As he maneuvers through delicate negotiations, President Obama doesn’t have to wonder if he can trust Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
He can’t.
Assad himself said so.
“I don’t think that President Obama should trust me,” he said in a Fox News interview Wednesday evening. “The Syrian people should trust me, not President Obama.”
The United States and Russia reached a deal to disarm Syria without military action. Damascus has one week to provide a “comprehensive list” of its chemical weapons and must allow UN weapons inspectors into the country by November.
Assad said he’s prepared to surrender the country’s chemical arsenal. The stockpile is “not secret anymore,” he said. “That’s why we joined the international agreement, in order to get rid of them.” He said he planned to “fully cooperate” with the international community.
But the Syrian leader continued to deny his regime was behind the deadly chemical weapons attack outside Damascus on Aug. 21. “We didn’t use any chemical weapons,” he said. “No one has verified the credibility of the videos and the pictures.”
The Syrian presidency Twitter account tweeted;
#Assad to #FoxNews: In one word, we did not use CW. We have evidence that terrorist groups used Sarin. Evidence was handed to the Russians.
— Syrian Presidency (@Presidency_Sy) September 19, 2013
He suggested outside forces were to blame: “Sarin gas is called kitchen gas, do you know why? Because anyone can make Sarin in his house.” He added, “You cannot use Sarin beside your own troops.”
He raised the specter of terrorists infiltrating Syria.
#Assad to #FoxNews: 80-90% of rebels are from al-Qaeda and its offshoots. We have tens of thousands of jihadists now in #Syria
— Syrian Presidency (@Presidency_Sy) September 19, 2013
A United Nations report released Monday found “clear and convincing evidence” that rockets carrying the nerve agent Sarin were used to kill nearly 1,500 civilians, including more than 400 children. The U.N. stopped short of accusing the Syrian government of turning weapons on its own people; President Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry have said Assad’s troops are responsible for the deaths.
Assad noted the “complicated operation” of physically destroying these weapons, which takes “a lot of money” and can be “detrimental to the environment.”
“If the American administration is ready to pay this money and to take responsibility of bringing toxic materials to the United States, why don’t they do it?” he asked. “In the end, if you’re going to destroy them, it doesn’t matter where they go.”









