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Assad Denies Chemical Attack in Interview for U.S. Viewers Assad Denies Chemical Attack in Interview for U.S. Viewers
(about 2 hours later)
President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, who has denied that his government attacked civilians with chemical weapons on Aug. 21, reiterated that denial to the American people on Sunday morning via the television interviewer Charlie Rose.President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, who has denied that his government attacked civilians with chemical weapons on Aug. 21, reiterated that denial to the American people on Sunday morning via the television interviewer Charlie Rose.
“He denied that he had anything to do with the attack,” Mr. Rose said on the CBS program “Face the Nation,” hours after interviewing Mr. Assad at the presidential palace in Damascus. “He denied that he knew, in fact, that there was a chemical attack, notwithstanding what has been said and notwithstanding the videotape. He said there’s not evidence yet to make a conclusive judgment.”“He denied that he had anything to do with the attack,” Mr. Rose said on the CBS program “Face the Nation,” hours after interviewing Mr. Assad at the presidential palace in Damascus. “He denied that he knew, in fact, that there was a chemical attack, notwithstanding what has been said and notwithstanding the videotape. He said there’s not evidence yet to make a conclusive judgment.”
No clips from Mr. Rose’s interview were released on Sunday. The interview, which was arranged in the last few days amid a Congressional debate about whether to authorize a limited military strike against Syria, will be broadcast on Monday by CBS and PBS, the same day that President Obama is scheduled to make his case for the strikes in interviews with anchors for six American networks.No clips from Mr. Rose’s interview were released on Sunday. The interview, which was arranged in the last few days amid a Congressional debate about whether to authorize a limited military strike against Syria, will be broadcast on Monday by CBS and PBS, the same day that President Obama is scheduled to make his case for the strikes in interviews with anchors for six American networks.
CBS described Sunday’s interview with Mr. Assad as his first with an American television network since December 2011, about nine months into the Syrian uprising and civil war, when he spoke with Barbara Walters of ABC. By agreeing to speak to Mr. Rose, Mr. Assad all but assured that his remarks would receive widespread attention from the American news media. CBS described Sunday’s interview with Mr. Assad as his first with an American television network since December 2011, about nine months into the Syrian uprising and civil war, when he spoke with Barbara Walters of ABC. By agreeing to speak to Mr. Rose, Mr. Assad all but assured that his remarks would receive widespread attention from the American news media. The columnist Jeffrey Goldberg commented on Twitter that Mr. Rose “just got the biggest get of the year.”
Mr. Rose, who was unavailable for interviews on Sunday because he was traveling back to the United States, said on “Face the Nation” that he read Mr. Assad a paragraph of a front-page New York Times article about Syria’s large stockpile of chemical weapons, and that Mr. Assad responded, “I can’t confirm or deny that we have chemical weapons.” Mr. Rose previously interviewed Mr. Assad in 2006 and 2010 for “Charlie Rose,” which is broadcast on PBS stations. He and many other Western journalists have been lobbying Mr. Assad for an interview since the Syrian uprising started in early 2011.
Mr. Assad also “had a message to the American people,” Mr. Rose said: “That it had not been a good experience for them to get involved in the Middle East, in wars and conflicts in the Middle East; that the result had not been good, and that they should not get involved.” One of Mr. Rose’s advantages this time was his combination of employers. “CBS This Morning,” which he has co-hosted since early 2012, and his eponymous show have shared several of his prominent interviews in the past year. The Assad interview is probably the best affirmation of the strategy so far. Portions of the interview will be shown on the morning program on Monday, then the interview will be shown in its entirety in prime time on PBS, giving Mr. Assad a chance to lay out his case in full.
Mr. Rose previously interviewed Mr. Assad in 2006 for “The Charlie Rose Show,” which is broadcast on PBS stations. He and many other Western journalists have been lobbying Mr. Assad for an interview since the Syrian uprising started in early 2011. While Sunday’s interview was granted with relatively short notice, said David Rhodes, president of CBS News, “Charlie has been working on this for a long time.”
“Charlie has been working on this for a long time,” said David Rhodes, the president of CBS News, who confirmed that Sunday’s interview “came through only this week.” In a sign of the importance of the interview, Mr. Rose was accompanied to Syria by Jeffrey Fager, the chairman of CBS News and the top producer of “60 Minutes.” The two men drove to Damascus after flying into neighboring Lebanon.
Mr. Rose drove to Damascus after flying into neighboring Lebanon. In a sign of the significance of the interview, he was accompanied by Jeffrey Fager, the chairman of CBS News and the top producer of “60 Minutes.” In an e-mail Sunday evening, Mr. Fager said, “Charlie got more out of our hour with President Assad than could be expected. It is a tough, informative and fascinating interview.”
“It’s not normal to send the chairman to produce an interview. It’s also not normal to have an interview like this at a time like this,” Mr. Rhodes said. Mr. Fager added, “The security getting to him was intense, but we found Assad to be surprisingly relaxed and confident. He knows an attack could be coming and it seemed like he was trying hard in the interview to prevent it from happening.”
Portions of the interview will be shown on CBS’s morning and evening newscasts on Monday, Mr. Rhodes said. Then the interview will be shown in its entirety in prime time at 9 p.m. Monday.