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© Mikhail Voskresenskiy / SputnikSyrian President Bashar al-Assad meets with Russian parliamentary delegation in Damascus.
Western politicians have been forced into the awkward position of being obliged to negotiate with Damascus over security under the table in fear of raising Washington's ire, Syria's president told Australia's SBS News in an exclusive interview.

"They attack us politically and then they send officials to deal with us under the table, especially the security, including your [the Australian] government," Bashar Assad told SBS News reporter Luke Waters.

"They don't want to upset the United States," the Syrian leader said. "Actually most of the Western officials only repeat what the United States want them to say. This is the reality," Assad said in an interview filmed in Damascus that took two years of negotiations to arrange.

Ahead of airing the interview with President Assad, SBS also interviewed Australia's former ambassador to Syria, Bob Bowker, who denied the Syrian leader' claims, saying that "The reality is that Assad is seen in the West as an unfit leader to be dealt with," while adding that Assad has "lost the credibility" in "the rest of the Arab world."


Comment: Looks like it's Bowker who's lost credibility. What a clown!


SBS quotes Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who has called Bashar Assad a "murderous tyrant," as well as the nation's opposition leader, Bill Shorten, who has described Syria's president a "butcher."

"These statements, I just can say they are disconnected from our reality, because I'm fighting terrorists," President Assad said, rejecting the accusations.

"Our army is fighting terrorists, our government is against terrorists, the whole institutions are against terrorists. If you call fighting terrorism butchery, that's another issue," he said.


Comment: Oh snap! In another recent interview, Assad elaborated:
"It's still working, the ceasefire, but we don't have to forget that terrorist groups violate this agreement, on a daily basis. But at the same time, we have the right, according to that agreement, to retaliate whenever the terrorists attack our government forces. So, actually you can say it's still working in most of the areas," Assad told Australia's SBS broadcaster in an interview whose transcript was published on the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA).

Syria does not include the unarmed political opposition to its list of terrorist groups, only those who take up arms, Bashar Assad said.

"When you talk about an opposition group that adopts the political means, they're not terrorists. Whenever you hold machineguns or any other armaments and you terrorize people and you attack civilians and you attack public and private properties, you are a terrorist," Assad told SBS.

Former US ambassador to Ukraine John Herbst told Sputnik this week that keeping President Bashar Assad in office is the only alternative to Islamic extremists taking power in Syria.

"I think Assad is a tyrant, he is brutal, but he is not as bad as the Islamic extremists," Herbst said, adding that Washington and Moscow have similar interests in Syria and could cooperate if the Russian military "stops bombing Syrian rebels" supported by the US.

President Bashar Assad also condemned foreigners coming to fight in Syria, regardless of which cause they support.

"If there are foreigners coming without the permission of the government they are illegal, whether they want to fight terrorists or want to fight any other one," he said. "It's the same. It's illegal we can call it."