The Mercury News Weekend

Assad blames U.S. for Syrian chaos

Leader refuses to accept responsibi­lity for Aleppo carnage

- By Ian Phillips and Zeina Karam Associated Press

DAMASCUS, Syria — He’s been stigmatize­d internatio­nally, a contentiou­s figure presiding over a ruinous civil war that seems to slip into further depravity every day. But in his power base in the Syrian capital, President Bashar Assad projected confidence — conceding nothing to his critics, and accusing the U.S. of derailing a cease-fire and lacking the “will” to fight extremists in his country.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Assad rejected U.S. accusation­s that Syrian or Russian planes struck an aid convoy in Aleppo this week and that his troops were preventing food from entering the city’s rebel-held areas. He maintained deadly airstrikes by the U.S.-led co- alition on Syrian troops last weekend were intentiona­l, dismissing American officials’ statements that they were an accident.

In Washington, the State Department countered that Assad’s assertions were “ridiculous.”

While acknowledg­ing that the war will “drag on” indefinite­ly as long as his opponents were still receiving external support from countries like Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, Assad said Syria will bounce back as a more unified state, and pledged to rebuild the ruined country and even welcome back refugees if assistance to the insurgents were to stop.

Assad, who inherited power from his father and is now in his 16th year in office, cut a confident figure during the interview Wednesday — a sign of how his rule, once seriously threatened by the rebellion, has been solidified by his forces’ military advances and by the yearlong air campaign by his ally Russia, which has turned the tables on the battlefiel­d. In Damascus, the seat of Assad’s power, where life goes on nearly as normal and the six-year-war feels like a distant inconvenie­nce, many cling to his rule, fearing the alternativ­e.

World leaders, including the United States and Turkey, have quietly walked back their calls for Assad’s immediate departure, focusing instead on fighting the Islamic State group, which flourished in the chaos of the country’s conflict.

The sense of detachment projected by the 51year-old Assad was striking. While acknowledg­ing some mistakes, he denied any excesses by his troops and claimed the rebel-held parts of Aleppo, Syria’s second-largest city, weren’t really under siege.

“If there’s really a siege around the city of Aleppo, people would have been dead by now,” Assad said, and questioned how rebels were able to smuggle in arms but apparently not food or medicine.

 ?? SYRIAN PRESIDENCY­VIAASSOCIA­TED PRESS ?? Syrian President Bashar Assad denied the Syrian city Aleppo was under siege. “If there’s really a siege around the city of Aleppo, people would be dead by now.”
SYRIAN PRESIDENCY­VIAASSOCIA­TED PRESS Syrian President Bashar Assad denied the Syrian city Aleppo was under siege. “If there’s really a siege around the city of Aleppo, people would be dead by now.”

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