We are fully free, not partially, fully free, in everything related to the future of Syria.

You can't make war in the Middle East without Egypt and you can't make peace without Syria.

To bring about a permanent peace in Syria, the southern part of the country must be protected.

I think it is absolutely correct to solve the problem of terrorism in Iraq and Syria and Libya.

The people who are fleeing Syria, they're the ones who need to run the country there long-term.

Surely our inaction with respect to Syria is a poor precedent if we're fighting a war on terror.

We need to significantly increase the number of bombing runs we're conducting in Iraq and Syria.

I can only say it is not for us to decide who should lead Syria. It is for the Syrians to decide.

The only people that have ever fought ISIS in Syria is not the regime; it is the Free Syrian Army.

At some point, there is going to be a terrorist diaspora out of Syria like we've never seen before.

Russia isn't likely to have any more military success in Syria and Iraq than has the United States.

I think the attempt to draw a comparison between Iran and Syria is false, misleading and dangerous.

What I'm trying to do, and my policy, is to disassociate, to shy away from what's going on in Syria.

The threat that Syria might transfer more advanced weapons to Hezbollah has existed for a long time.

There was a president imposed by Syria. Our battle... is to have a Lebanese president that we elect.

You'd better believe that Putin sees that in Syria, Obama draws a red line and ignores the red line.

Israel specifically does not want Syria to hand over weapons, chemical or conventional, to Hezbollah.

If you want to hear arguments against deploying a big U.S. ground force in Syria, just ask a general.

Syria doesn't want to talk with us on a bilateral basis, only under the auspices of the United States.

There's a real question of what the United States could do if we detain somebody out of Syria right now.

Why is Assad more responsible for all the deaths in Syria than those fighting to overthrow and kill him?

I've been involved in air strikes against Syria and operations against Syria numerous times in my career.

ISIS already has strongholds in Syria, while the Free Syrian Army desperately needs more U.S. assistance.

A good friend of mine works at Oxfam and has been closely involved in the charity's aid efforts in Syria.

We know that there are various activities important to the insurgents in Iraq that are occurring in Syria.

Syria is attracting a lot more Westerners than the Iraq War ever did because it's the perfect Sunni jihad.

We must do everything we can to be more aggressive in confronting Syria about what they are doing in Iraq.

Hezbollah is not fighting for Syria. Hezbollah is not fighting for Iran. Hezbollah is fighting for Lebanon.

I think Syria is in a particularly sensitive geopolitical position in terms of the politics of the Middle East.

I think Syria is now the training ground for the world... These rebel forces are more of a threat than anything.

There's a big film industry in Egypt, and quite a big one in Syria, and there's a big Muslim community in Paris.

I can't discuss the possibility of the U.S. involvement in Syria's civil war without also talking about Benghazi.

The Salafists, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Al Qaeda in Iraq are the major forces driving the insurgency in Syria.

Guantanamo Bay is a facility that I think should be utilized by the United States for detainees, say, out of Syria.

Few issues better illustrate the limits of the Obama administration's 'reset' with Russia than the crisis in Syria.

We don't say that we don't have it, we're still secular in Syria, but with the time, this secularism will be eroded.

Like Syria, the government of Bahrain employs aggressive tactics to censor and monitor its people's online activity.

If Syria collapses completely, the United States and the world would have to consider who, and what, fills the vacuum.

There's a conspiracy going on online every day between these top U.K. individuals within ISIS leadership out of Syria.

The Russians need to understand that you cannot have peace [in Syria] unless you resolve the question of Sunni buy-in.

Secretary [John] Kerry has called Civil War [in Syria] an unbelievably small war that we're going to get involved with.

Let's put America first. Let's not spill American blood to fight the enemies of other countries as is the case in Syria.

It is time for all civilized nations to stop the horrors that are taking place in Syria and demand a political solution.

Eighty percent of those people with a passport from the Netherlands who go to Syria as jihadists are actually Moroccans.

We're seeing Iran now through the Shia militias in Iraq. We're seeing Iran in Syria; we know the Quds Force is in there.

The American people deserve answers about Benghazi before we move forward with military involvement in Syria's civil war.

The understanding of Syria's devastating civil war has been distorted by the immense danger and difficulty of covering it.

Russia is not engaged in a fight against Daesh in Syria. On the contrary, they are actually targeting moderate opposition.

Turkey will not let Turkish territory or airspace be used in any activity that could harm the security or safety of Syria.

I have sympathy for the people in Syria, and I do think there should be a worldwide response, but we should act cautiously.

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