In Interview with ABC’s Barbara Walters, Syria's President Bashar al-Assad say’s 'There Was No Command to Kill'. (For More on this Story including Walter’s Views on Interview Go to ABC’s Here)
Barbara Walters discusses brutal crackdown of protests with Syria's président :
(NOTE : TO WATCH DOUBLE CLICK HERE)
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THE ASSAD ENIGMA :
From Respectable Surgeon to ‘bloodthirsty’ dictator
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Barbara from "The View" program went to Syria ( few years ago):
Asma Elassad Syria's first lady on Gaza by CNN (Jan 14, 2009):
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NO REMORSE , NO GUILT
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Syria's Bashar al-Assad 'feels no guilt' over crackdown (bbc)
Syria's president has said that he feels no guilt about his crackdown on a 10-month uprising, despite reports of brutality by security forces.
In an interview with the US network ABC, Bashar al-Assad said he had given no orders for violence to be used against protesters but admitted "mistakes"were made.
He said he did not own the security forces or the country.
At least 4,000 people have been killed since the uprising began, the UN says.
However, Mr Assad said the UN was not credible.
Syria blames the violence on "armed criminal gangs".
The US later rejected President Assad's assertions that he did not order the killing of protesters.
"It is just not credible," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.
"The United States and many, many other nations around the world who have come together to condemn the atrocious violence in Syria perpetrated by the Assad regime know exactly what's happening and who is responsible."
Mr Assad's interview comes a day after the US announced that its ambassador in Syria, Robert Ford, would return to Damascus after he was withdrawn in October because of security concerns.
France's ambassador returned on Monday.
'Big difference'
Responding to questions from veteran presenter Barbara Walters about the brutality of the crackdown, Mr Assad said he did not feel any guilt.
"I did my best to protect the people, so I cannot feel guilty," he said. "You feel sorry for the lives that has [sic] been lost. But you don't feel guilty - when you don't kill people."
"We don't kill our people… no government in the world kills its people, unless it's led by a crazy person," he added.
The security forces were not his, nor did he command them, the Syrian president said.
"There was no command, to kill or to be brutal," he said.
"I don't own them, I am president, I don't own the country so they are not my forces."
Instead he blamed the violence on criminals, religious extremists and terrorists sympathetic to al-Qaeda, who he said were mingling with peaceful protesters.
He said most ofthose killed were from government supporters, with 1,100 soldiers and police among the dead.
Those members of the security forces who had exceeded their powers had been punished, he said.
"Every 'brute reaction' was by an individual, not by an institution, that's what you have to know," he said.
"There is a difference between having a policy to crack down and between having some mistakes committed by some officials. There is a big difference."
When challenged about reports of house-to-house arrests, including of children, Mr Assad said the sources could not be relied upon.
"We have to be here to see. We don't see this. So we cannot depend on what you hear,"he said.
The United Nations, which has said the Syrian government committed crimes against humanity, was not credible, Mr Assad said.
He described Syria's membership of the UN as "a game we play".
Asked if he feared sharing the fate of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi or ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, Mr Assad said the only thing he was afraid of was losing the support of his own people.
Recommended Reading:
Bashar al-Assad: Syria's unintended president (CNN, Wire Staff)
U.N.puts death toll at 4,000 in Syria as pressures rise by Mohamed Fadel Fahmy, (CNN)
Related Blogs on Syria and ME Crisis:
Jordan's King Abdullah Calls On Syria's President Assad to Step Down
Jordan's King Warns: 'No one has any idea what to do about Syria'
Jordan King in talks with Mahmoud Abbas on Palestinian statehood bid
STUBBORN WALLS: Ben Gurion, Hussein, Nasser interviews on ME Peace Process
Related Blogs on ‘Barbara Walter’s Interviews’ :
Barbara Walters On Interviewing Muammar Gaddafi in 1989
pictory: Shah Interview with Barbara Walters and US Networks (1974-77)
A QUEEN's LOYALTY: Barbara Walters Shares Shahbanou Farah's concerns for President Mobarak's Family
WOMEN KNOW YOUR LIMITS: The Shah's Post Mortem Apologies to Barbara Walters and Oriana Fallaci
PRINCE OF PERSIA: Barbara Walters Interview with Crown Prince Reza (2002)
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I hope Assad & his goons would be indicted on their crimes
by Esfand Aashena on Tue Dec 13, 2011 06:23 AM PSTReferring Assad and his goons to the International Criminal Court would be another step in the right direction and the beginning of the end for Assad and his criminal cohorts.
Everything is sacred
Wonder where's Comrad Dabashi to denounce the "Imperialists" ?
by Darius Kadivar on Tue Dec 13, 2011 04:13 AM PSTCourt 'should probe Syria crimes' (bbbc)
The top United Nations human rights official has told the Security Council that Syria should be referred to the International Criminal Court over its crackdown on anti-government protests.
Navi Pillay said she felt widespread killings and torture in the country "constituted crimes against humanity".
Ms Pillay put the number of those killed by security forces in the nine-month uprising at more than 5,000.
Syria's UN envoy said Ms Pillay was "not objective" and "not fair".
Related Blog:
NIAC’s Hamid Dabashi Denounces Hypocrisy of Foreign Intervention in Libya
Syrian death toll 'exceeds 5,000'
by Darius Kadivar on Mon Dec 12, 2011 04:34 PM PSTSyrian death toll 'exceeds 5,000' (bbc)
More than 5,000 people are now believed to have been killed in the uprising in Syria, the UN's top human rights official has said.
Navi Pillay told a closed session of the Security Council that 14,000 people are believed to have been arrested and 12,400 fled to neighbouring countries.
At least 20 people died in clashes on Monday, opposition activists said.
Amid the violence, local polls were held, but turnout is expected to have been very low.
Mother freaker!
by Esfand Aashena on Thu Dec 08, 2011 06:54 AM PSTAssad has taken a page out of Ahmadinejad's playbook! Look them straight in the eye and lie through your teeth! Who is going to stop you? You can deny! deny! deny! Until you are kicked out of Syria you "own" the justice system so enjoy it while it last, you mother freaker!
In 2009 when handheld cell phones (Assad outlawed them last week) were used to document Iranian police beating up the protester to pulp, the regime was saying the same thing that their police are the victims!
There is no evidence like multiple (not a single individual) live video evidence and no better evidence than the estimated 4,000 dead. This is the time when I hope a brutal end to Assad personally, like it happened to Qaddafi and Mubarak.
Everything is sacred
"I was elected by syrian people, because they love me"!!!!!!
by Roozbeh_Gilani on Wed Dec 07, 2011 04:26 PM PSTSo believes the pretty boy dentist, shazdeh asad jnr.
I believe that with roo like this, this syrian shazdeh makes the perfect candidate for Islamist regime's "presidential election", so long has he looks after his ass, unlike gaddafi :)
"Personal business must yield to collective interest."
In other words
by Rea on Wed Dec 07, 2011 04:05 PM PST.... he saw nothing, heard nothing, knew nothing, issued no orders.
He may be living in Lebanon after all.
//observers.france24.com/content/20111202-syria-syrian-minister-old-footage-lebanon-proof-terrorism-fake-video-damascus-press-conference-foreign-moallem
Ukh..........akhi......
by پندارنیک on Wed Dec 07, 2011 03:44 PM PSTIt is indeed the right time to resign, and disappear from the public sight in order to give the next generation some sought-after space; Barbara Walters has been around for way too long........