Assad denies Russia, Iran running the show in Syria

Assad denied Moscow is running the show in his war-torn country, saying in an interview his regime operates independently of its Russian and Iranian allies.
3 min read
10 June, 2018
Russia support has helped prop up the Assad regime since 2015. [Getty]

Syria's President Bashar al-Assad denied Moscow is running the show in his war-torn country, saying in an interview released Sunday his regime operates independently of its Russian and Iranian allies.

In a wide-ranging interview in Damascus with the Mail on Sunday, Assad slammed the United States and British military actions in Syria as "colonial" while praising supporter Russia. 

"We've had good relations with Russia for more than six decades now, nearly seven decades. They never, during our relation, try to dictate, even if there are differences," he told the British newspaper.  

Assad admitted his regime has disagreed with Russia and Iran throughout the country's seven-year conflict.

"That's very natural, but at the end the only decision about what's going on in Syria and what's going to happen, it's a Syrian decision," he said. 

Since September 2015, Assad's forces have been making strong gains on the ground against insurgents thanks to Russian air cover and ground forces mostly made up of Iran-backed fighters from Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanistan. 

Assad now controls more than half of Syria's territories including the largest four cities.

More than 6,000 civilians, including 1,761 children, have been killed by Russian forces in Syria, according to a report by the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR).

Russian offensives conducted with the Syrian regime and Iran have displaced some 2.5 million people.

Moscow has used its veto at the UN Security Council twelve times to shield the Syrian regime from accountability after using chemical weapons against the civilian population in Syria.

'No coordination between Israel, Russia'

Iran's regional foe, Israel, has repeatedly warned it will not accept an entrenched Iranian presence in Syria.

It is suspected of carrying out numerous raids on Syrian regime positions over the years, and last month announced unprecedented strikes on what it said were Tehran-operated bases in Syria. 

In his interview, Assad denied Moscow had ever had prior knowledge of such strikes, despite close cooperation between Israel and Russia. 

"No, no, that's not true," he said. 

"Russia never coordinated with anyone against Syria, either politically or militarily, and that's (a) contradiction," he said.

"How could they help the Syrian army advancing and at the same time work with our enemies in order to destroy our army?" 

Syria's war has also drawn in many Western powers, who first backed rebel groups against Assad then shifted their focus to defeating the Islamic State militant group as part of a US-led coalition.

Assad lambasted the American and British interventions, saying they were "breaching the sovereignty of Syria". 

"This is colonial policy, that's how we see it, and this is not new," he said.

He also told the Mail on Sunday that his country had stopped intelligence sharing with European nations. 

"They want to exchange information despite their governments being politically against ours, so we said... When you change your political position, we're ready," he said. 

"Now, there's no cooperation with any European intelligence agencies including the British." 

The interview, according to the Mail on Sunday, was Assad's first with a British journalist since 2015. Its full transcript was published on Syrian state news agency SANA.

More than 350,000 people have been killed in the Syrian war since it started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.