By AFP: Damascus,
SANA-President Bashar al-Assad gave the following interview to AFP News Agency
on the developments in Syria and the region:
Journalist: Mr. President, we would like to thank you for taking the time to answer our questions in these crucial moments in the history of Syria and the region.
Question 1: How do you feel when you see tens of thousands of your citizens starving, running away from hunger, from their areas, which are being shelled by your Russian allies, and trying to cross the borders to Turkey? And how do you feel when you see the pictures of them drowning in their attempt to cross the seas?
Journalist: Mr. President, we would like to thank you for taking the time to answer our questions in these crucial moments in the history of Syria and the region.
Question 1: How do you feel when you see tens of thousands of your citizens starving, running away from hunger, from their areas, which are being shelled by your Russian allies, and trying to cross the borders to Turkey? And how do you feel when you see the pictures of them drowning in their attempt to cross the seas?
President Assad: If we talk about emotions,
I belong to this people; and it is self-evident that I have the same feelings
my people have. Any scene of suffering is painful to all of us as Syrians. But
as an official, the question for me is less about emotions than about what I,
as an official, should do, being responsible before my people.
However, when the cause of this suffering
is the terrorists, not the Russian shelling, as claimed by Western media, and
when one cause for migration is the almost five-year-old embargo against the
Syrian people, naturally my, and every Syrian official’s first task is to fight
terrorism essentially using Syrian capabilities, but also using our friends’
support in the fight against terrorism. That’s why I say the problem of Syrian
refugees abroad, as well as the problem of hunger inside Syria, as you referred
to it, is a problem caused by terrorism, Western policies, and the embargo
imposed on the Syrian people.
Question 2: Mr. President, since you are
talking about actions rather than emotions, can we talk, or at least think,
about the possibility of putting an end to shelling civilian populations in
order to alleviate the suffering of these civilians, and also lifting the
blockade imposed on certain areas?
President Assad: The conflict has been,
since the beginning of the crisis in Syria, about who wins the support of the
people in Syria. Consequently, it doesn’t make sense for us to shell civilians
if we want to win them to our side. This is in theory. Practically, while moving
around in Syria, you will find that in any area under the control of the state,
all sections of Syrian society, including the families of the militants, are
being cared for by the state. What is more is that in a city like Raqqa, which
is under the full control of Daesh (ISIS), the state continues to pay the
salaries of employees and send vaccines for children. So, it doesn’t make sense
for the state to shell civilians while doing all the above, unless we are
talking about mistakes which happen in every battle. The general rule is that
there are innocent victims in every war. This is a rule of thumb in wars, but
this is definitely not the Syrian state’s policy.
Question 3: Mr. President, what do you say
to those emigrating to Europe? Do you ask them to come back?
President Assad: I would like to ask every
person who left Syria to come back. That’s natural but not enough. Emotions are
not enough. They would ask: “why should I come back? Has terrorism stopped?
Have the basic requirements for life been restored?” Many of those who have
emigrated are neither against the Syrian state or with the terrorists, but
sometimes there are circumstances which force people to emigrate. So, my answer
to this question is: when terrorism recedes, and things are better, they will
return of their own volition without any invitation. So, instead of asking
these people to return, I’ll call on the European governments, which have been
a direct cause for the emigration of these people, by giving cover to
terrorists in the beginning, and through the sanctions imposed on Syria, to
help in making the Syrians return to their country.
Question 4: Mr. President, will the Syrian
state regain control over Aleppo in the next few days? If so, what is next? Is
it extending full control to Lattakia, Aleppo, and Idleb?
President Assad: The battle in Aleppo now
is not about regaining control over Aleppo, because the Syrian state is there;
but the main battle is about cutting the road between Aleppo and Turkey; for
Turkey is the main conduit of supplies for the terrorists. The battle is going
on now on more than ten fronts at the same time, from north, to south, to the
east, to the far east too, and to the west in Lattakia. It was going on in
Homs, and now it’s over. So, all these stages are moving in parallel.
Question 5: Do you think, Mr. President,
that you can regain control over all Syrian territory? And what is the
timeframe you have for that now?
President Assad: Regardless of whether we
can do that or not, this is a goal we are seeking to achieve without any
hesitation. It makes no sense for us to say that we will give up any part. The
timeframe is dependent on two scenarios. Suppose that the problem is purely
Syrian, i.e. that Syria is isolated from its surroundings, we can put an end to
this problem in less than a year by moving on two fronts: fighting terrorism
and political action. The second scenario – which is the case now – taking the
shape of continuing supplies to terrorists through Turkey, Jordan, and partly
from Iraq – because Daesh (ISIS) exists in Iraq with Saudi, Turkish, and Qatari
support – naturally means that the solution will take a long time and will
incur a heavy price. So, it is difficult to give a precise answer about the
timeframe.
Question 6: Can’t you say precisely how
many years you need to restore peace to Syria?
President Assad: The question is: for how
many years will Turkey and Saudi Arabia continue to support terrorism. That is
the question. And when will the West put pressure on these countries to stop
supporting terrorism.
Question 7: Mr. President, can we know who
is your main enemy? Is it the so-called moderate opposition and the Islamists,
or is it Daesh (ISIS)? I’m asking because everybody can see that you are
targeting, with your shelling and blockade, the areas under the control of this
opposition and these Islamists. Who are your real enemies?
President Assad: I don’t think that the
term “opposition” can be used, in France or anywhere else in the world, to
describe somebody carrying a weapon. Opposition is a political act. Suppose
that you mean to say “moderate terrorists,” this is a different term. Saying
that, you mean that they do not belong to Daesh (ISIS), al-Nusra, or to these
extremist groups. Obama said that the moderate opposition is a fantasy. Biden
said the same thing. But what’s more important is reality which says that such
an opposition is non-existent. Most of the militants belong to extremist
groups, such as Daesh (ISIS), al-Nusra, Ahrar al-Cham, and others. So, my
answer is that every terrorist is an enemy. We respect every political
opposition; and we do have political opposition inside Syria. They adopt tough
positions against the state, and we are not attacking them.
Question 8: I would like to get this
straight. As far as you are concerned, there’s no difference between these
armed groups, on the one hand, and Daesh (ISIS), al-Nusra, and others, on the
other?
President Assad: Legally speaking, there is
no difference. The state will confront all those who carry weapons. It will not
ask them about their ideology. But the difference is that the extremist groups
refuse to have any dialogue with the state. They believe that they will fight,
die, and go to heaven. This is their doctrine. The other groups are not
ideological. Most of them have been misled. They got involved in dialogue with
the state later. Some of them have laid down their weapons, and some are
actually fighting with the Syrian Army today. We grant them amnesty in return
for laying down their weapons.
Question 9: Mr. President, what do you
think of Jaish al-Islam and Ahrar al-Cham? They did negotiate with you, and
went to Geneva.
President Assad: They went as part of the opposition formed by Saudi Arabia,
because it is Saudi Arabia which supports terrorism worldwide. So, it is only
natural for the representatives of Saudi Arabia to be terrorists, not
politicians.
Question 10: So, you will not negotiate
with those.
President Assad: In principle, direct
negotiations were not supposed to take place in Geneva 3. They were supposed to
take place through de Mistura. And here we should be precise: we are not
negotiating with Syrians, but with representatives of Saudi Arabia, France, the
UK, and others. So, if you mean Syrian-Syrian dialogue, the answer is naturally
no. Dialogue with these people is not a Syrian-Syrian dialogue at all. A Syrian
dialogue is that conducted with Syrian groups which have grassroots in Syria,
like the political opposition in Syria, for instance. Any persons calling
themselves opposition but belong to foreign states or foreign intelligence
services do not represent Syrians in the dialogue, and simply we do not
consider them Syrian.
Question 11: You said that you were going
to negotiate. All those who went to Geneva were based outside Syria. Can you
explain?
President Assad: No, some of them are based
inside Syria, and some live outside Syria but they are involved in politics and
have supporters in Syria. I’m not talking only about terrorists, I’m talking
about people who have been formed in a foreign state and act on behalf of a
foreign state.
Question 12: Mr. President, you talked
about a Syrian opposition inside Syria. My question is: don’t you think that had
you been more tolerant in dealing with this opposition in the past, you would
have avoided this conflict? Don’t you bear part of the responsibility?
President Assad: We do not claim that we
did not make mistakes in Syria. This is natural in any state. And we do not
claim that we, in the Middle East, have reached a stage of significant
political openness. We were moving in that direction, not very quickly, and
maybe slowly. Back to your question, the more radical segments of the
opposition inside Syria, which attack the state, have not been imprisoned or
prosecuted by the state, neither before or after the crisis. So, I don’t know
what is meant by tolerance in this case.
Question 13: Maybe it was difficult for the
opposition inside Syria to assemble and to organize itself, before the crisis,
and to raise the voice as opposition. Maybe they did not have a margin for
movement.
President Assad: You are talking about a
general condition in the Middle East. This is partly true, particularly in the
Arab world. But the question in this case is not that of tolerance. The
question has to do with individuals rather than institutions. The question is:
what is the institutional action that we should take in order to move forward.
This has legal, social, or cultural aspects, because democracy is more of a
culture than a law. You cannot proceed with laws while remaining culturally in
your place.
Question 14: Mr. President, do you think
that there might be a Turkish intervention in Syria now? And do you think the
Saudi threats are serious?
President Assad: Logically, intervention is
not possible, but sometimes reality is at odds with logic, particularly when
there are irrational people leading a certain state. That’s why I don’t rule
that out for a simple reason: Erdogan is a fanatical person with Muslim
Brotherhood inclinations. He is living the Ottoman dream. For him, the collapse
which took place in Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Syria is something personal. This
threatens his political future, on the one hand, and his fanatical Islamist
ambitions, on the other. He believes that he has an Islamist mission in our
region. The same applies to Saudi Arabia. The collapse of the terrorists in
Syria is a collapse of their policies. I tell you that this process is surely
not going to be easy for them, and we will certainly confront it.
Question 15: Mr. President, are you
prepared to give northern Syria to the Kurds as a self-rule area after the
crisis?
President Assad: This question is directly
related to the Syrian constitution; and as you know, the constitution is not
given by the government, all sections of Syrian society have a say in it, and
it is put to public referendum. That’s why this should be a national question,
not a question put to any Syrian official, whether it has to do with self-rule,
federalism, decentralization, or any similar thing. All these things are part
of the political dialogue in the future; but I would like to stress that the
Kurds are a Syrian national group.
Question 16: Is it true, Mr. President,
that the Russians persuaded, or tried to persuade you, to step down? Don’t you
fear a Russian-American deal on this issue?
President Assad: If we look at Russian policies and Russian officials in the
same way we look at unprincipled Western officials and policies, this is a
possibility. But the fact is the exact opposite, for a simple reason: the
Russians treat us with great respect. They do not treat us as a superpower
dealing with a minor state, but as a sovereign state dealing with a sovereign
state. That’s why this issue has not been raised at all in any shape or form.
Question 17: Mr. President, are you
prepared to give Russia and Iran permanent bases on your territory? And in this
case, do you fear that Syria will become a satellite to these powers?
President Assad: Having military bases for
any country in Syria does not mean that Syria will become a satellite state to
these countries. They do not interfere in issues related to the law, the
constitution, nor to politics. In any case, the Russian base exists already,
while the Iranians have not asked to have one. But in principle, we do not have
a problem.
Question 18: So, if the Iranians raise this
possibility, will you accept?
President Assad: The issue hasn’t been
raised, and consequently this is hypothetical. But as I said, when we accept it
in the case of Russia, it means the principle is acceptable. But this also
depends on the capabilities of every state and their role on the regional and
international arena.
Question 19: Has Russia asked your
permission to build new bases on your territory?
President Assad: No.
Question 20: Mr. President, the American
elections are still at the primaries stage. Are you, personally, with candidate
Trump or Clinton? Do you see a third person who might be useful and in the
interest of the region?
President Assad: We have never placed our
bets on any American president. We always bet on policies; and these policies
are not controlled only by the president, but by the establishment in general,
and by the lobbies operating in the United States. If you look at the
competition between many candidates, now or in the past, you will find that it
revolves around who is more inclined to start wars, and this doesn’t bode well.
Intervention: Who is more aggressive, or
more inclined to war, Trump or Clinton?
President Assad: The problem with American politicians
is that they say something and do the exact opposite, before and after the
elections.
Intervention: So, the promises made by
Trump do not frighten you?
President Assad: No. As I said, since I
don’t build on what the American candidates say, I see no reason why I should
comment on any of them, i.e. they are all alike to me.
Question 21: Mr. President, do you intend
to be a president for life, as was your father? And if you don’t intend to do
that, are you in the process of grooming a successor; and would this successor
be one of your sons?
President Assad: First, the presidency is
not a hobby that we enjoy. It is a responsibility, particularly in these
circumstances. As to my selecting a successor, this country is neither a farm
nor a company. If I want to remain president, that should be dependent on two
factors: first, my desire to be president, and second, the desire of the
people. When the next elections come and I feel that the people don’t want me,
I shall not stand. That’s why it’s too early to talk about this. We still have
years before the next elections.
Question 22: Mr. President, you know that
there have been many accusations to your government and to you personally, most
recently by the UN investigation committee, which accused you of genocide,
which is a crime against humanity.
Last month, the UN Human Rights High
Commissioner spoke about blockading a number of your cities, like the town of
Madaya, and accused your government of committing war crimes, and also about
crimes he says you commit by throwing barrel bombs on civilians. Aren’t you
concerned that you will one day face an international court?
President Assad: First, you know that UN institutions express balance among the
superpowers and the conflict among them.
And these organizations are now basically
controlled by Western powers. That’s why most of their reports are politicized
and serve a political agenda. The evidence is that these organizations haven’t
said anything about clear massacres perpetrated by terrorist groups against
innocent civilians in Syria. What refutes the reports of these organizations is
that, first, they do not provide any evidence, and this is the case in general.
Second, there is a logic for things: if Western states and rich Gulf states are
against an individual; and this individual is killing his people, how would he
withstand for five years in these circumstances? That’s why I’m not concerned
about these threats or these allegations.
Question 23: You said that these reports
and institutions do not provide any evidence. But don’t you believe that these
reports are correct, particularly the latest report by the UN committee about
the death of thousands of prisoners in your prisons? There are eyewitnesses in
this case.
President Assad: No, there is a difference
between individual crimes having been committed and having a state policy of
systematic killing. I said that innocent people die in the war. That is true,
but war crimes are committed when orders are given to follow a policy of
committing massacres for certain purposes. Had this been true, people would
have fled from state-controlled areas to the areas controlled by armed groups.
What is happening is the exact opposite: everybody moves to the
state-controlled areas.
Question 24: Mr. President, how do you
think you will figure in history, as a man who saved Syria or a man who
destroyed it?
President Assad: This depends on who will
write the history. If it is the West, it will give me all the bad attributes.
What’s important is how I think. Certainly, and self-evidently, I will seek,
and that is what I’m doing now, to protect Syria, not to protect the chair I’m
sitting on.
Question 25: Mr. President, do you still
really intend to negotiate with the militants, or are you thinking of crushing
them militarily?
President Assad: We have fully believed in
negotiations and in political action since the beginning of the crisis;
however, if we negotiate, it does not mean that we stop fighting terrorism. The
two tracks are inevitable in Syria: first, through negotiations, and second
through fighting terrorism. And the two tracks are separate from each other.
Question 26: Mr. President, what is your
comment on the resignation of French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius? And do
you believe that this will change French policy in any way? And would you make
any initiative in the war against terrorism towards France in order to make
communication possible with it and make it change its policy towards you?
President Assad: Changing personnel is not that
significant. What’s important is the change of policies. The French
administration changed almost completely between Sarkozy and Hollande, but for
us the policies have not changed. They have been destructive policies extending
direct support to terrorism. That’s why we should not assume that the foreign
minister makes the policies. They are made by the whole state, headed by the
president. As to what we can do in Syria, I don’t think that Syria has to do
anything towards France. It is France which should do something towards
fighting terrorism. So far, it supports terrorists, albeit politically, and in
some cases it supported them militarily. It is France’s duty to reverse or
change its policies in order to fight terrorism, particularly after hundreds of
French citizens paid with their lives for their wrong policies.
Journalist: Thank you very much, Mr.
President.
President Assad: Thank you.
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