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Testimony: |
Interview with Bashar al Assad |
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Date: |
May 19, 2003 |
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Interview conducted before Lally Weymouth from Newsweek |
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NEWSWEEK: Secretary Powell said you had agreed to close the headquarters of some Palestinian rejectionist groups here in Damascus. Did you?
Bashar Assad: There are
differences in priorities between us and the U.S. administration. When Secretary
Powell talked about the offices, we asked him to talk about all the issues
concerning our two countries in a package … Our priority is to restore our
territory.
You mean the Golan Heights?
Yes, the Golan.
What do you mean by closures: expelling the leaders or moving the
offices elsewhere?
This is a question I posed to Secretary Powell. These are not offices
really. They are houses where these groups do media activities. We spoke with
Powell about all these activities.
The U.S. contends that these “offices” are involved in directing
terrorist operations in the territories and in Israel.
You consider these offices to be involved in terrorist activities, but
they are not.
Have you closed some offices?
You use the word “closed.” I talked with Mr. Powell about stopping
“activities,” not closures. The [Palestinians] have information offices and can
appear on TV. But [restricting them] is related to the Golan—to resuming the
peace talks on the Syrian track.
Did you give Powell some assurance that there would be some
restrictions placed on these groups?
We talked about all these issues but no final decision was made. We are
still talking.
There have been stories in the Israeli press about recent meetings
between a Syrian official and an Israeli over starting up peace negotiations. Is
there any truth to this?
This is the Israeli way—they try to make it appear as if Syria is working
in secrecy. Why should we create back channels? This does not give you popular
support … which is very important if you are engaged in a peace process. Neither
now nor in the future will Syria engage in secret negotiations.
Would Syria be willing to engage with Israel in peace talks?
The important thing for us is to restore our territory completely, and
this is guaranteed in [United Nations] Security Council resolutions. If any
Israeli government is ready to engage on these terms and restore our territory,
we have no problem.
Do you demand that Israel agree to give back, in advance, what former
prime minister Ehud Barak offered, or will you negotiate without conditions?
If you want to negotiate, you need a basis. The basis is the Madrid conference.
Your father, Hafez Assad, came close
to making peace with Barak.
No, not Barak but with Prime Minister [Yitzhak] Rabin in 1995. With Barak,
we did not achieve anything.
Do you view this Israeli government as
a partner for peace?
We don’t trust [Israeli Prime Minister Ariel] Sharon because he definitely
doesn’t want to make peace … but it’s nothing personal.
You don’t trust Sharon?
Nobody trusts Sharon, not only me. None of the officials that I have met say
that he wants peace….
Prime Minister Barak risked his career in an effort to make peace, but
Palestinian leader Yasir Arafat turned the offer down, so ...
Both made mistakes.
Did you make a mistake in opposing the
war with Iraq, keeping Iraqi oil flowing to Syria and allowing weapons to go
across your border into Iraq?
We were not close to [Iraqi President] Saddam [Hussein] and did not have an
embassy in Baghdad. I never met him or talked with him on the phone. What you
said about the oil is true. We had economic relations with Iraq. What you said
about this government allowing armaments to go to Iraq is not correct. [But]
arms were smuggled into Iraq by individuals; the government had nothing to do
with it.
Did Iraqi regime leaders come here
during the war?
Yes, some of them came to the border. They weren’t allowed to come in. Some
of them were captured by the Americans.
Didn’t some come here?
Somebody came before [the war].
Their families?
We allowed families to come to Syria, women and children. But we were
suspicious of some of the relatives—that they had positions in the past and were
responsible for killings in Syria in the ’80s.
Didn’t Powell ask you to stop Iran
from supplying Hizbullah with weapons via Damascus?
He talked about supplying Hizbullah. They do not get arms via Syria. We give
them political support because they want to get back their lands.
Would you consider stopping the
political support?
As long as they don’t do any terrorist acts, we are supporting them.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State
Richard Armitage called Hizbullah the “A team” of terror.
That’s false. They have not killed anyone outside of Lebanon where their
land is occupied.
Are you hoping to have a better
relationship with the U.S.?
We are working for it. Cooperation in combating terrorism is evidence.
The U.S. has introduced the “road map”
in an effort to bring about a Palestinian-Israeli peace. In the past, Syria has
been viewed as a spoiler.
We don’t have any relations with Palestinians ... so we are not able to
spoil. I can talk about the concept: for the last two years, they talked about
security before a political solution. [But if] you get a political solution
[that] doesn’t satisfy all parties, you won’t have security. You should first
have the political solution. We won’t interfere. Our concern is the Golan.
Don’t you have to engage in talks
with Israel to get back the Golan?
There’s no other way. You should have negotiations to have peace.
It is said that your father made a strategic decision to go for a peace treaty with Israel and that he prepared people in Syria for such a move. Do you agree with your father’s decision?
Yes, definitely … He made the decision but I had the same feeling.
When did your father make that
decision?
In 1990, we took the decision for peace.
Some in Israel say that you are more
extreme than your father, more involved than he was with Hizbullah leader Hassan
Nasrallah. Is this so?
It’s just a lie. I became president in July 2000. In September of that year, the
intifada started. The mood in the region changed ... It seemed as if the
Israelis did not want peace. It was not that we changed our mind about peace.
Why did you allow volunteers to cross
your border into Iraq during the war?
These volunteers went through unsealed borders. The government of Syria had no
relation with these volunteers.
I thought the Syrian government
facilitated their entry into Iraq.
We only have two official checkpoints from which you can enter Iraq, but the
border is 500 kilometers. How can you close it? I told Mr. Powell, “You have an
army; you control it.”
Saddam Hussein is gone. No one seems
to be sorry.
Nobody is sorry. It’s good that he’s gone ... but [the outcome] should be
better.
Are you worried about U.S. military
action here?
Powell said there are no plans for U.S. military actions against Syria.
Do you believe him?
Yes, Powell is the rational wing [of the Bush administration].
Are you hoping to have a better
relationship with the United States?
We are working for it. Cooperation in combating terrorism is evidence. We helped
save the lives of Americans last year.
What is your response to stories that
Iraq put its weapons of mass destruction in your country during the war?
Why would Syria let them put these weapons in this country? There’s no benefit
for Syria.
Syria is said to have a chemical and a
biological weapons program. Is that true?
No.
If you don’t, why won’t you sign the
chemical-weapons treaty?
Because Israel did not sign it.
Isn’t it time to withdraw your troops
from Lebanon and let that country become a free and sovereign state?
This is related to a peace treaty, to a complete [Israeli] withdrawal.
The Israelis withdrew from Lebanon.
They didn’t withdraw completely. They still occupy Shebaa Farms [a disputed area
that Lebanon claims but is historically part of Syria].
Many in the U.S. believe that there is
a new Middle East. Saddam’s gone, and the administration is trying for a
solution to the Palestinian-Israeli question. Where will Syria fit in?
We have played a role in this region for years ... not related just to the will
of the U.S.
Are you going to adjust to the new
situation?
We are going to be active.
You can move with the train or stay
by the road.
I can walk parallel to the train and sometimes come close and sometimes get into
the train and sometimes leap to another car. There is not only one train.
Will you stop the funding of
rejectionist groups?
All the Arabs support the Palestinians and send them money. You cannot stop
that. No one in our area calls it terrorism. They are talking about freedom.
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