Syrian President Bashar al-Assad Denies US Cooperation in ISIS Fight

Bashar al-Assad said he receives anti-terror information from the United States.

“They don’t talk to us, we don’t talk to them,” he said.

“Sometimes they convey a message, a general message but there’s nothing tactical,” Assad told the BBC’s Jeremy Bowen in a rare interview, adding that Iraq and other countries act as third parties and that he knew about the U.S.-led coalition’s bombing campaign before it started in September.

“There is no dialogue. There is, let’s say, information but not dialogue,” Assad said.

By carrying out missions in the skies over Syria, Assad said, “they easily trample over international law.”

“We have bombs, missiles and bullets. No indiscriminate weapons,” Assad said. “There are no barrel bombs, we don’t have barrels.

The president danced around questions about personal mistakes he has made during the now almost four-year war in Syria, saying simply, “everybody makes mistakes.”

From the beginning, the Assad government has claimed that it was battling terrorists, that there was no moderate rebel movement. Assad still claims that he has popular support. Otherwise, he said, “how could I stay in power?”

“Many reasons that could affect any human,” he answered. “Could be your job, could be personal. Like any other human.”