Blatter, speaking to Japan's Nikkei business daily, also protested that he should have been warned before Swiss police arrested seven FIFA officials in May, and said he hoped to return to his job in the coming weeks.
"It was a tsunami," he said of the May arrests on behalf of US authorities, which plunged the world body into crisis, in the interview published today.
"Swiss authorities should have at least informed me that such a thing would happen," Blatter said, adding that he was "shocked when I saw, and (what is) still going on, what has happened in the different confederations".
The arrests in Zurich kick-started events which forced Blatter to announce his resignation. He is now suspended from FIFA as Swiss authorities investigate the alleged misappropriation of funds and a USD 2 million payment to UEFA chief Michel Platini.
Blatter, who suffered a health scare last month, said he would be fully recovered by Christmas and hoped to be back in office in time to hand over to his successor, who will be elected on February 26.
- 'Not leaving the command' -
=============================
Sports marketing company ISL is alleged to have paid a
total of USD 100 million to officials including Joao Havelange, Blatter's predecessor as FIFA chief, and former FIFA executive Ricardo Teixeira, in return for TV and marketing rights in the 1990s.
Blatter has maintained he was unaware of the payments, but the BBC said it had seen a letter obtained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the United States that casts doubt on his denial.
Asked whether he knew about the payments to Havelange, his former boss, Blatter reiterated: "It is settled. It was settled by a tribunal in Switzerland. They even went to the highest court. (There) was no harm to me on ethics, nothing."
Blatter also denied that the reason he has barely left Switzerland for months is that he's scared of being arrested.
"First, we have been in a crisis. This is my military education: When you are in a crisis, the commander is not leaving the command," he said, adding that his health was also a factor.
"They have just made an alarm clock, but they will not go away," Blatter said, adding: "There is a new world coming in. China decided to go to football, and there is India.
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