Assad from Presidential Palace: Syria Is Fighting Regional, Int’l Battle
Assad from Presidential Palace: Syria Is Fighting Regional, Int’l Battle
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President Bashar al-Assad’s Interview with Addounia TV
DAMASCUS- President Bashar al-Assad gave the following interview to Addounia TV on the local and regional developments:
President al-Assad: We cannot separate the situation of Homs from the situation of the rest of the provinces. As for the delay of resolving the situation in the city, it’s known that when armed forces wage battles in cities they must take two things into consideration: first, concern for human life, and second, concern for properties. Apart from that, if the armed forces wanted to use all their military capabilities including firepower then they can crush the enemy in a short time, but this is unacceptable and doesn’t achieve the desired results. This type of operations needs time. On the other hand, we cannot forget that there’s constant supply of gunmen in Homs, specifically because they considered Homs to be the center from which the victory they hope for will move, in addition to its proximity to the Lebanese borders.
In the beginning, that opposition presented a reform process, reforming, amending, changing laws or amending the constitution. It believed that we would reject this logic, of course, this is what has been proposed by it publically, At the same time, it was bargaining with us through hidden channels that it had no interest in all this and that this speech was for the media or popular consumption, but it wanted to take part in the government.
Of course, in principle we said we have no problem in the issue of participation in the government. The government is not restricted to one side, the government is for all people. We have always let independent people participate. Other forces could come, we have no problem, but we don’t accept blackmail. The basis in dealing with any side is the moral and principled dealing. We reached dialogue.
Those forces were calling for dialogue, we were surprised that they didn’t come, I stress that I talk about part of the opposition, why did those forces refuse to come to dialogue? Because, before dialogue starts, they supposed it to be restricted to the State and those groups, to sit at the dialogue table in the absence of other sides.
Many initiatives came from various sides, some from foreign organizations like the one that sponsored the recent Rome initiative, and I’m surprised that foreign organizations are sponsoring Syrian initiatives by Syrian people. This is disgraceful for us on the national level. We disregarded many of these initiatives that have no value and no weight, as the crisis isn’t a place for some people to seek positions. This is part of trading in the crisis.
Without the successes of the Syrian Arab Army during these complicated circumstances, the country’s situation would doubtless be in danger, and the people’s embracing of this army is essential. We say the people’s army, as this army is part of this people. If we look at society as sectors of doctors, intellectuals, university graduates, vocational workers, farmers, workers, etc., and if we go back to the beginning of the crisis, the crisis began or relied on sectarian propositions. They wanted in the beginning to create a sectarian divide among the Syrian people to open a large hole in Syria in which this plan can pass very easily and quickly. The sectarian proposition is a departure from religion and deviation from religion, because religions, and Islam in particular, cannot be sectarian and separatist. There are many tools for confronting sectarianism, but the most important tool for this is proper religion, and no-one can play this role like religious figures or scholars. Truth is, for history, the role of religious figures in this crisis was very important and vital, and many people don’t know that a number of respectable religious figures were tortured and imprisoned in basements and some were assassinated and paid with their lives not for standing by the state, but for saying a word of truth or for speaking of the true principles of religion. The essence of the crisis was primarily creating sectarian strife and religious figures had a primary role in combating it. Here we also talk about the media as we said before; if the role of the media in Syria wasn’t important then journalists wouldn’t have paid the price with their lives. There are many groups, there are people in various points. I don’t exclude groups; all groups have patriotic people and people who paid the price with their lives, but there was a focus by the opponents and enemies on specific direction, and these groups or sectors of the people had to fulfill their duty and they carried out their duty. On the other hand, there were of course deviant religious figures who played a negative role either due to ignorance in creed or due to hidden political reasons for which they exploited religion, but those were encircled by the religious figures of Syria. Therefore, I believe this stage is one that should be recorded for all these groups that protected the homeland.
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i posted this after another article, but this news also applies here:
http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-opposition-group-not-job-says-ex-member-114709110.html
“DUBAI/AMMAN (Reuters) – Egypt called on Thursday for intervention to halt bloodshed in Syria, telling a meeting of 120 nations it was their duty to stand against the “oppressive regime” of Bashar al-Assad, prompting a Syrian walkout.”
i suspect mubarak may not have been as pliable to zionazi demands, so they got rid of him and replaced him with a quisling less independent and totally loyal to israel (ie: mursi and the mb israelo sycophants).
In 3 days Mohammad Mursi [Mubarak] achieved what what Mohammad Husni [Mubarak] failed to do in 3 decades. He destroyed Gaza’s lifelines.
That proves it was time to replace Mubarak with someone more dependable
Again, Arinda, you hit the nail.
Mubarak was an Israeli stratigic asset for three decades, but he at the end is man, so Ahmad ShafiK, brotherhood is a party.
Mubarak, failed in Gaza, failed in Lebanon, look at both now, Gaza is controlled by Brotherhood’s Murshid, and Lebanon is turned by Islamist salafis into a thorn in Hezbollah and Syria’s backs.
Israel killed his Guards in Sinia and instructed him to act, and when he tried to be smart and send more force that required Barak warned.
“They must act against terror and if they have to bring in troops, let them do so. And when it ends, they must take them out,” Barak said in an interview with Israel’s army radio.
I am only a little surprised that Barak said so publicly instead of more diplomatically and discreetly sending Mursi a symbolic package of a few fish wrapped in a newspaper. Perhaps Barak is not a fan of Coppola’s cinematic masterpiece.
At any rate I cannot help thinking that such public displays of Israeli power only occur when Israel feels totally and irretrievably in control, boot firmly on the neck of the other, as happened when Sharon boasted that the American Congress doesn’t “tell us what to do, we tell them what to do.”
Mursi is in the bag.
And he said we control America
“‘America is something that can be easily moved. Moved to the right direction.They won’t get in our way’” Benjamin Netanyahu