Supreme leader says Iranian intel warned of ‘enemy’ threats, denies ‘axis of resistance’ is weakened by fall of key ally.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has accused the United States and Israel of orchestrating the toppling of former Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, while also blaming a “neighbouring” country of Syria.
“There should be no doubt that what happened in Syria was the result of a joint American-Zionist plot,” said Khamenei, addressing the fall of al-Assad for the first time in a speech delivered in Tehran on Wednesday.
While emphasising that the US and Israel were the main conspirators, Khamenei also alluded to the role played by “a neighbouring state of Syria”, according to state news agency IRNA.
The neighbour had a “clear role and continues to do so,” said Khamenei, without naming the country.
Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon and Turkiye all share borders with Syria. Of those neighbours, Turkiye has long supported certain Syrian opposition forces.
Khamenei also said that Iranian intelligence had warned the Syrian government about threats to its stability over the past three months, adding that Damascus had “neglected the enemy”.
Blow to ‘axis of resistance’
Syrian rebels’ lightning push to the capital, Damascus, from their strongholds in the northwest ended the decades-long rule of al-Assad’s family.
Iran and Russia had propped up al-Assad’s rule after the eruption of war in 2011 with military and political support, as well as fighters and airpower.
On Tuesday, the commander of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Hossein Salami, said no Iranian forces remained in Syria.
Al-Assad had long played a strategic role in the Iran-led “axis of resistance” against US and Israeli influence in the region, which includes armed groups.
Speaking hours after al-Assad fled Syria on Sunday, US President Joe Biden claimed the end of al-Assad’s rule was partly due to US backing for Israel’s war on Gaza and its fight against Hezbollah in Lebanon, as well as support for groups in Syria and Iraq that weakened Iran.
He also pointed to US support for Ukraine’s war against Russia’s invasion, which siphoned resources from Moscow, and said US forces would remain in northeast Syria.
But Khamenei on Wednesday said events in Syria would not diminish Iran’s power, dismissing suggestions that the country would be weakened as “ignorant” and arguing that resistance would grow.
“The more pressure you apply, the stronger it becomes; the more crimes you commit, the more motivated it becomes; the more you fight them, the more expanded it becomes,” he said.
Hours after al-Assad’s fall, Iran said it expected relations with Damascus to continue, based on the two countries’ “far-sighted and wise approach” and called for the establishment of an inclusive government representing all segments of Syrian society.