Syria Vows to Use “Surprise” Defenses if Attacked

Agence France Presse (AFP)28.08.2013 Syria
Syria Vows to Use “Surprise” Defenses if Attacked

Syria Vows to Use “Surprise” Defenses if Attacked

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Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem vowed on Tuesday that his country will defend itself in case of any Western military strikes against it, AFP reported.


“We have two options: either to surrender, or to defend ourselves with the means at our disposal. The second choice is the best: we will defend ourselves,” AFP quoted Muallem as saying in a televised news conference.

Muallem said that his country had defenses that would “surprise” the world, and that any such action against it would serve the interests of Israel and al-Qaeda. “Syria is not an easy case. We have defenses which will surprise others,” he said.

“The war effort lead by the United States and their allies will serve the interests of Israel and secondly al-Nurse Front,” an al-Qaeda-linked jihadist group in Syria, said Muallem.

Allegations that the Syria government used chemical weapons in the rebel-held Damascus suburb of Ghouta last week is merely a “pretext” to attack the country, he said.

“All we hear is the drums of war beating,” said Muallem, adding that he “challenged” those making the allegations to provide evidence.

Britain’s Armed Forces are drawing up contingency plans for military action in response to the alleged chemical attack, a spokesman Prime Minister David Cameron said Tuesday.

Washington said there was little doubt that the Syrian government used chemical weapons, adding that it was evaluating a response.

“Syria can’t remove evidence in areas that are under militants’ control,” said Muallem. “Where were the U.N. inspectors when we requested them to inspect sites five months ago?”

Damascus’s ally Russia said opposition forces could be behind the Ghouta attack, which took place last Wednesday.

It is “part of Syria’s national interests to cooperate with the U.N. inspectors,” said Muallem. He rejected Washington’s statement that Damascus offering access to Ghouta was “too late.”

The United Nations made a request to inspect the site on Saturday, Muallem said. “Sunday we agreed, and Monday” the inspectors went to the site, he added.  “We didn’t argue over the sites [they requested]. We agreed immediately. There was no delay.” Muallem accused rebels of firing on a convoy of U.N. inspectors, briefly delaying their mission to gather evidence.

Meanwhile, Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal called on the International Community to take “decisive and serious” position against the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“The rejection of the Syrian regime of all serious and earnest Arab efforts requires a decisive and serious standby the international community to stop the humanitarian tragedy of the Syrian people,” Prince al-Faisal said, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

 

Source: AFP; SPA

 



 
 

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