Russia is supplying weapons to Damascus under contracts completed since the conflict in Syria began in 2011, as well as under earlier deals, President Bashar al-Assad said. Assad's comments, in
an interview published by Russian government newspaper Rossiyskaya
Gazeta on Monday, appeared to contradict remarks by Moscow suggesting
any Russian arms supplies to Damascus were agreed before the conflict
began. "There are
contracts that had been sealed before the crisis started and were
carried out during the crisis. There are other agreements on arms
supplies and cooperation that were signed during the crisis and are
being carried out now," Assad said. "They
went through some changes to take into account the type of fighting the
Syrian army carries out against the terrorists," he said in the full
text of the interviews, excerpts of which were published last week. Assad gave no details of the weapons being supplied by Russia,
the world's second-biggest arms exporter, since the start of the
conflict which has killed more than 220,000 people and displaced
millions. Russia's Defense Ministry, contacted by telephone, declined immediate comment. Russia
is a longstanding ally of Assad and is hosting meetings in Moscow on
April 6-9 involving some of the more moderate Syrian opposition
representatives and Damascus envoys. Expectations
of a breakthrough are low after a first round of consultations made
little progress. Many Syrian opposition figures shunned the January
consultations, saying they would appear only at meetings that led to
Assad's removal from power. (Reuters)
Syria gets Russian arms under deals signed since conflict began: Assad
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