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Assad says Syria is informed on anti-IS air campaign

Gulan Media February 10, 2015 News
Assad says Syria is informed on anti-IS air campaign
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad says his government is receiving messages from the US-led coalition battling the jihadist group, Islamic State.

Mr Assad told the BBC that there had been no direct co-operation since air strikes began in Syria in September.

But third parties - among them Iraq - were conveying "information".

The US National Security Council has denied co-ordinating with the Syrian government.

A spokesperson told the BBC that there has been no "advance notification to the Syrians at a military level".
'Childish story'

Mr Assad also denied that Syrian government forces had been dropping barrel bombs indiscriminately on rebel-held areas, killing thousands of civilians.

He dismissed the allegation as a "childish story", in a wide-ranging interview with BBC Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen in Damascus.

"We have bombs, missiles and bullets... There is [are] no barrel bombs, we don't have barrels."

Our correspondent says that his denial is highly controversial as the deaths of civilians in barrel bomb attacks are well-documented.

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond condemned the president's comments and said that the Syrian government had used crude and indiscriminate weapons against its own people.

He added: "Assad is deluded or lying when he says his military are not murdering hundreds of innocent civilians with the use of barrel bombs."

BBC
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