WASHINGTON — 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 U.S. 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 U.S. had expected Britain, a major ally, to join
in the effort.
Top U.S. 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, to specify objectives
and to lay out a firm case linking Assad to the attack.
Afterward, the House Democratic leader, Rep. Nancy Pelosi of
California, pointedly sided with Republican Speaker John Boehner of Ohio
in urging the administration to do more to engage with Congress on the
matter, even as she expressed "my appreciation for the measured,
targeted and limited approach the president may be considering."
She said in a statement she agreed with Boehner and other lawmakers
who say the administration needs to consult more with "all members of
Congress" – a reference to the limited circle briefed Thursday night –
and provide "additional transparency into the decision-making process."
The high-level officials who spoke to the lawmakers offered more
details of the suspected chemical attack and their firm conviction that
the Syrian government was to blame – but little new evidence backing up
that conviction. It remained to be seen whether any skeptics were swayed
by the call, given the expectation in advance that officials would hold
back classified information to protect intelligence sources and
methods.
The officials told lawmakers 1,300 men, women and children died in
the attack, said Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, top Democrat
on the House Intelligence Committee. That's a far higher death toll
than has been reported; the humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders
says the attack outside Damascus killed 355.
A number of lawmakers raised questions in the briefing about how the
administration would finance a military operation as the Pentagon is
grappling with automatic spending cuts and reduced budgets.
Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma, the top Republican on the Armed Services
Committee and a participant on the call, said in a statement that the
administration presented a "broad range of options" for dealing with
Syria but failed to offer a single plan, timeline, strategy or
explanation of how it would pay for any military operation.
"The main thing was that they have no doubt that Assad's forces used
chemical weapons," New York Rep. Eliot Engel, top Democrat on the House
Foreign Affairs Committee and a supporter of Obama's course, said after
the briefing.
Even so, he said the officials did not provide much new evidence of that.
"They said they have (intercepted) some discussions and some
indications from a high-level official," he said, and that they possess
intelligence showing material being moved in advance of the attack.
An intelligence report similar to the findings shared with lawmakers
Thursday night is expected to be released publicly on Friday.
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 U.N. chemical weapons team on the ground in Syria released its
findings about the Aug. 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 U.S. 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 U.S. 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.
Assad, who has denied using chemical weapons, vowed his country "will defend itself against any aggression."
Some of the U.N. chemical weapons experts will travel directly from
Syria on Saturday to different laboratories around Europe to deliver "an
extensive amount of material" gathered, U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq said.
While the mandate of the U.N. 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. U.S.
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 U.S.
deeper into the Syrian civil war.
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.
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 U.S.
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.
U.S. officials also are considering attacking military command
centers and vital forces, communications hubs and weapons caches,
including ballistic missile batteries.
___
Associated Press writers Kimberly Dozier, Matt Apuzzo, Donna Cassata
and Bradley Klapper in Washington, Alexandra Olson at the United
Nations, Robert Burns in Manila, Philippines, and Raquel Dillon in
Valencia, Calif., contributed to this report.
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