Syria's Assad issues warning to foreign states hostile to his rule

  • 9 years ago
Amid new international efforts to try to halt fighting in Syria, the country’s president has hit out at foreign nations hostile to his regime.

Bashar al-Assad has singled out Turkey, accusing it of supporting insurgents who have recently made further gains in a civil war now into its fourth year.

The Syrian President admitted to the Swedish newspaper Expressen that “war weakens any army, no matter how strong, no matter how modern”.

Ankara denies the claims made by Assad.

Next month the UN envoy for Syria will start consultations with representatives from Syria and other interested states on possible peace talks.

But Assad has a grim message for Steffan de Mastura, insisting that the conflict is complicated by what he calls “external intervention”.

He said that Mastura was aware that if he couldn’t “convince those countries to stop supporting the terrorists and let the Syrians solve the problem, he will not succeed”.

Assad also described Syria as a fault line, saying th