
Syrian President Bashar Assad, right, during an interview with CBS news anchor Charlie Rose, which aired Monday
"You should expect everything, not necessarily through the government," Assad told CBS This Morning co-host Charlie Rose in what CBS said was the first television interview given by the embattled Syrian leader since President Barack Obama asked Congress to approve military action against Syria in retaliation for an alleged chemical weapons attack last month that Washington has blamed on the Assad regime.
"Everything is on the brink of explosion - you have to expect everything," Assad said, warning that his government is not in control of the volatile situation in Syria, where the United Nations says at least 100,000 people have been killed in a three-and-a-half-year civil war, because it is "not the only player in this region."












Comment: That list of countries also happen to be U.S. client regimes and most repressive in the region. Coincidence?
You have to laugh in horror when you hear that Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States, the biggest regional exporters of terrorism - culturally, materially, and financially - are doing all this under the pretext of 'fighting terrorism'.