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News ID: 95288
Publish Date : 10 October 2021 - 22:13

Syria Demands End to Illegal U.S., Turkish Presence

DAMASCUS (Dispatches) –
Syrian Foreign Minister Faisal Mikdad wants Turkey and the United States to immediately end their illegal occupation of his country.
In an interview with Syria’s al-Watan newspaper published on Sunday, Mikdad said it is time for Turkey to withdraw its forces from the northwest of Syria and to back a solution that guarantees normal relations between Syria and Turkey after the end of Ankara’s occupation of the Syrian soil.
The Syrian minister also urged the United States to withdraw its forces from Syria. “We have many ways to convince the Americans to leave our country, so I suggest they leave without casualties.”
The United States and Turkey, among several other countries, have been involved militarily in the conflict in Syria, which began in early 2011. Turkey has sent troops to northern regions of the Arab country and provided the so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA) militant group with military assistance throughout the turmoil.
Damascus has on several occasions accused Washington and Ankara of supporting terrorist groups such as Daesh and Jabhat al-Nusra, while demanding their immediate withdrawal.
On Sunday, President Bashar al-Assad stressed the need to end the presence of “illegal foreign powers” on Syrian soil, making a reference to the U.S. and Turkish forces.
During a meeting with visiting Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, Assad said the war on terror will continue until the entirety of the Syrian soil is liberated.
In another part of his interview, Mikdad said, “We do not disagree at all with our allies in the Russian Federation on the priorities that we both have to know in the face of terrorism.”
He described President Assad’s recent visit to Russia as one of his best visits, saying Moscow provides unlimited support to Syria in the fight against terrorism.
“We trust our friends for several reasons,” he said. “First, because they adhere to the Charter of the United Nations, international measures, and multipolarity in international politics, and second, because they believe in serious action against terrorism.”
Elsewhere in his interview, Mikdad said a change in Arab countries’ attitude toward Syria has begun a while ago due to international developments, which “convinced many Arab brothers that Arab countries’ solidarity with each other may help some of them overcome the difficult circumstances they are going through and are going through.”