DAMASCUS — Syrian President Bashar Assad has blamed Europe’s refugee crisis on Western support for “terrorists”, as people fleeing his country’s civil war stream towards the European Union.
In his first public comments on the mass migration, broadcast on Wednesday, Assad said Europe could expect more refugees.
Countries including the United States, Turkey and Saudi Arabia want to see Assad gone from power and have supported the opposition to his rule during the four-year-old war, including some of the armed groups fighting him.
Assad has been buoyed in recent weeks by signs of increased military support from his ally Russia. In his comments he made no mention of reports of Russian military activity in Syria.
The White House said on Tuesday it wanted to see Russia engage constructively with the international coalition fighting ISIS, rather than build up its own military presence.
Moscow says the Syrian government should be part of a broad coalition to fight ISIS.
Assad said there was no coordination between his government and the United States, even indirectly, apparently backing away from comments earlier this year suggesting there had been some contact.
“There’s not a single coordination or contact between the Syrian government and the United States government or between the Syrian army and the U.S. army … Not even any third party, including the Iraqis,” he said.
He played down proposals for a peace initiative that Assad ally Iran has said it presented to Syrian officials.
“There is currently no Iranian initiative, but rather there are ideas, or principles, for an Iranian initiative, which are based principally on the subject of Syria’s sovereignty … and are based on fighting terrorism,” Assad said.
Leave a Reply