France says “end is near” for Assad

PARIS,  (Reuters) – French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said today he believed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad would fall soon and that the new opposition coalition had to be supported to prevent extremists taking control.

“I think that the end is nearing for Bashar al-Assad … even the Russians are considering it,” Fabius told RFI radio.

France, one of Assad’s harshest critics, was the first Western country to recognise the new Syrian National Coalition as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people.

Fabius said that the longer Syria’s armed rebellion lasted, the more likely it was that it would radicalise and benefit extremists.

Western powers and Arab nations recognised Syria’s new opposition coalition as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people at talks in Morocco last week, but feelings about arming the rebels are mixed.

“The best defence against extremists is the Syrian coalition,” he said.

“The coalition is uniting the opposition. The problem is ensuring that, once Assad’s regime falls, there isn’t more chaos. We want to avoid the Iraqi phenomenon,” he said.

Many Western powers are reticent about sending weapons because they believe that some rebel groups, notably the al-Nusra Front, have links to al Qaeda and will seek to impose Islamic law if they succeed in toppling Assad.

“The problem is not simply today, but tomorrow. Once Bashar falls, the question will be what happens to these fighters. Will we find them in Mali, or elsewhere?”