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Al-Assad: Not to Leave Syria, Ready to Comply to UN Resolution over Chemical Arms

Al-Assad: Not to Leave Syria, Ready to Comply to UN Resolution over Chemical Arms
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Syrian President Bashar al-Assad confirmed Sunday that he would not hesitate to resign quitting the post if this really somehow improve the situation in Syria. However, he reiterated that he is not ready to leave the country during a time of crisis unless the majority of Syrians tell him to.

Al-Assad: Not to Leave Syria, Ready to Comply to UN Resolution over Chemical Arms

"You don't quit your position and leave your country in the middle of the storm," Syria's al-Assad said in an interview with the Italian Rai News TV channel. "Your mission is to take your country to the shore, not to abandon the ship and the Syrian people."
In parallel, al-Assad stressed his country's willingness to eliminate chemical weapons, saying that Syria has no reservations on this issue.
He also stated that it is "self-evident" that the government will ensure security to the UN team, which will be responsible for the dismantling process, adding however that terrorists might undermine the efforts.

"Of course our role is to offer the data and to facilitate their procedures, which is available so far. But I think it's about the technical side or aspect of the implementation, about how to reach those places, especially when you have terrorists who could put any obstacle, and about how to dismantle and get rid of those materials," al-Assad added.
In the interview al-Assad pointed out that his government is ready for political dialogue with the opposition that has "a political program, a political vision," stressing "when they are armed you don't call them the opposition, you call them terrorists."
"So, we can speak with every party in the opposition. Regarding the militants, if they give up their arms, we'll be ready to discuss with them anything like any other citizen," the top of the Syrian state highlighted.

Moreover, he emphasized: "We cannot talk with al-Qaeda offshoots and organizations that are affiliated with al-Qaeda. We cannot negotiate with the people who ask for foreign intervention and military intervention in Syria."
Concerning the Geneva 2 talks that will focus on a political resolution of the ongoing Syrian war and are expected to take place in November, al-Assad said that as the framework of the conference is "not clear" yet, he is uncertain who will head the government delegation and if he will participate in it personally.
In the interview al-Assad reiterated that the idea of a military intervention is "not acceptable" for Syria, adding that there is no "armistice line" where you can put the UN enforcers.
"So, even if you want to suppose that you can accept that idea - which is not acceptable for us - but if you want to accept it, where can you position those troops? No-one can draw a map. You need a clear map. There is no clear map. There are gangs coming from everywhere, and they are terrorists who should be fought, not isolated from the Syrian troops."

Meanwhile, al-Assad blamed European states for "adopting the American practice" of cutting off relations with the opposing side. He stressed that there is no credibility in "talking about humanitarian aid and at the same time establishing the worst embargo we've ever seen since the existence of Syria after [gaining] independence."
Answering the question about the alleged infamous August chemical attack, the head of state reiterated that the Syrian army never arranged to use chemical weapons during the crisis.
"Logically and realistically, you don't use it when you're in advancement. The army was advancing. Why use it? You didn't use it for two and a half years while you had many difficult situations in different areas in Syria, you had much more terrorists facing you in other places more than Damascus. Why didn't we use it? Why only in that place?"

He points out that the Syrian government itself invited the UN inspectors to investigate the use of chemical weapons, adding that it would have been illogical for the government forces to use chemical weapons the next day. Al-Assad said there are still no verifications of the alleged videos and photos of the Ghouta attack circulating on the Internet that were used to build a case against the government.
"In many places, the same pictures of the same children were used in different photos in different places, and you can find those pictures on the Internet," he said.
"On the other side, we have complete evidence, like the materials, containers that the terrorists used, we have the confessions of some of the terrorists that conveyed chemical materials from neighboring countries, and you have the indication that the interest of whoever committed this crime wasn't the Syrian Army; it was the terrorists."

In parallel, al-Assad compared the use of chemicals to the use of nuclear weapons, which is "under strict procedure because it's complicated technically first of all to activate the material itself."
"Second, not a single unit in the Syrian Army has chemical weapons anyway; you have specialized units, and if you want to use it, these specialized units should join the army in order to use the chemical weapons," the President added.
When asked if he regrets acting tough against any sign of opposition at the very beginning of the crisis, President al-Assad explained that he "dealt with the situation according to the constitution," citing as an example US actions during the 1992 riots in Los Angeles.
"We have to define the word ‘tough' because we dealt with the situation according to the constitution. It's like, if you say, the Americans sent the army to Los Angeles in 1992. Do you call it tough, or do you call it that they sent the army to fight the rebels?" he asked.
"So, according to the constitution we should have fought the terrorists, because from the very first week, we had many victims from the army and the police, from the very first few weeks.""Mistakes committed on the ground that could happen anywhere in the world," al-Assad said.

When asked whether he thought of leaving stepping down, al-Assad answered he would if it guarantees peace and stability in the country.
"But there is the other question; would the situation be better? So, for me as president, so far, I have to be in my position because when you have a storm, you don't give up your position."

However, it is not for him to make the decision, a-Assad noted, it is the decision of the Syrian people who can talk through a ballot box.
"I should obey whatever the Syrian people want," he said. "There's no other way in any country. I mean, it's not the decision of any group in Syria; it's the decision of every Syrian citizen."
Concerning the 2014 elections the president said "if I feel that the Syrian people want me to be in that position, I will run. If not, I will not."


Al-Assad urged that reform be led by the Syrian people, adding that when the crisis is over a lot of work will need to be done.
"Even if we get over this crisis, we have so many things to manage after the crisis, the leftovers of this crisis, especially the ideological, the psychological and the social consequences on this society, so we have a lot of work."
In the wide-ranging interview, al-Assad said that "so long as the United States is honest," a US-Iranian rapprochement would have a "positive" impact on Syria and the Middle East.
"Like the Syrians, the Iranians don't trust the Americans... but the Iranians are not being naive in their rapprochement. It's a careful step that is based on the Iranians' experience with the Americans ever since the 1979 revolution," al-Assad said.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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