In a SPIEGEL interview, Syrian President Bashar
Assad [Al-Asad] discusses his fight for power, his arsenal of weapons of mass
destruction and the special expectations he has for Germany.
Part 1: 'In the End, a Lie Is a Lie'
SPIEGEL: Mr. President, do you love your
country?
Assad: That is a simple, evident question. Of
course. It's human to love where you come from. But it is not just a question
of the emotional relationship. It is also about what you, as a person, can do
for your home, especially when you are in a position of authority. That becomes
especially clear in times of crisis. Right now, at a time when I have to
protect my country, I am feeling just how much I love it.
SPIEGEL: If you were a true patriot, you would
step down and pave the way for negotiations for an interim government or a
cease-fire with the armed opposition.
Assad: The Syrian people will determine my
fate. That is not a question any other party can decide. Who are these
factions? Who do they represent? The Syrian people? At least part of the Syrian
people? If they do, then let's go to the ballot box.
SPIEGEL: Are you prepared to stand in an
election?
Assad: My second term in office will end next
August. Two months earlier we will hold a presidential election. I cannot
decide now whether I am going to run. It's still early, because you have to
probe the mood and will of the people. If I no longer know that I have the will
of the people behind me, then I will not run.
SPIEGEL: So you're really considering giving up
power?
Assad: Whether I'm open-minded or not, this is
about the decision of the people, because this is their country. It's not only
my country.
SPIEGEL: But you are the reason for the
rebellion. The people want to get rid of corruption and despotism. They are
calling for a real democracy and the opposition believes this will only be
possible if you step down.
Assad: Again, when you talk about factions,
whether they are opposition or supporters, you have to ask yourself the
question: Whom do they represent? Themselves or the country that made them? Are
they speaking for the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Saudi Arabia
and Qatar? My answer here has to be frank and straight to the point. This
conflict has been brought to our country from abroad. These people are located
abroad, they live in five-star hotels and they say and do what those countries
tell them to do. But they have no grassroots in Syria.
SPIEGEL: Do you dispute that there's a strong
opposition against you in your country?
Assad: That's normal. If I don't have
opposition, it means all the people support me, and that's impossible.
SPIEGEL: But we aren't the only ones who are
disputing your legitimacy. "A leader who slaughtered his citizens and
gassed children to death cannot regain the legitimacy to lead a badly fractured
country," US President Obama said at the United Nations General Assembly
at the end of September.
Assad: First of all, you're talking about the
president of the United States, not the president of Syria -- so he can only
talk about his country. It is not legitimate for him to judge Syria. He doesn't
have the right to tell the Syrian people who their president will be. Second,
what he says doesn't have anything to do with the reality. He's been talking
about the same thing -- that the president has to quit -- for a year and a half
now. Has anything happened? Nothing has happened.
SPIEGEL: From our point of view, it looks more
like you are the one who is ignoring reality. If you stepped own, you would
spare your people a lot of suffering.
Assad: The whole problem wasn't about the
president. What do killing innocents, explosions and the terrorism that
al-Qaida [Al-Qa'ida] is bringing to the country have to do with me being in
office?
SPIEGEL: It has to do with the president
because your troops and intelligence services are responsible for a part of
these horrors. That is your responsibility.
Assad: Our decision from the very beginning was
to respond to the demands of the demonstrators, although they were not truly
peaceful demonstrations from the start. We already lost soldiers and policemen
during the first weeks. Nevertheless, a committee changed the constitution (to
reflect the protesters' concerns), and later there was a referendum. But we
also have to fight terrorism to defend our country. I admit that mistakes were
made during the implementation of this decision.
SPIEGEL: The victims in the first protests in
Daraa, where the insurgency began, were largely protesters who were beaten and
shot. This harshness was a mistake on the part of your regime.
Assad: In every implementation in the world,
you have mistakes. You are human.
SPIEGEL: So you admit that the harshness
against the protesters was a mistake?
Assad: There were personal mistakes made by
individuals. We all make mistakes. Even a president makes mistakes. But even if
there were mistakes in the implementation, our decisions were still
fundamentally the right ones.
SPIEGEL: Was the massacre at Houla only the
result of the failure of individuals?
Assad: It was the gangs and militants who
attacked the village residents, never the government or its supporters. That's
exactly what happened. And if you talk about proof, no one has proof against
this. Actually, what happened was that our supporters are the ones who were
killed, and we can give you the names of the victims' families because they
supported our course against terror.
SPIEGEL: We have plenty of evidence. Our
reporters were in Houla, where they conducted in-depth research and spoke to
survivors and relatives of the victims. UN experts have also come to the
conclusion that the 108 village residents who were killed, including 49
children and 34 women, were the victims of your regime. So how can you deny any
responsibility and blame the so-called terrorists?
Assad: With all due respect to your reports, we
are the Syrians. We live here and we know the reality better than your
reporters. We know what is true and we can document it.
SPIEGEL: The perpetrators are part of Shabiha,
a militia that is close to your regime.
Assad: Let me be frank with you. Your question
is full of misstatements. However you put it, in the end a lie is a lie. So,
what you say is not correct.
SPIEGEL: So you deny that the Shabiha militia
was involved?
Assad: What do you mean by "Shabiha?"
SPIEGEL: This militia, the "ghosts,"
who are close to your regime.
Assad: This is a Turkish name. There is nothing
called "Shabiha" in Syria. In many remote areas where there is no
possibility for the army and police to go and rescue the people and defend
them, people have bought arms and set up their own small forces to defend
themselves against attacks by militants. Some of them have fought with the
army, that's true. But they are not militias that have been created to support
the president. At issue is their country, which they want to defend from
al-Qaida.
SPIEGEL: So massacres and terror are only
perpetrated by the other side? Your militias, security forces and secret
services have nothing to do with this?
Assad: You cannot go to the extreme and make
things absolute -- they did everything and we did nothing, 100 percent and zero
percent. Reality isn't black and white like this. It has shades of gray. So if
you want to talk about our side, if you talk about the decisions, we are
defending our country. The mistakes are individual, and, as president, I
wouldn't discuss individual mistakes because there are 23 million Syrians.
Every country has criminals who have to be fought. They can exist anywhere,
including the government or the army -- or outside the government and army.
This is normal, but we don't have sufficient information about this. You're
asking me to generalize, but I cannot generalize.
SPIEGEL: A president's legitimacy is not a
question of phrases and declarations. You are measured by your deeds. Through
the deployment of chemical weapons against your own people, you have
definitively lost the legitimacy to hold your office.
Assad: We did not use chemical weapons. This is
a misstatement. So is the picture you paint of me as a man who kills his own
people. Who isn't against me? You've got the United States, the West, the
richest countries in the Arab world and Turkey. All this and I am killing my
people and they still support me! Am I a Superman? No. So how can I still stay
in power after two and a half years? Because a big part of the Syrian people
support me, the government and the state. Whether that figure is greater or
less than 50 percent? I am not saying that it is the bigger part of our
population. But a big part means that you are legitimate. That is very simple.
And where is another another leader who would be similarly legitimate?
SPIEGEL: President Obama said after the
investigation into this crime by the United Nations that there was "no
doubt" that your regime used chemical weapons on Aug. 21 in an attack that
killed more than 1,000 people.
Assad: Once again, I dare Obama to give a
single piece of evidence, a single shred. The only thing he has is lies.
SPIEGEL: But the conclusions of the UN
inspectors …
Assad: What conclusions? When the inspectors
came to Syria, we asked them to continue the investigation. We are hoping for
an explanation of who is responsible for this act.
SPIEGEL: Based on the trajectory of the
rockets, it is possible to calculate where they were fired from -- namely the
positions of your Fourth Division.
Assad: That doesn't prove anything, because the
terrorists could be anywhere. You can find them in Damascus now. They could
even launch a missile from near my house.
SPIEGEL: But your opponents are not capable of
firing weapons containing Sarin. That requires military equipment, training and
precision.
Assad: Who said that they are not capable? In
the 1990s, terrorists used Sarin gas in an attack in Tokyo. They call it
"kitchen gas" because it can be made anywhere.
SPIEGEL: But you really can't compare these two
Sarin attacks -- they aren't comparable. This was a military action.
Assad: No one can say with certainty that rockets
were used -- we do not have any evidence. The only thing certain is that Sarin
was released. Perhaps that happened when one of our rockets struck one of the
terrorists' positions? Or perhaps they made an error while they were handling
it and something happened. Because they have Sarin -- they used it earlier in
Aleppo.
Part 2: 'The West Is more Confident in al-Qaida
than Me'
SPIEGEL: In total, 14 instances in which
chemical weapons were used have been detected, but never before were they used
on the same massive scale as they were in August. Have you actually started
your own investigation?
Assad: Any investigation should begin with the
identifying the number of the real victims. The militants said 350 victims, the
US said 1,200 victims. There is something not true on the ground. There are
also inconsistencies in the pictures. One of the dead children can be seen in
two locations in two photos.
What I want to say with this is that you have
to verify this case very precisely, but no one has done that so far. We can't
do that either because it is a terrorist area.
SPIEGEL: So close to the capital city?
Assad: They are very close to Damascus and very
close to our army barracks. They could kill our soldiers, and that cannot be
allowed to happen.
SPIEGEL: Do you think you can recapture ground
you have lost?
Assad: Our fight is not about winning or losing
ground. We're not two countries in which one has occupied a part of the other,
like Israel has done with our Golan Heights. It's about getting rid of the
terrorists. If we liberate a piece of this ground -- and that is what is
happening in many areas in Syria -- this doesn't mean that you're winning,
because the terrorists will go to another area and destroy it. If the people
support us, then we are gaining.
SPIEGEL: Western intelligence agencies have
tapped phone calls from your officers in which they urge the leadership to use
chemical weapons.
Assad: That's completely fake. I don't want to
base our conversation just on such allegations.
SPIEGEL: Is it irritating for you that we in
the West perceive the situation so differently?
Assad: Your region always arrives late when it
comes to understanding the actual situation. When we were speaking about
violent protests, you were still talking about "peaceful
demonstrations." And when we started talking about extremists, you started
talking about "some" militants. When you spoke of extremists, we were
already talking about al-Qaida. Then they started talking about a
"few" terrorists at a time when we were already talking about a
majority. Now they have started talking about it being 50-50. Of course, [US
Secretary of State] John Kerry is still in the past -- he's talking about 20
percent.
SPIEGEL: Could it be that we hesitate in
following your assessments of the situation because we lack confidence in you?
And how would you explain this lack of confidence?
Assad: It seems to me the West is more
confident in al-Qaida than me.
SPIEGEL: That's absurd.
Assad: No, this is freedom of expression,
please. That's my opinion, I'm telling you frankly. Everything that the West
has been doing for the past 10 years has supported al-Qaida. Maybe they don't
have this intention, but in reality it is what happened. Because of this, we
now have al-Qaida here, with fighters from 80 countries. We have to deal with
tens of thousands of fighters. And with that, I am just talking about the
foreigners.
SPIEGEL: You have lost many soldiers who are
defecting to the opposition. Are you trying to tell us that they are becoming
al-Qaida supporters overnight?
Assad: No. I didn't say everybody is now
al-Qaida. I said the majority. The minority is comprised of deserters or
outlaws. At the beginning of the crisis, 60,000 Syrian outlaws were walking
around freely outside of prison. They alone would be enough to create an army.
I can't tell you the number of people fighting
against us because most of them come in illegally through the borders. They
come to go to paradise in their jihad against atheists or non-Muslims. Even if
you get rid of thousands of them, they will still have a constant supply coming
from outside.
SPIEGEL: And you still think you have a chance
of winning this war?
Assad: Even if we don't have the chance, we
don't have any other choice but to fight and to defend our country.
SPIEGEL: Let's go back to the issue of chemical
weapons. We would like to remind you that you have always denied possessing
chemical weapons. But now, after the crimes against humanity on Aug. 21 and the
threat of a military strike by the US, you have admitted possessing them.
Assad: We never said we didn't have chemical
weapons. We always say "if we had, then" …
SPIEGEL: Chemical weapons are no reason to
laugh, but there is nothing else we can do.
Assad: In any case, we never lied.
SPIEGEL: There is evidence that German firms
delivered chemicals to Syria that can also be used in the making of chemical
weapons. Do you have more details about that?
Assad: No, I don't know. It is not my business.
But in principle we do not get any help from abroad when it comes to building
the weapons. We don't need it. We are experts in this area ourselves.
SPIEGEL: How many tons of Sarin or other
chemical weapons do you currently have at your disposal?
Assad: That's classified information until we
give it to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapns (OPCW).
SPIEGEL: We know that Western secret services
suspect a thousand tons.
Assad: In the end, it's about the concept, not
the tons. We have the principle that we have chemical weapons, but we think the
Middle East should be a weapons of mass destruction-free zone.
SPIEGEL: That, too, is a question of trust. If
you admit to having 45 storage depots for such weapons, how do we know that is
correct?
Assad: The president doesn't deal with the
numbers. He deals with the policy. We're very transparent. The experts can go
to every site. They are going to have all the data from our government, and
then they're going to verify that data on the ground. Then they can say if we
are credible or not. We don't accept or commit ourselves to any agreement
partially. This is our history. We're not going to pay for the destruction of
the weapons, though.
SPIEGEL: Is the international community
supposed to believe that you don't have secret depots?
Assad: In international relations there's
nothing called trust; there's something called mechanism. They don't have to
trust me in person. What counts is that the institutions work together -- my
government and the OPCW -- and if I have the trust of the Syrian people. I'm not
made by the West. I am made by the Syrians.
SPIEGEL: You don't need the West?
Assad: Of course we do, but not instead of the
Syrians, and not instead of our real friends like the Russians. The Russians
understand the reality here much better. I'm not just praising them because we
have long relations. They are more independent than Europe, which is too
oriented toward US policy.
SPIEGEL: The Russians are only concerned with
their strategic interests.
Assad: You can discuss this with President
Vladimir Putin. But let me say this: Some Europeans have come to us through
different channels to say that they are convinced about our position and
analysis, but cannot voice this out loud.
SPIEGEL: Is that also true with regard to your
portrayal of the chemical weapons attack?
Assad: Obama's lies couldn't even convince the
American people. According to one poll, 51 percent were against a military
strike against Syria. The British parliament was against it too. The French
parliament had a bitter debate about it. The atmosphere in Europe was against
such an attack. Why? Because the majority didn't believe the story.
SPIEGEL: Are any of the European contacts that
you continue to maintain from Germany?
Assad: We have some relations with some
institutions, and have recently been using channels that didn't exist before.
We exchange some information, but we cannot say that we have political
relations.
SPIEGEL: Does Germany play a special role for
you?
Assad: When I think of Europe, I ask myself who
is closer to the reality in my region? Every European position is still far
from our reality. Germany and Austria have the most objective and closest
position to reality. The German position is the closest.
SPIEGEL: Could Germany take on the role of
intermediary?
Assad: Of course, I would like to see envoys
from Germany come to Syria to see and discuss the reality. Coming here doesn't
mean you support the government. But if you come here, you can do, you can
talk, you can discuss, you can convince. If you think you have to isolate us,
you only end up isolating yourselves. This is also about your interests: Do you
really want a backyard that is filled with al-Qaida? When you support
instability here? After two and a half years, you should rethink your policies.
SPIEGEL: Given the unrest in your country, do
you even have your chemical weapons arsenal under control?
Assad: Of course, under full control. Because
let me tell you this: the material that could be used by any regular army
doesn't exist in the stores in activated form. So no one can use it before it
is activated.
SPIEGEL: Is this also true of depots containing
biological weapons, which you also possess?
Assad: It is classified information. We never
talk about military classified information, but this should not be understood
as confirmation that we possess them.
SPIEGEL: Do you understand the international
community's fears that these weapons of mass destruction could fall into the
hands of terrorists?
Assad: The situation is not as bad as it seems
in the media and the West. There is no need for any undue concern.
Part 3: 'We Don't Have any Other Option than To
Believe in Our Victory'
SPIEGEL: According to our information, the
armed opposition controls at least 40 percent of the country, and some
estimates put that figure as high as more than two-thirds of the country.
Assad: These numbers are exaggerated. Sixty
percent of Syria is desert. Who's in the desert? Nobody. In the rest of the
country they don't control a single full area.
SPIEGEL: That's not true for the area along the
Turkish border.
Assad: They are on the borders in the north of
Aleppo with Turkey, but only on that part, not fully. They have some areas, but
they are just focal points. We're not talking about a front. Sometimes they are
isolated in areas where there's no army to fight them. But this isn't about
percentages. The solidarity of the population is much more important to us. And
this is growing because many don't want terrorists destroying the country any
more.
SPIEGEL: The brutality of the conflict has
turned a quarter of the population -- some 6 million people -- into refugees.
Assad: We don't have a precise number. Even 4
million could be exaggerated because many Syrians moved within Syria to another
house or with relatives and didn't register themselves.
SPIEGEL: You sound as if you are talking about
a tax increase and not a humanitarian catastrophe.
Assad: Actually, no. In the West, when you ask
about the number, you talk about it like spreadsheets. If you have 1 million or
5 million, you're going to do the same. Whether it's 70,000 victims, 80,000,
then 90,000, or 100,000, it's like an auction. It's not an auction -- it's a
tragedy. Whether it's 1,000 or 10,000, it's the same.
SPIEGEL: The flood of refugees is happening for
one reason -- you and your regime.
Assad: Sorry, is this a question or a statement
of fact? If it's a statement, it's not correct. If it's a question, the first
thing we have to ask is why people leave? You don't have one reason; you have
multiple reasons. One of the reasons is that many people left their homes and
houses because of the threat of the terrorists.
SPIEGEL: No one is fleeing your soldiers and
security forces?
Assad: The army represents Syria, otherwise you
wouldn't have the army, because it would have been divided a long time ago. It
is a threat to no one. When it comes to refugees, you have to ask yourself a
question about the other governments, especially the Turkish government. What
is their interest in having these high numbers? You know what it is? Their
interest is to use them as a humanitarian card with the UN. Some other
countries used them to get money for themselves, not the refugees. So you have
corruption, interests and some people that could have fled because they are
scared of the government, but we don't have anything against them. And in the
last two weeks, more than 100,000 or 150,000, depending on the estimate, came
back to Syria. So the tide has recently been reversed.
SPIEGEL: How did you convince people to return?
Assad: We worked hard to bring them back. We
engaged with everybody to alleviate their fears. If you didn't violate the law,
then we have no problem with you. If you are against the government, come be
against the government in Syria. We don't have a problem. That was very
successful.
SPIEGEL: From a military perspective, however,
you haven't had any success. The capture of Aleppo that was promised has not
come to pass. Maalula remains a major problem, and there's even fighting in the
suburbs of Damascus. We heard the thunder of grenades on our way to your
palace.
Assad: When you have this kind of crisis, you
cannot say you are as strong as before. The damage is much too massive. To be
realistic, it will take time before we get over this problem. We don't have any
other option than to believe in our victory.
SPIEGEL: How can you be so confident of victory
when you need help from Lebanon's militant group Hezbollah?
Assad: Lebanon is a small country with a
population of 4 million. In Damascus alone we have 5 million. Syria is too big
for Hezbollah even if they want to send all their troops. We fought with them
on the border with Lebanon against terrorists who attacked their loyalists, and
we cooperated, and that was good.
SPIEGEL: So you could actually do without
Hezbollah's help?
Assad: That's not what I said. I'm talking
about the perception in the West and in the media that Hezbollah is fighting
because the Syrian army cannot fight. Even if you want to make it a reality,
you can't, because the proportion doesn't work.
SPIEGEL: Hezbollah are among the few who still
support you. Russian President Putin appears to be slowly losing his patience
with you. And the new Iranian president, Hassan Rohani [Rowhani], could find
rapprochement with the US to be more important than your survival.
Assad: Putin is more supportive than ever. This
has been proven by Russia's three vetoes against sanctions in the UN Security
Council.
SPIEGEL: But he voted in favor of a resolution
to destroy your chemical weapons.
Assad: It's a good resolution.
SPIEGEL: Because it prevented a US air strike?
Assad: There's not a single point in that
resolution that's against our interests. The Russians see very clearly what we
are doing here because they suffered from terrorists in Chechnya, and they know
the meaning of terrorism.
SPIEGEL: Does that mean you are confident
Moscow will deliver the S-300 air defense system you've been waiting on for
months?
Assad: He said very clearly on many different
occasions that he would continue supporting Syria, and that he's committed to
the contract -- not only on air defense, but all kinds of armaments.
SPIEGEL: The international community will do
everything possible to prevent you from acquiring more arms.
Assad: On what grounds? They don't have any
right. We are a state, and we have the right to defend ourselves. We don't
occupy others' lands. Why doesn't the international community oppose Israel
when they get all these armaments? Germany sent Israel three submarines, and
they occupy our land. We don't trust the West because of its double standards.
SPIEGEL: Even if Putin delivers the new air
defense system, aren't you afraid that Israel will bomb it to pieces?
Assad: You cannot be afraid. When you are in a
war situation, you don't do something because you're afraid of doing it. You
have to strengthen yourself and not to allow your enemy to destroy your
armaments or to win.
SPIEGEL: And if they try?
Assad: When that happens we can talk about it.
SPIEGEL: In the past you sounded more
self-confident when it came to Israel.
Assad: No, we have always said we need peace
and stability in this region. Even if you want to retaliate, you have to ask
yourself the question: What would the result be? Now that we're fighting
al-Qaida, in particular, we have to be cautious that we don't start a new war.
SPIEGEL: At what point will you be able to
claim victory over al-Qaida?
Assad: The victory is stability. The first
phase is to get rid of the terrorists. The second one, which is more difficult
and dangerous, is to get rid of their ideology, which has infiltrated some
parts in Syria. It cannot be that an eight-year-old boy tries to behead
someone, which happened in the north. Or that children watch the beheading with
jubilation, happy like they're watching a soccer match, for example. If we
don't deal with this problem, which is more dangerous than the terrorists
themselves, we're going to face a bleak future.
SPIEGEL: This scene wouldn't sound all that
surprising if it had taken place in Somalia. But in Syria?
Assad: The brutality we are experiencing in
Syria is incredible. People slaughtered a Christian bishop by slitting his
throat with a small knife.
SPIEGEL: Do you still believe you can return
Syria to its pre-war state?
Assad: In terms of stability, of course we can.
If we stop billions in support for the terrorists from Saudi Arabia and Qatar,
and the logistic support of Turkey, we could solve this problem in a few
months.
SPIEGEL: Is it still possible to find a
solution through negotiations?
Assad: With the militants? No. The definition
of political opposition doesn't include an army. We will negotiate with whoever
wants to lay down his arms and go back to normality. Since we discussed
deserters before, I'd like to point out that it's going the other way too. People
who used to be militants are fighting with the army now.
SPIEGEL: The international community blames you
for the escalation of this conflict, whose end is not yet in sight. How do you
live with this guilt?
Assad: It's not about me, but about Syria. The
situation in Syria worries and saddens me; that's where my concern is. I am not
concerned for myself.
SPIEGEL: Are your wife and three children still
standing by you?
Assad: Of course, they never left Damascus for
one moment.
SPIEGEL: Do you sometimes fear that something
like what happened to Romanian President Ceausescu might happen to you? After a
short trial, he was shot by his own soldiers.
Assad: If I were afraid, I would have left
Syria a long time ago.
SPIEGEL: Mr. President, we thank you for this
interview.
Spiegel Online
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