Thousands of e-mails purported to be from the private accounts of Bashar al-Assad and his wife show the Syrian president took advice from Iran on how to handle the uprising against his rule, joked about his promises of reform and bypassed US sanctions to shop on iTunes, the Guardian newspaper has reported.
The newspaper on Wednesday said it got the trove of e-mails from a member of the Syrian opposition whom it does not identify. The documents are said to have been intercepted by members of the Supreme Council of the Revolution between June and early last month.
There has been no immediate response from Damascus.
The e-mails paint a picture of a ruling family that seems far removed from an uprising that has pushed the Arab nation to the brink of civil war, killing more than 7,500 people over the past year, according to international observers. According to the Guardian, the Syrian first lady, Asma al-Assad, spent tens of thousands of dollars buying luxury goods online, including gold jewelry laden with gems, as well as chandeliers and furniture.
The purported e-mails also offer insight into the president’s inner circle. According to the Guardian, the e-mails show that al-Assad has received advice from Iran. Ahead of a speech in December, al-Assad’s media consultant said his advice to the president was based on “consultations with a good number of people in addition to the media and political adviser for the Iranian ambal-Assador.”
The memo advised al-Assad to use “powerful and violent” language and encouraged the regime to “leak more information related to our military capability” to convince the public that it could withstand a military challenge.
According to the purported e-mails from al-Assad, the president was also briefed in detail about the presence of Western journalists in the rebel-held Baba Amr district of Homs, and he was urged to “tighten the security grip” there in November, the report said. Several foreign journalists were among the hundreds of people killed in Homs over the past year.
The Guardian published a lengthy explanation of why it believes the e-mails are genuine, saying the cache includes private information, such as family photographs and videos, a scan of the president’s identity card and other details that, it said, “would be difficult for even the best-resourced hoaxer or intelligence agency to gather or fabricate.”
The sam@alshahba.com and ak@alshahba.com accounts that activists say were used by Bashar al-Assad and his wife “communicate regularly and in affectionate terms with the wider family and advisers, some of whose email addresses are easily verified,” the newspaper said.
Still, the Guardian acknowledged that the verification process does not rule out the possibility that there are fake e-mails in the cache.
The shopping habits of the president and first lady are the subject of many of the missives.
On July 19 last year, according to the purported e-mails quoted by the Guardian, Asma al-Assad placed an order with her cousin for four necklaces made in a Paris workshop: “1 turquoise with yellow gold diamonds and a small pave on side” as well as a cornaline, “full black onyx” and “amethyst with white gold diamonds.”
When she learned there would be a delay in the order, she wrote that she did not mind, the report said.
“I am absolutely clueless when it comes to fine jewellery!” she wrote, before signing off: “Kisses to you both, and don’t worry, we are well!”
The trove of quoted messages suggests a loving relationship between the president and first lady.
In one e-mail cited, Asma al-Assad informs her husband she will be done at 5pm. The president responds by making light of the changes he has promised in Syria, saying: “This is the best reform any country can have that u told me where will you be, we are going to adopt it instead of the rubbish laws of parties, elections, media.......”
Another e-mail has al-Assad sending his wife a clip from America’s Got Talent showing “the best illusion of all time.” The trick shows a man appearing to saw another man in half and then putting him back together again.
The Guardian said al-Assad bypassed US sanctions by registering his iTunes account in another name and a New York address.
On Feb. 5, the report said, he sent his wife an iTunes file of the US country star Blake Shelton singing God Gave Me You.
Other reported downloads include Walter Isaacson’s biography of Apple founder Steve Jobs and songs including Don’t Talk Just Kiss by Right Said Fred, Bizarre Love Triangle by New Order and Sexy and I Know It by LMFAO.
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