25 Apr 2024
Friday 14 October 2016 - 12:46
Story Code : 235083

Saudi Arabia vowed to support Syria if ties with Iran cut: Assad



Syrian President Bashar al-Assad says Saudi Arabia had made a pledge to throw support behind him in case the Damascus government broke off all forms of relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran.
If we were tomove away fromIran and announcethat we were refusing all relations withIran, they said they would help me, Assad said in an exclusive interview with Russian-language tabloid newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda released on Friday.
Hespecifiedthat the offer was made afterthe start ofthe conflict inSyria over five years ago.

The Syrian leader also praised Russian military operations in Syria, stressing that Takfiri terrorists have lost ground as a result of Russias military intervention in the conflict-plagued Arab country.

'Terrorists must be either killed or returned to Turkey'

Turning to government forces push to drive militants out of Aleppo, Assad highlighted that the recapture of the strategic northwestern city, located some 355kilometersnorth of thecapital Damascus, will offer the Syrian army a springboard to liberate other parts of the country and send terrorists back to Turkey.
It's going to be the springboard, as a big city, to move to other areas, to liberate other areas from the terrorists. This is the importance of Aleppo now," Assad said.
You have to keep cleaning this area and to push the terrorists to Turkey to go back to where they come from, or to kill them. There's no other option. But Aleppo is going to be a very important springboard to do this move, he commented.

Assad went on to say that Turkey's actions in Syria are international law andamount to an invasion.

He also described the ongoing foreign-sponsored militancy in Syria as a conflict between Russia and the West.

Hope for change in Turkey's policy

Assad hoped that Russia could persuade neighboring Turkey to change its policy towards Syria in light of a rapprochement between Moscow and Ankara.



[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="555"] Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (Photo by AP)[/caption]

Turkey and Russia put an end to seven months ofstrained relations inJune, when Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wrote a letter tohis Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin, apologizing forthe Turkish militarys downing of a Russian Su-24 fighter jet conductingan anti-terror mission in Syrian skies near the Turkish border in November last year.Of the two pilots aboard the warplane, one was rescued with the help of the Syrian army, but the other was killed by militants fighting the Syrian government.

Elsewhere in his remarks, the Syrian president drew parallel between Daesh, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham (formerly known as al-Nusra Front) and the so-called Free Syrian Army terrorist groups, stating that they are notdifferent from one another concerning their nature.
When it (the Free Syrian Army) started togrow and it became impossible tohide the crimes ofbeheadings, the West was forced toaccept the existence ofal-Nusra Front. But it is actually the Free Syrian Army. It is Daesh. They have the same roots and move fromone area toanother, Assad said.
The conflict in Syria, which flared up in March 2011, has claimed the lives of more than 400,000 people, according to an estimate byUN Special Envoy for SyriaStaffan de Mistura.

By Press TV

https://theiranproject.com/vdcaamnue49new1.tgk4.html
Your Name
Your Email Address