
Members of the Popular Mobilization units holding a position on top of a building in the al-Hayakel area on the eastern outskirts of Iraq's Fallujah during a military operation conducted with government forces against Daesh terrorists.
What follows is a rough transcription of the interview.
Press TV: Russia's call for the world to join and help the Syrian government in fighting ISIL terrorists, seems to have fallen on deaf ears at least in Washington. Instead, we have the US president saying that Moscow's strategy in Syria is doomed to failure. Two questions here: First of all, what is Russia's strategy that the West is so opposed to? And second: Why is the West so worried about what it calls an alleged Russian build-up in Syria?
Chossudovsky:Well first of all we have to distinguish between axis of aggression against the sovereign state which is what the United States is doing under the humanitarian mandate of going after ISIL when in fact we know and it is amply-documented that the ISIL is supported financed by the United States and its allies and what we might describe as bilateral military cooperation between two sovereign states namely Syria and the Russian Federation and that is something which has been ongoing you know for many, many years between the two countries. Russia has a naval base in the Mediterranean and it is also providing Syria with its air defense system, the S-300, as well as other areas of cooperation particularly focusing on training and weapons systems and so on. I do not think that implies in any way that they would be deploying ground forces. That will not happen.














Comment: In truth the Syrian 'conflict' can't be resolved until the West ends its ongoing genocide. And that's where the pressure from a strong country like Russia, that hasn't gone full-blown psychopath and still respects basic human dignity, comes in. See:
The refugee crisis reveals the Neo-Holocaust