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Wednesday 17 February 2016 - 10:32

Israel seeks government change in Syria to undermine resistance: Nasrallah

Story Code : 521590
Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary general of the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah, addresses the Lebanese nation, February 16, 2016.
Seyyed Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary general of the Lebanese resistance movement Hezbollah, addresses the Lebanese nation, February 16, 2016.
Israel prefers the Daesh Takfiri terrorists and al-Qaeda militants to the Syrian government, Nasrallah said in a televised address to the Lebanese nation on Tuesday, the Martyr Leaders Day.
 
He said the government of the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad poses a danger to the interests of the Israeli regime.
 
Israel agrees with Saudi Arabia and Turkey that any solution to the crisis in Syria must not prolong the existence of the government in Damascus, Nasrallah said.
 
He added that Israel prefers the partition of Syria to a political settlement of the crisis in the Arab country.
 
Nasrallah rejected claims that the Syrian government will finally bow to pressures for the disintegration of the Arab country, saying Syrian forces are present everywhere across Syria, meaning that the government will not allow such partitioning and the “national will” is clearly against that.
 
He also slammed Turkey and Saudi Arabia for their active support of the militants in Syria, saying they have failed in their plots against the government of Assad. 
 
Militants in Syria are suffering successive defeats, Nasrallah stated, pushing Saudi Arabia and Turkey to consider deploying ground troops into Syria under the banner of the so-called international coalition against the Takfiri Daesh terrorists.
 
The Hezbollah secretary general said the plan for sending troops into Syria is a plot by Ankara and Riyadh to maintain their position at the ongoing peace talks over Syria.
 
He said the resistance movement and their allied forces will not allow any country to determine the future of Syria.  
 
'Tel Aviv only sees own interests in region'
 
The Hezbollah chief said that the Israeli regime is also after the formation of an alliance with some Sunni states, warning the Arab countries that this would only serve the interests of the Israeli regime.
 
Israel only looks after its own interests, he warned.
 
Nasrallah drew the attention of Arab states to the Israeli crimes against Sunni states since its creation. 
 
    "How can any sane person in Sunni states consider Israel as a friend, ally or a protectorate?" he asked.
 
If Israel becomes an ally of Sunni states, "Palestine will be lost eternally," he warned.
 
He added that Israel also sees Iran and the resistance movement in Palestine and Lebanon as threats.
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