Western countries, members of the International Security Council, led by the United States, France, and Britain, are said to have rejected the results of the Syrian presidential election, which is scheduled to be held on May 26.
Western countries oppose the announcement of the end of the presidential election and the seal of the written confirmation of the candidates in the election, which lasted ten days and the end of the first round of the presidential election, after the announcement of the Speaker of the Syrian Parliament Hamouda Sabbagh.
The Syrian parliament invited some parliamentarians of friendly countries, including Iran, to participate in the election process.
The least reason for the West to oppose the Syrian elections is, these countries have long opposed the national reconstruction of the infrastructure of Syria and insisted on the collapse of the Arab country through civil war, serving the interests of the Zionist regime.
Undoubtedly, the main motive for holding the Syrian presidential election is Damascus’ desire to implement the constitution. Others are inciting these countries to submit to their plans and will by inciting sedition and inciting war.
But the history of the failure of these interventionist plans in the internal affairs of the countries of the region has been proven, and the support of the people for the elected leaders in the form of free and fair elections is another reason for its failure.
Professor Konstantin Trovsio, a researcher at the Russian Center for Oriental Studies, said the Syrian presidential election was a complement to Syria’s achievements in reconstruction and a desire to implement the constitution, and that Western countries, primarily the United States, were undermining the legal institutions of countries opposed to their plans. It is Belarus that we are already failing at because the people are supporting their elected officials in free and fair elections.
When the United States and some North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries, such as Turkey, intervened militarily to plunder Syria’s wealth and protect Israel’s security, a report entitled “France is looking for a foothold in northeastern Syria” wrote to Paris’s efforts in the strategic area paid off.
Bassam al-Sabbagh, Syria’s permanent representative to the United Nations, also called on some countries to infiltrate the borders and exploit them to serve covert political agendas and hostile goals toward Syria.
Sabbagh said that millions of Syrians inside and outside the country will go to the polls next month to vote in the presidential election.
He stressed: “Holding this election is to continue other missions, including liberating the country from the clutches of terrorist groups and ending the illegal military presence of foreigners and re-establishing security and stability and rebuilding the infrastructure destroyed by terrorists.”