After UK opts out, US readies solo action against Syria
After UK opts out, US readies solo action against Syria | The Times of Israel.
Despite British parliament’s stunning decision, Obama appears determined to move forward with attack plans
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama on Thursday prepared for the possibility of launching unilateral American military action against Syria within days as Britain opted out in a stunning vote by Parliament. Facing skepticism at home, too, the administration shared intelligence with lawmakers aimed at convincing them the Syrian government used chemical weapons against its people and must be punished.
Despite roadblocks in forming an international coalition, Obama appeared undeterred and advisers said he would be willing to retaliate against Syria on his own.
“The president of the United States is elected with the duty to protect the national security interests in the United States of America,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said.
Even before the vote in London, the US was preparing to act without formal authorization from the United Nations, where Russia has blocked efforts to seek a resolution authorizing the use of force, or from Capitol Hill. But the US had expected Britain, a major ally, to join in the effort.
Top US officials spoke with certain lawmakers for more than 90 minutes in a teleconference Thursday evening to explain why they believe Bashar Assad’s government was the culprit in a suspected chemical attack last week. Lawmakers from both parties have been pressing Obama to provide a legal rationale for military action and specify objectives, as well as to lay out a firm case linking Assad to the attack.
Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, senior Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and already a supporter of moving against Syria in a limited way, said after the briefing that “strong evidence of the Assad regime’s continued use of chemical warfare” merited a military response.
It remained to be seen whether any skeptics were swayed, given the expectation that officials would hold back classified information to protect intelligence sources and methods.
In London, Prime Minister David Cameron argued a military strike would be legal on humanitarian grounds. But he faced deep pressure from lawmakers and had already promised not to undertake military action until a UN chemical weapons team on the ground in Syria released its findings about the August 21 attack.
The prime minister said in terse comments after the vote that while he believes in a “tough response” to the use of chemical weapons, he would respect the will of the House of Commons.
Caitlin Hayden, Obama’s National Security Council spokeswoman, said the US would continue to consult with Britain but Obama would make decisions based on “the best interests of the United States.”
It was not certain the US would have to act alone. France announced that its armed forces “have been put in position to respond” if President Francois Hollande commits forces to intervention against Syria. Hollande does not need French parliamentary approval to launch military action that lasts less than four months.
Obama discussed the situation in Syria with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who wrote to the president earlier this week seeking a legal justification for a military strike and the objectives of any potential action.
Assad, who has denied using chemical weapons, vowed his country “will defend itself against any aggression.”
Some of the UN chemical weapons experts will travel directly from Syria on Saturday to different laboratories around Europe to deliver “an extensive amount of material” gathered, UN spokesman Farhan Haq said. While the mandate of the UN team is to determine whether chemical agents were used in the attack, not who was responsible, Haq suggested the evidence — which includes biological samples and witness interviews — might give an indication of who deployed gases.
Obama and other top officials have not revealed definitive evidence to back claims that Assad used chemical weapons on Syrians. US officials say the intelligence assessments are no “slam dunk,” with questions remaining about who actually controls some of Syria’s chemical weapons stores and doubts about whether Assad himself ordered the strike.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the intelligence publicly.
Despite shortcomings in the intelligence, the White House signaled urgency in acting, with Earnest, the White House spokesman saying the president believes there is a “compressed time frame” for responding.
“It is important for the Assad regime and other totalitarian dictators around the world to understand that the international community will not tolerate the indiscriminate, widespread use of chemical weapons, particularly against women and children as they’re sleeping in their beds,” he said.
But many Congress members were pressing Obama to explain the need for military action and address fears that such a move might draw the US deeper into the Syrian civil war.
The White House has not responded directly to Boehner’s letter seeking more answers about Syria operations and the speaker’s office appeared unsatisfied after the president’s call Thursday.
“Only the president can answer these questions, and it is clear that further dialogue and consultation with Congress, as well as communication with the American public, will be needed,” Boehner spokesman Brendan Buck said.
Washington Rep. Adam Smith, senior Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, cautioned that an attack might be ineffective and might draw the United States into the Syrian civil war, now in its third year.
“Simply lashing out with military force under the banner of ‘doing something’ will not secure our interests in Syria,” Smith said in a statement.
Thursday’s briefing for lawmakers was expected to include only unclassified intelligence, meaning that key details that could more clearly link Assad to a chemical attack might not have been part of it. A similar intelligence report is also expected to be released publicly on Friday.
Obama continued making his case for a robust response to world leaders, speaking Thursday with German Chancellor Angela Merkel. With national elections scheduled in Germany for next month, Merkel is unlikely to pull her country into a military conflict.
Merkel also discussed Syria by phone Thursday with Russian President Vladimir Putin, insisting that the attack “requires an international reaction,” Merkel spokesman Steffen Seibert said.
Obama has ruled out putting American forces on the ground in Syria or setting up a no-fly zone over the country. He’s also said any US response to the chemical weapons attack would be limited in scope and aimed solely at punishing Assad for deploying deadly gases, not at regime change.
“We do have to make sure that when countries break international norms on weapons like chemical weapons that could threaten us, that they are held accountable,” he said during a television interview.
The most likely military option would be Tomahawk cruise missile strikes from four Navy destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. At a minimum, Western forces are expected to strike targets that symbolize Assad’s military and political might: military and national police headquarters, including the Defense Ministry; the Syrian military’s general staff; and the four-brigade Republican Guard that is in charge of protecting Damascus, Assad’s seat of power. Assad’s ruling Baath Party headquarters could be targeted, too.
US officials also are considering attacking military command centers and vital forces, communications hubs and weapons caches, including ballistic missile batteries.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press.
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August 30, 2013 at 8:11 AM
This is it. Finally, they are starting to show their really faces, after the Big Masquerade, 2013. ”… British parliament’s stunning decision…”; are you kidding me? What Parliament and what stunning decision? If anyone were stunned, sure we weren’t because we have that discussion here, regarding the Britons, only a few days before. The majority of people who are writting and contributing here were not ”stunned” by those clowns. May be something else just might stun us, but not that farce, in that sorry room, with cynical and hypocrite creatures, who don’t give a damn about anything but their sorry buts. Hey, I have something for you: Are you the great British Empire? Do you want to have a say on the international arena? Do you want to feel big and important? Then, sorry fu@kers, get this: with greatness, the responsibility is coming, too. Don’t be fouls. Stop acting like clowns. Don’t even think to enter in situations in which you cant make a stand after you are already in. Think before you speak. Leave the big game to the big boys league.
And now, look what you have done to Obama. If the Britons where to participate to that party, then the strike would be a very limited one, something nice and cozy that even Assad wouldn’t feel it. But now you cancelled your reservation and Obama is alone, using a new military terminology which, if the situation wouldn’t be tragic in essence, it should cause us to be killed laughing.
Are you ready for this? I mean, are you ready? Because I’m going to quote now the American administration with something so knew, so innovative, that we all feel that our lives will never be the same after been exposed to such a great wiseness . Ok, here it comes:
” Discrete military strike ”. Oho, do we get this? It will be a military strike, let there be no doubt about that. Obama has promised and Obama is delivering. But, it will be discrete. Obama will hit Assad, but he will do it in a discrete mode. What that discretion might be about? No, nasties, its not what do you have in your blue minds; so Assad’s wife is gorgeous, so what? A discrete action for that? What is here? Troy, Paris and Helena? And even they weren’t so discrete and it was a pity because Troy has fallen because their lack of discretion. No, no. Its not about that. A military, discrete blow…That surely will kill Assad – only with laughs.
August 30, 2013 at 3:04 PM
Everyone in my office wants to know why I am sitting at my computer by myself and laughing so loud. I would put a Hellfire missile discretely on Bashar’s head next time it popped up.
August 30, 2013 at 11:00 AM
After the House of Commons vote –
How The Independent censors dissenting opinion
http://www.madisdead.blogspot.co.il/2013/08/how-independent-censors-dissenting.html