The hosts dominate with a total of 194 medals including 65 golds with Saudi in second place and Kuwait in third
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Syrian President Bashar Al Assad said on Sunday the army had been forced to give up areas in order to hold onto more important ones in its fight with insurgents, and the scale of the war meant the military faced a manpower shortage.
In a remarkably frank assessment of the strains afflicting the Syrian military after more than four years of conflict, Assad said that the type of war confronting Syria meant the army could not fight everywhere for risk of losing vital ground.
"Sometimes, in some circumstances, we are forced to give up areas to move those forces to the areas that we want to hold onto," Assad said in a televised speech. "We must define the important regions that the armed forces hold onto so it doesn't allow the collapse of the rest of the areas."
The Syrian government's territorial control stands at no more than 25 per cent of the country, with the rest divided among an array of armed groups including Daesh, other rebel groups and a well-organised Kurdish militia, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks the war. But the state-held area is home to the majority of the population.
Assad said increased support from states backing the rebels - including Turkey - was the reason for recent setbacks that had created "a state of despair" among Syrians. Syria is in a war funded by the richest and most powerful states, he said.
But Assad struck a defiant tone, saying there would be no compromise solutions, and he dismissed the view that Syria was heading towards partition into areas run separately by the Damascus government and armed groups fighting him.
"Everything is available (for the army), but there is a shortfall in human capacity," Assad said. "Despite that, I am not presenting a dark picture."
Military reversals for Assad have ever more reduced his control beyond the main population centres of western Syria that comprise the cities of Damascus, Homs, Hama, and the coastal region forming the heartland of his Alawite sect.
The army still, however, has footholds in the northeast, the east, and the south, in addition to Syria's second city Aleppo.
Assad said the idea behind giving up territory was to allow for later counter-attacks. "From a military point of view, holding to this area, or that patch, would lead to the recovery of the other areas."
The military setbacks have triggered renewed pledges of support from Assad's main regional allies, Iran and the Lebanese group Hezbollah, which is fighting alongside the Syrian army.
But Assad stuck to the position that any political proposal for resolving the war must be based on "eliminating terrorism".
Assad said there were "positive" changes in Western attitudes towards Syria's conflict - a reference to the US-led air strike campaign against Daesh. But he faulted the West because, he said, states were still classifying militants fighting him as revolutionaries rather than "terrorists".
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