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Assad Says He Doesn't Discount U.S. Military Attack Possibility

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  • Assad Says He Doesn't Discount U.S. Military Attack Possibility

    ASSAD SAYS HE DOESN'T DISCOUNT U.S. MILITARY ATTACK POSSIBILITY

    September 26, 2013 - 09:12 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Syrian President Bashar Assad said in an interview
    broadcast Wednesday, Sept 25, that he does not discount the possibility
    of a U.S. military attack even though threatened action was forestalled
    when he agreed to give up chemical weapons.

    Assad also said in an interview broadcast by Venezuela's state-run
    Telesur network that his government has confessions from rebels that
    they brought chemical weapons into the civil war-wracked nation.

    According to the broadcast's Spanish dubbing, Assad said all evidence
    pointed to rebel responsibility for the attack.

    He said that Syrian authorities had uncovered chemical arms caches
    and labs and that the evidence had been turned over to Russia, which
    brokered the deal that helped persuade U.S. President Barack Obama to
    pull back from threatened military action over an Aug 21 gas attack
    that killed civilians in a Damascus suburb.

    In a speech at the UN on Tuesday, Obama said he would not use military
    force to depose Assad. But Washington and Moscow remain at odds on
    how to hold Syria accountable if it does not live up to its pledge
    to dismantle its chemical weapons stockpile.

    Assad predicted during the 40-minute interview that "terrorists would
    try to block access of UN inspectors who enter Syria to secure the
    government's chemical arsenal."

    While Assad said he had evidence that countries including Saudi Arabia
    were arming Syrian rebels, he said he had no proof that any particular
    country had supplied them with chemical weapons.

    He was also asked about the apparent thaw in relations between the
    U.S. and Iran, his government's chief patron in the region.

    Assad called the development positive but added that he did not
    consider it to mean that Tehran's leaders trust Washington. He said
    it was important that the U.S. stop pressuring Iran not to have
    nuclear technology.

    Assad also accused the Obama administration of lying to U.S. citizens
    by claiming it has proof that Assad's government was responsible for
    the Aug 21 gas attack.

    Interviewed by China's state television CCTV in Damascus on Monday, the
    Syrian capital, said he was not concerned about the draft resolution
    and that China and Russia would "ensure any excuse for military action
    against Syria will not stand."

    "I am not concerned. Since its independence, Syria has been committed
    to all the treaties it has signed. We will honor everything that we
    have agreed to do. And more importantly, I want to say, by submitting
    the draft to the UN Security Council, or by urging the U.S. and
    Russia to agree on a deal, the U.S., France, and Britain are just
    trying to make themselves winners in a war against a Syria which is
    their imaginary enemy," Assad was quoted as saying.

    In an interview on the Fox News television channel earlier this month,
    Assad said his government would dispose of its chemical weapons arsenal
    and it would take about a year. "I think it is a very complicated
    operation technically and it needs a lot, a lot of money.

    Some estimated about a billion for the Syrian stockpile," he said.

    He said the Syrian army was advancing in the area at the time and
    had no need to fire rockets filled with the nerve agent sarin, as
    the United States says it did. "The whole story doesn't even hold
    together. It's not realistic. So, no, we didn't. In one word, we
    didn't use any chemical weapons in Ghouta," he said, speaking English.

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