Iran President Sees Syria as Part of Western 'Plot'

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

Iranian President Hasan Rowhani warned Monday of a Western campaign to transform the Arab world to suit the interests of Israel, with the Syria conflict part of the plot.

Rowhani, seen as a moderate in the Islamic republic, made the remarks at a meeting with commanders of the hardline Revolutionary Guards focused on the conflict in Syria, which is Iran's key regional ally.

He said the uprisings in Syria, Libya, Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen and Bahrain, together with the resultant instability, were all "chains of a single plot with one goal," according to state television speech.

The aim was to "benefit Israel, to consolidate Israel and its power" while weakening the anti-Western and -Israeli fronts in the region, where Iran and Syria back Hizbullah and the Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.

The United States and its allies in the West and the Arab world back Syrian rebels in the country's uprising-turned-civil war that has claimed more than 110,000 lives since March 2011.

"We know very well that the conflict in Syria is not about which person should be president," Rowhani said.

"It is completely clear that the West has (made) a decision for the entire region as it does not accept our region in its current state."

Tehran says its support for President Bashar Assad stems from respect for his status as the elected president and maintains it would back a new leader if he were chosen by the Syrian people.

"We will be in agreement with whoever Syria's citizens elect to run their country," Rowhani reiterated.

Tehran has openly provided Damascus with material and intelligence support, but it denies having armed Assad's regime or deployed troops to the conflict.

Iran actively opposes military intervention in Syria, warning of dangerous consequences for the entire region, and stopped short of threatening to intervene if its ally comes under Western attack.

But Guards commander General Mohammad Ali Jafari hinted that his powerful force could intervene.

"If the US takes military action in Syria, it will definitely face numerous problems," Jafari warned. "The Guards will then carry out its duty."

Comments 3
Thumb arzak-ya-libnan 16 September 2013, 16:43

Tehran says its support for President Bashar Assad stems from respect for his status as the elected president

you turbaned reformist...neither Assad Jr. OR his dad were EVER elected.

Thumb fero 16 September 2013, 17:51

Well why didn't the Syrian people get involved then and call for elections they simply accepted it so instead of them turning on bashar as the problem they should be blaming themselves for not getting involved in the political process if they really respect democracy as these so called rebels claim why not practice it , so instead of killing lots of people and wanting an islamist state why don't they jst put a candidate out there and go into an election.

Thumb arzak-ya-libnan 17 September 2013, 07:30

Read the Syrian constitution prior to the revolt. The Ba'ath was the SOLE representative of the people. Nobody could run against them. Educate yourself before bursting out with comments that make no sense.