President Bashar al-Assad on Thursday said Raqa is not a priority target
for his forces, saying his goal is to retake “every inch” of Syrian
territory.
“Raqa is a symbol,” Assad said in an interview with French media,
while asserting that jihadist attacks carried out in France were “not
necessarily prepared” in the Islamic State group (IS) stronghold in
Syria.
“You have ISIS close to Damascus, you have them everywhere,” Assad said, using another acronym for IS.
“Everywhere is a priority depending on the development of the battle,”
he said, as a new round of peace talks was set to kick off in the Kazakh
capital Astana.
“They are in Palmyra now and in the eastern part of Syria,” he said
in the interview in Damascus with Europe 1 radio and the TF1 and LCI
television channels.
“For us it is all the same, Raqa, Palmyra, Idlib, it’s all the same.”
The Syrian leader said it was the “duty of any government” to regain control of “every inch” of its territory.
After a string of major losses in both Iraq and Syria, the jihadists’
two main strongholds of Mosul and Raqa are both under attack from
forces backed by a US-led coalition.
After a massive, four-month campaign, Iraqi forces are tightening the
noose on Mosul, while in Syria, an Arab-Kurd alliance, the Syrian
Democratic Forces, has begun advancing on Raqa.
Also in the interview, Assad categorically denied that his government
practises torture and reiterated his rejection of recent allegations by
Amnesty International of executions and atrocities perpetrated at a
prison near Damascus.
Assad said Amnesty’s “childish report” contained “not a single fact
(or) evidence” to support allegations that some 13,000 people were
hanged at the Saydnaya prison between 2011 and 2015.
– Winning hearts –
“They said they interviewed few witnesses, who are opposition and defected. So it’s biased,” the Syrian president said.
Regarding torture, he said, “We don’t do this, it’s not our policy,”
adding: “Torture for what? … For sadism?… to get information? We have
all the information.”
He argued: “If we commit such atrocities it’s going to play into the
hands of the terrorists, they’re going to win. It’s about winning the
hearts of the Syrian people, if we commit such atrocities… we wouldn’t
have (popular) support (through) six years” of war.
Concerning international negotiations to end the conflict that has
claimed more than 300,000 lives, Assad said Western countries had “lost
their chance of achieving anything in Geneva twice.”
While Turkey, Russia and Iran take the lead in the talks in Astana,
the West has become “passive”, he said, denouncing the coalition for
supporting “those groups that represented the terrorists against the
government.
“They did not want to achieve peace in Syria.”
Russia and Iran have helped turn the tables on the ground with their
military backing for Assad, while Turkey has supported rebels fighting
to oust the strongman.
A new round of the Astana talks was set to kick off on Thursday after a one-day delay for “technical reasons”.
The talks — pushed by key Assad supporter Moscow — are viewed as a
warm-up for UN-led negotiations that are due to begin in Geneva on
February 23.
The meeting in Geneva, the fifth time negotiators have gone to
Switzerland, has been pushed back twice already, in part to give the
opposition more time to form a unified delegation.-AFP

No comments:
Post a Comment