorism has nothing to
do with religion. Whether we call it Islamic
terrorism or give it any other name, it has
nothing to do with religion. Terrorism is
terrorism wherever it is; and Islam is a
peaceful religion like any other heavenly
religion. But unfortunately, we see many
cases in Syria where some children or young
people shift very quickly from a state of
moderation to a state of extremism and
terrorism. The reason is that moderate
religion hasn’t been enshrined in the
families and the communities in which these
young people live. That’s why I believe this
work is essential anywhere there is a Muslim
community because they are targeted by
Wahhabism and Wahhabi institutions.
Question 13:
Fedor Ivanitsa from Izvestia newspaper. Mr.
President, I would like to ask you about
Syrian-Russian relations. Despite the
difficult situation and the conflict in
Syria, the supply and maintenance site for
the Russian navy in Tartous is still
functioning. Is there any idea to turn this
site in the future into a full-fledged
Russian naval military base? Have you
received such a proposal, and if so are you
studying it, and have there been new
military contracts signed between Moscow and
Damascus during the crisis?
President Assad:
Concerning Russian presence in different
parts of the world, including the Eastern
Mediterranean and the Tartous port, it is
necessary to create a sort of balance which
the world lost after the disintegration of
the Soviet Union more than 20 years ago.
Part of this existence, as you said, is in
Tartous port. As far as we are concerned,
the stronger this presence is in our region,
the better it is for the region’s stability,
because the Russian role is important for
the stability of the world.
Of course, in this context
I can say that we certainly welcome any
expansion of the Russian presence in the
Eastern Mediterranean and specifically on
the Syrian shores and in Syrian ports for
the same objectives I mentioned. But this of
course depends on Russian political and
military plans for the deployment of their
forces in different regions and different
seas and their plans for the expansion of
these forces. If the Russian leadership
intends to expand Russian presence in the
Eastern Mediterranean and in Syria, we
certainly welcome such expansion.
As to contracts and
military cooperation between Syria and
Russia, as you know, it is quite old and has
been going on for more than six decades, and
nothing will change, as far as this
cooperation is concerned, in this crisis.
There were Russian contracts with Syria
signed before the crisis and which started
to be implemented after the beginning of the
crisis. There are also other new contracts
on weapons and military cooperation signed
during the crisis and their implementation
is ongoing. The nature of these contracts
has of course changed given the nature of
the battles conducted by the Syrian armed
forces in facing the terrorists. But in
essence the nature of these relations has
not changed and has continued as before.
Question 14:
Mr. President, I have another question. I
would like to touch on the disastrous
humanitarian situation in Syria during the
crisis. We watch on the news, and we
ourselves write about this, that ethnic and
religious minorities in Syria have been
targeted or been subject to violations by
the terrorist organization. Does the Syrian
government have plans to move these
minorities to other areas, to provide a new
environment for these displaced people where
they can live? There are larger numbers of
people belonging to minorities running away
from ISIS. What is the number of those who
became displaced in and outside Syria
fleeing from ISIS and other organizations?
President Assad:
As for the first part of the question, as I
said earlier, the terrorists and the
propaganda which helped them used divisive,
sectarian, and ethnic language. The
objective was to push components of the
Syrian society to emigrate and to realize
the terrorist plan in making Syria an
undiverse country. Whenever there’s no
diversity, there is always extremism.
In fact, the terrorists
have not attacked minorities. They attack
everybody in Syria, and the minorities have
not been singled out in themselves, but this
language has been necessary for them to
create divisions within Syrian society. Now,
if we do this, i.e. protect what are called
minorities, it means that we are doing what
the terrorists want. The Syrian state must
be a state for all Syrian citizens, taking
care of all, and defending all. This is what
the Syrian Arab Army should do. That’s why I
believe there should be only one plan which
is protecting the homeland and protecting
the Syrian people. When you protect the
people, it is no longer important whether
there are minorities or majorities in the
Syrian people, because the people are one
unit and all of them are targeted.
On the number of the
displaced, there are no accurate statistics,
and the figure changes every day. There are
many people who leave certain areas and move
to other areas where they have relatives.
These people are not registered as displaced
people. Of course the number inside and
outside Syria is several millions, but it is
greatly exaggerated in foreign media to be
used to justify military intervention under
a humanitarian slogan. What’s more important
is that the Syrian state is providing care
to all those who do not have a home. There
are shelters for these displaced people,
they are provided with medical care, food,
and education for their children. Of course
these things cannot be at the same level
that they were used to in their lives
before, but this is a temporary stage until
their areas are freed from terrorists and
they’re returned to their areas.
Question 15:
Mr.
President, how do you see Syrian-Arab
relations when there are indications of
closer Syrian-Egyptian relations and general
coordination between Syria and Iraq? What is
your position towards the Arab Summit being
held without Syria’s participation?
President Assad:
Arab Summits, at least since I attended the
first one, have not achieved anything in the
Arab world. This has to do with inter-Arab
relations, because the Arab League consists
of Arab states, some of which implement the
Western agenda and hinder any progress in
the work of the Arab League. Other countries
do not play any role. They are neutral. A
small number of these countries try to play
a role. For example, when there was a vote
in the Arab League to ask the Security
Council to facilitate or conduct military
action in Libya, Syria was the only country
which objected. This was before the crisis,
and was one of the reasons which made other
Arab countries, which are in the Western
sphere of influence, start an incitement
campaign against Syria and push the
problems, or the crisis, in this direction
from the very beginning. That’s why
inter-Arab relations are now subject to the
desires of inter-Western relations. They are
not independent. They are non-existent on
the inter-Arab level and equally
non-existent on the Syrian-Arab level.
As to our relation with
Egypt, Egypt suffered from the same
terrorism from which Syria suffered, but in
a different way. It suffered from the
attempts of Arab countries to interfere and
fund terrorist forces, but of course to a
much lesser degree than what happened in
Syria. But there is a great degree of
awareness in Egypt in general, on the level
of the Egyptian state and people, of what
happened in Syria recently. There is a
relation but in a very limited framework
between the two states, practically on the
level of the security services. But we do
not talk about real relations or about
having closer ties unless there is a direct
meeting between the concerned political
institutions in the two countries. This
hasn’t happened so far, and we hope to see a
closer Syrian-Egyptian relation soon because
of the importance of Syrian-Egyptian
relations for the Arab condition in general.
Relations with Iraq are good of course, and
we coordinate with Iraq because we have the
same terrorist arena.
Question 16:
Mr. President, in a number of reports for
RT, we said that after things settled down
in Damascus, this year will be a year of
great changes. After a number of foreign
parliamentary and political delegations
visited Syria, what is your reading of the
near future, politically and militarily,
particularly after your meetings with these
delegations?
President Assad:
The delegations which visited Syria
recently, some publically and others
secretly, express two things: first, they
show the lack of credibility of the media
campaign in the West towards what is
happening in the region. Repeating the same
lies for four years cannot continue because
it is no longer convincing. Realities on the
ground are changing, and there are things
which we in Syria used to say from the
beginning of the crisis which have proved to
Western people to be true.
When we used to talk about
the spread of terrorism, they used to say
there was no terrorism. The delegations
which visit Syria include journalists, civil
society organizations, and parliamentarians.
They wanted to come to Syria in order to
know what is going on. On the other hand,
there is something related to the states.
More than one Western official we met told
us that Western officials climbed the tree
and are no longer capable of coming down. We
have to help them come down through these
meetings. They have lied a great deal to us
for four years, and now they are saying the
exact opposite. It won’t be possible for
these politicians to say the opposite and
say the truth, because they will end
politically. That’s why they send
delegations, and when the delegations
return, they attack them, saying that they
were private visits and have nothing to do
with the state.
Despite the fact that
these delegations include parliamentarians,
but they include people who represent the
executive authority, whether in the
intelligence services, the ministries of
defense, or the like. This shows that the
Western countries still persist in their
lies but they want a way out and do not know
how to get out of the dilemma they have got
themselves into.
Question 17:
Once again, Mr. President, it’s Rossiyskaya
Gazeta. The Syrian crisis has been going on
for four years. I believe it has been a
difficult experience for you as a leader of
this state in order to help the state itself
survive. Could you please tell me about this
new experience you have acquired during this
difficult period. What are the things you
concluded concerning foreign relations, for
instance? What are the principles you adopt
in leading the state?
President Assad:
It is self evident that the role of any
state is to work for the interests of the
people and the interests of the country. It
is only normal that its role should be to
act in order to achieve these interests. The
conflict for the past decades, including
this crisis, is actually linked to what is
happening in Ukraine, first because Syria
and Ukraine concern Russia, and second
because the objective is clear: weakening
Russia. The objective is to create client
states. When the task of the state or the
official is to work for the interests of the
people, it is self evident that this should
be the guiding principle in managing
domestic and foreign policies. This requires
continued dialogue between officials and the
population, all the officials and all the
population. It’s normal to have different
viewpoints in every country, but ultimately
there should be one general line which
identifies the public policy of the state.
In that case, even if there were mistakes,
and even if there was some deviation, the
people will support you in such crises
because your intentions are good and because
you do not implement the policies of other
countries. You implement the policies of
this people, a little better, a little
worse, this is the nature of things.
This is why I say that
what we have succeeded in doing during these
four years is that we haven’t paid attention
to the Western campaign, haven’t cared about
Western statements. We have cared a great
deal about what the different sections of
the Syrian people think, particularly when
there was an intellectual polarization in
Syria, between those who support the state,
those who oppose it, and those in the
middle.
Many people now support
the state after they discovered the truth,
not because they support the state
politically – they might have great
differences with the state in terms of
political, economic, cultural, and foreign
policies – but they are convinced that this
is a patriotic state which acts in the best
interest of the people, and that if they
want to change these policies, it should
happen through constitutional and legal
ways. This is what we have succeeded in
doing, and this is what has protected our
country. Had we gone in any other direction,
we would have failed from the early months
of the crisis, and what they proposed in
terms of the state and the president would
fall, would have been true, because they
believed that we would move away from people
and follow our own way, and this is what we
haven’t done.
Question 18:
With your permission, I have another
question from Russia 24 TV channel. You
talked about foreign attempts to change
regimes in a number of countries, and there
are moves and acts on the part of Western or
foreign intelligence agencies to overthrow
certain regimes. Did they try something like
this with you before the crisis?
President Assad:
Of course, and for decades. At least these
attempts have not stopped for the past five
decades. They used to have two trends:
sometimes changing the state, and when these
attempts fail, and they always do, they used
to move in another direction which is
weakening the state from within, and
sometimes from the outside, through
sanctions, in the same way they are behaving
towards Russia now.
The sanctions against
Russia aim at weakening Russia from the
inside. We also have been subject to
sanctions for decades, like Cuba, and they
also failed. There have been other attempts
through people inside the country, people
who belong in their minds and aspirations to
the West, not to the country. They admire
the West and have an inferiority complex
towards it, and that’s why they implement
its agendas.
There was another method
used through the Muslim Brotherhood, for
instance. The organization was created in
Egypt at the beginning of the last century
with British support, not Egyptian support.
The British created it in order to make it
one of the tools used to destroy Egypt when
Britain needs it. Of course, the
organization spread to other Arab countries,
including Syria. These methods will not stop
as long as the West continues to think in a
colonialist manner, and as long as there are
states which speak the national language and
do not accept foreign intervention. These
countries include Russia, Syria, Iran, and
many other countries in the world. They will
continue to try, and I think they will not
stop, because that is the logic of history:
there are countries which want to dominate
and control other countries, if not through
war, then through the economy, and if not
through the economy, then through creating
problems and blackmail.
Journalists:
Thank you, Mr. President.
President Assad:
Thank you very much for visiting us in these
circumstances, and I hope that this
discussion has been useful to you and to
your Russian audiences. When we talk to the
Russians, we know that they know exactly
what is happening in Syria, because what is
happening in Syria and Russia is similar.
And of course there are historical relations
and Syrian-Russian families. I hope to see
again you under different circumstances.
Thank you.