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Case File
d-24765House OversightOther

President Asad’s speech on Syrian conspiracies and national dialogue

The passage is a political speech lacking specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable details. It offers no concrete leads for investigation beyond general statements about conspiracies and ref Claims of foreign‑backed conspiracy against Syria involving satellite phones and advanced weapons. President Asad emphasizes national dialogue and reform without addressing security‑force abuses. Ref

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #030168
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a political speech lacking specific names, dates, transactions, or actionable details. It offers no concrete leads for investigation beyond general statements about conspiracies and ref Claims of foreign‑backed conspiracy against Syria involving satellite phones and advanced weapons. President Asad emphasizes national dialogue and reform without addressing security‑force abuses. Ref

Tags

political-rhetoricpolitical-speechsyriaforeign-influencenational-dialoguehuman-rightshouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
13 They had no respect for state institutions or the rule of law. No reform was possible with such vandals. He dismissed the argument that Syria was not facing a conspiracy. There was a conspiracy, he declared — designed abroad and perpetrated inside the country. How else to explain the satellite phones, the advanced weapons, the guns mounted on trucks in the hands of his enemies? Syria had always been a target of conspiracy. He had long been under pressure to abandon his principles. (No doubt, by this he meant his Arab nationalist convictions, his alliance with Iran and Hizbullah, his opposition to Israel and the United States.) Syria needed to strengthen its immunity against such conspiracies, he insisted. In this defiant speech, President Asad made no mention of the abuses of his security services -- the callous use of live fire against civilians, the killing of well over a thousand protesters, the deployment of tanks to besiege rebellious cities, the mass arrests, the beatings and the torture, the flight of terrified refugees across Syria’s borders -- a catalogue of outrages which has shattered Syria’s reputation and earned it international condemnation. The refugees in Turkey should return home, he said. They would not be punished. The army would protect them. But those who have had a taste of army brutality may not be persuaded by the President’s assurances. He did, however, have a word of condolence for bereaved mothers. The heart of Asad’s address was a statement of his ambition to shape a new vision for Syria’s future. Reform, he declared, was his firm conviction. His one big idea -- the centrepiece of his speech -- was a plan for a National Dialogue. A special authority had been set up to work out the necessary arrangements for this great debate, which he hoped would provide for the widest possible popular participation. The task was to create a forum where far-reaching political and economic reforms could be discussed, so that legislation could then

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