Syrian President Expects to Run Again, Rejects Power Deal

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Syria's President Bashar Assad said there is a "significant" chance he will seek a new term and ruled out sharing power with the opposition seeking his ouster, in an exclusive interview with Agence France Presse before the Geneva II peace talks.

Speaking on Sunday at his presidential palace in Damascus, Assad said he expected Syria's war to grind on.

And he called for the talks scheduled to begin on Wednesday in Montreux in Switzerland to focus on what he termed his "war against terrorism".

"I see no reason why I shouldn't stand," he said of presidential elections in June.

If there is "public opinion in favor of my candidacy, I will not hesitate for a second to run for election".

"In short, we can say that the chances for my candidacy are significant."

Assad appeared at ease, wearing a navy blue suit and smiling regularly throughout the 45-minute interview.

He answered the first three questions on camera, and an AFP photographer was able to take pictures.

He spoke from the plush surroundings of the Palace of the People on a Damascus hillside, but said he neither lives nor works in the building, finding it too large, preferring his office or home.

Assad, 48, came to power in 2000 after the death of his father Hafez, who ruled for nearly 30 years.

He was elected in a referendum after his father's death and won another seven-year term in July 2007.

Assad dismissed the opposition, which says it will attend the peace talks, as having been "created" by foreign backers.

"It is clear to everyone that some of the groups which might attend the conference didn't exist until very recently," he said.

"They were created during the crisis by foreign intelligence agencies whether in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, France, the United States or other countries."

"When we sit down with these groups, we are in fact negotiating with those countries," Assad said.

Opposition representation in government would mean "the participation of each of those states in the Syrian government," he added.

He mocked the Syrian opposition leaders, who are based abroad.

"Last year, they claimed that they had control of 70 percent of Syria, yet they didn't even dare to come to the areas that they had supposed control of," he said.

They "come to the border for a 30-minute photo opportunity and then they flee. How can they be ministers in the government?"

"These propositions are totally unrealistic, but they do make a good joke!"

Victory not imminent

The peace talks are meant to build on the Geneva I accord, which called for a transitional government but made no mention of Assad's departure.

The discussions are backed by both the United States, which supports the rebels, and Russia, a staunch Assad ally.

Syria's conflict began in March 2011, with peaceful protests that spiraled into an armed uprising after a brutal regime crackdown.

Assad said his forces were "making progress".

"This doesn't mean that victory is near at hand; these kinds of battles are complicated, difficult and they need a lot of time."

"But when you're defending your country, it's obvious that the only choice is to win," added Assad, who deems all those who oppose his regime "terrorists".

"This battle is not..., as Western propaganda portrays, a popular uprising against a regime suppressing its people and a revolution calling for democracy and freedom," he said.

"A popular revolution doesn't last for three years only to fail. Moreover, a national revolution cannot have a foreign agenda."

Assad warned of the consequences if his government lost the war.

"Should Syria lose this battle, that would mean the spread of chaos throughout the Middle East."

He rejected any distinction between the rebels and radical jihadists, despite a recent backlash by the armed opposition against the al-Qaida-inspired Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

"Regardless of the labels you read in the Western media, we are now fighting one extremist terrorist group comprising various factions," he said.

Assad said this should be the primary focus of the peace talks.

"The Geneva conference should produce clear results with regard to the fight against terrorism in Syria," he said.

"This is the most important decision or result that the Geneva conference could produce. Any political solution that is reached without fighting terrorism has no value."

'No such thing as a clean war'

Assad also said localised ceasefires, which have happened in areas around the capital, could "be more important than Geneva".

And he insisted that he had not considered leaving Damascus, where he lives with his wife Asma and their three children.

"Fleeing is not an option in these circumstances. I must be at the forefront of those defending this country and this has been the case from day one."

Despite reports of war crimes by both Syrian forces and rebels, Assad said his troops had never massacred civilians.

"These organisations do not have a single document to prove that the Syrian government has committed a massacre against civilians anywhere," he said, accusing rebels of "killing civilians everywhere".

"The army does not shell neighborhoods. The army strikes areas where there are terrorists."

But, he added, "there is no such thing as a clean war in which there are no innocent civilian victims".

'Why are there such evil people?'

Assad defended the role of Hizbullah, whose fighters are battling alongside his troops, noting that combatants from around the world had joined the opposition.

But he said the withdrawal of all foreign fighters was "one element of the solution in Syria".

Despite his diplomatic isolation, Assad confirmed that Western intelligence agencies had reached out to his government on the issue of counter-terrorism.

"There have been meetings with several intelligence agencies from a number of countries," he said.

But he added that Syria rejected security or political cooperation with countries that have "anti-Syrian policies".

In particular, he accused France of becoming a "proxy state" for Qatar and Saudi Arabia. All three are key rebel backers.

He also said many aspects of his life were unchanged.

"I go to work as usual, and we live in the same house as before."

But Assad added that his children, like other Syrian children, asked difficult questions.

"Why are there such evil people? Why are there victims? It's not easy to explain these things to children," he said.

Comments 29
Thumb Mystic 20 January 2014, 11:53

That is normal, why share power with the same people who wanted to kill him and kick him out to begin with? I would not share my house with someone who tried to kick me out of it.

Thumb Mystic 20 January 2014, 11:57

Syria belongs to the Syrian people, and if they want him to be their President. It is up to them, neither you or me.

Thumb sevilla 20 January 2014, 12:14

"I would not share my house with someone who tried to kick me out of it."

Mystic: I would agree with you had the house been yours to begin with:)

Thumb cedars2 20 January 2014, 12:28

Hahahahaaa!!!!!!!

Thumb Mystic 20 January 2014, 12:18

saudi terrorist. You know my views, and i know yours. Now i know one thing, that Dr. Assad is the one winning. And that your side is loosing while shredding each other to pieces.

Thumb cedars2 20 January 2014, 12:25

Yes why would anyone want to kick such a specimen?

Thumb kanaanljdid 20 January 2014, 13:26

Another divine electoral victory with something like 99% of the votes, like last time. Maybe 100% that time, who knows, he is so popular and loved by everyone.

Thumb Marc 20 January 2014, 18:51

If Assad loves Syria, he would have left in 2011 and saved lots of Syrian lives.... His ending will be similar to Gaddafi; that was his choice

Thumb Mystic 20 January 2014, 22:30

Not really, i'm still laughing everytime naive people says the same lines of crap, that you said 3 years ago. Assad is still here and he is going to win this. The winds are blowing in his direction now, whether any of you like it or not

Thumb proudm14. 21 January 2014, 03:07

The winds were blowing in FSA direction in 2012 habboub. War changes, goals change, positions shift. When the ISIL is routed, you will see the attention of the rebels shift back to Alleppo, and they will not accept less than taking the entire city. Watch and see.

Thumb Mystic 21 January 2014, 04:51

The FSA had their chance, they failed it's finish. Now this war should be ended, they are fighting a loosing battle against the syrian people. Al Qaeda is main opposition fighters now

Thumb ice-man 20 January 2014, 11:54

"In short, we can say that the chances for my candidacy are significant."

Why not, he runs a democracy validated by Putin, Obama, and Nasrallah.

Thumb cedars2 20 January 2014, 12:30

Icey I can't thumbs up or down with my handheld is this normal? I can only do it on laptop

Thumb ice-man 20 January 2014, 12:32

yes normal. Just tell me which comments you want voted up or down and I will do it for you.

Thumb ex-fpm 20 January 2014, 12:36

rofl @ice-man!!!

Thumb cedars2 20 January 2014, 12:30

Puppy haha!! Lol...

Thumb sevilla 20 January 2014, 12:16

"Why are there such evil people? Why are there victims? It's not easy to explain these things to children," Assad said.

Unbelievable!

Thumb cedars2 20 January 2014, 12:30

Yes why why why....

Thumb cedars2 20 January 2014, 12:24

I second the motion.

Default-user-icon Hanoun (Guest) 20 January 2014, 13:09

Syria will be democratic when the gulf countries becomes a democracy

Default-user-icon oumba2a (Guest) 20 January 2014, 15:58

Gulf is here while Thailand is so far Mr. Terrorist Saudi Geopolitical doctor.
Ah i forgot!
You are uncultivated and brain-washed!

Thumb EagleDawn 20 January 2014, 13:16

the best part of his interview is "'Why are there such evil people?'".

Default-user-icon helloworld (Guest) 20 January 2014, 14:23

Of course its his right to do so constitutionally, and of course I and many others support it too because he's making the world a safer placr by killing dozens of terrorists from ALL OVER THE WORLD everyday.

Default-user-icon helloveritas (Guest) 20 January 2014, 16:10

You're too full of yourself to be taken seriously. Define rebel and the we continue this conversation, and put your name to the test.

Thumb -phoenix1 20 January 2014, 15:51

Mr. Al Assad, when your regime starts losing ground, you start making all the right noises, when you gain a few inches, you start getting intransigent. When the West threatened to pulverize you into thin air, you immediately allowed them to come and inspect your most priced possession, CWs, now they are on their way to Italy for destruction. Maybe you are posturing for Geneva, but now both of you, and the rebels you face now have a frightful enemy, this enemy is pushing hard in Iraq, Al maliqi seems impotent to remove them from Falluja and other parts of Iraq, now in Syria, they are growing in strength and numbers. You know it, the FSA and the SNC know it, if you all don't compromise now and talk sense, you will lose your country to people who care less for you all. Do wake up all of you, it's a lot wiser.

Thumb ice-man 20 January 2014, 18:45

Flamethrower, mowaten and Southern.

Missing youssefhaddad 20 January 2014, 21:11

Does Assad believe that it is so important to remain in power even if all Syria is destroyed?
Of course some of those fighting him are hideous and barbarians but his repressive regime caused these extremists to flood into Syria under the pretense of protecting the Syrians.
There will not be any peace in Syria till Assad leaves.

Thumb proudm14. 21 January 2014, 03:06

dear sagh,

you seem to have a knack for structuring all of your posts the exact same way. Us here at Mustaqbal HQ in Beirut want to employ a field of people dedicated to defending our cause on online forums such as this one.

We were wondering how much you are paid by the Ba'ath government for each post and for each thumb down that you give? Do you all work in the same building or are you employed from home? If you work extra hard, do you get sexy pics of Asma Assad?

Thank you, please email us at LebanonLovesHariri.com

Thumb proudm14. 21 January 2014, 03:09

i wonder if we will see on TV the mukhabarat agents beating up the people who refuse to go?