House Speaker Backs Obama’s Call for Strike Against Syria
By MARK LANDLER, MICHAEL R. GORDON and JACKIE CALMES
Christopher Gregory/The New York Times
Speaker John A. Boehner outside the White House after a meeting on Syria with President Obama on Tuesday.
Speaker John A. Boehner on Tuesday said he would support President
Obama’s “call to action,” giving him a crucial ally in the quest for
votes in the House of Representatives.
Christopher Gregory/The New York Times
President Obama met with members of Congress on Tuesday, including Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi.
By MARK LANDLER, MICHAEL R. GORDON and JACKIE CALMES
Published: September 3, 2013
WASHINGTON — Speaker John A. Boehner said on Tuesday that he would
“support the president’s call to action” in Syria after meeting with
President Obama, giving the president a crucial ally in the quest for
votes in the House.
Tracking the Syrian Crisis
The Times will provide updates, analysis and public reaction from around the world.
Multimedia
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Christopher Gregory/The New York Times
Speaker John A. Boehner outside the White House after
a meeting on Syria with President Obama on Tuesday.
Representative Eric Cantor of Virginia, the No. 2 House Republican,
quickly joined Mr. Boehner to say he also backed Mr. Obama.
“Understanding that there are differing opinions on both sides of the
aisle, it is up to President Obama to make the case to Congress and to
the American people that this is the right course of action, and I hope
he is successful in that endeavor,” Mr. Cantor said in a statement.
Mr. Obama and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. summoned Mr. Boehner
and other Republican and Democratic leaders to the White House as they
intensified their push for Congressional approval of an attack on Syria.
Conservative House Republicans have expressed deep reluctance about the
president’s strategy, and winning Mr. Boehner’s approval could help the
president make inroads with a group that has not supported him on most
issues in the past.
Representative Nancy Pelosi, the House Democratic leader, said, “I
believe the American people need to hear more about the intelligence.”
Ms. Pelosi said she did believe that Congressional authorization was a
good thing, although not necessary, and that she was hopeful the
American people “will be persuaded of” military action.
“President Obama did not write the red line,” she said. “History wrote the red line decades ago.”
But, she said, people in her California district were not convinced that
military action was necessary. And she said the administration needed
to continue making its case.
“There’s work to be done,” she said. “Some won’t ever be comfortable with it.”
Other Democrats also voiced support.
Senator Dianne Feinstein, the chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, said military action was “key and critical.” She added, “It’s
important to the security of the Middle East and to the security of the
world.”
Representative Eliot L. Engel, Democrat of New York, said, “Iran is
watching us very carefully in Syria as a test of how we’ll respond when
they have a nuclear weapon.” He added that the consensus in the White
House meeting was to support the president.
For Mr. Obama, who leaves on Tuesday evening for a three-day trip to
Sweden and Russia, the meeting was the next phase in a White House
lobbying campaign that will have to extend beyond hawks like Senator
John McCain, Republican of Arizona, to persuade lawmakers who are
reluctant to get involved militarily in Syria.
The president’s case will face scrutiny in Congress on Tuesday afternoon
when Secretary of State John Kerry, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey,
testify before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
On Wednesday, Mr. Kerry and Mr. Hagel appeared before the House Foreign
Affairs Committee. Winning support in the Republican-controlled House is
likely to be harder than in the Senate, where Democrats hold a slim
majority and Mr. McCain has a voice.
Mr. Obama also continued shoring up international support for military
action, speaking on Monday evening with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of
Japan, who the White House said in a statement agreed with Mr. Obama
“that the use of chemical weapons is a serious violation of
international norms and cannot be tolerated.”
After an hourlong White House meeting on Monday, Mr. McCain said that
Mr. Obama had given general support to doing more for the Syrian rebels,
but that no specifics were agreed upon.
Officials said that in the same conversation, which included Senator
Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, Mr. Obama indicated that a
covert effort by the United States to arm and train Syrian rebels was
beginning to yield results: the first 50-man cell of fighters, who have
been trained by the C.I.A., was beginning to sneak into Syria.
There appeared to be broad agreement with the president, Mr. McCain and
Mr. Graham said, that any attack on Syria should be to “degrade” the
Syrian government’s delivery systems. Such a strike could include
aircraft, artillery and the kind of rockets that the Obama
administration says the forces of President Bashar al-Assad used to
carry out an Aug. 21 sarin attack in the Damascus suburbs that killed
more than 1,400 people.
The senators said they planned to meet with Susan E. Rice, Mr. Obama’s
national security adviser, to discuss the strategy in greater depth.
“It is all in the details, but I left the meeting feeling better than I
felt before about what happens the day after and that the purpose of the
attack is going to be a little more robust than I thought,” Mr. Graham
said in an interview.
But Mr. McCain said in an interview that Mr. Obama did not say
specifically what weapons might be provided to the opposition or discuss
in detail what Syrian targets might be attacked.
“There was no concrete agreement, ‘O.K., we got a deal,’ ” Mr. McCain
said. “Like a lot of things, the devil is in the details.”
In remarks to reporters outside the West Wing, he called the meeting
“encouraging,” urged lawmakers to support Mr. Obama in his plan for
military action in Syria and said a no vote in Congress would be
“catastrophic” for the United States and its credibility in the world.
Mr. McCain said he believed after his conversation with the president
that any strikes would be “very serious” and not “cosmetic.”
Although the words from Mr. McCain and Mr. Graham were a positive
development for Mr. Obama and a critical part of the administration’s
lobbying blitz on Syria on Monday, the White House still faces a tough
fight in Congress. Many lawmakers entirely oppose a strike, and others
favor a resolution that would provide for more limited military action
than what is in a draft resolution that the White House has sent to
Capitol Hill. The conflict of opinion underscores Mr. Obama’s challenge
in winning votes in the House and Senate next week and avoiding personal
defeat.
A Labor Day conference call with five of Mr. Obama’s highest-ranking
security advisers drew 127 House Democrats, nearly two-thirds their
total number, after 83 lawmakers of both parties attended a classified
briefing on Sunday. Pertinent committees are returning to Washington
early from a Congressional recess for hearings this week, starting
Tuesday with the testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
“The debate is shifting away from ‘Did he use chemical weapons?’ to
‘What should be done about it?’ ” said Representative Adam B. Schiff, a
California Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, in an interview
after the Monday conference call.
The push in Washington came as reaction continued around the world to
the president’s abrupt decision over the weekend to change course and
postpone a military strike to seek authorization from Congress first.
In France, the only nation to offer vigorous support for an American
attack, there were rising calls for a parliamentary vote like the one
last week in Britain, where lawmakers jolted the White House with a
rejection of a British military attack. But the French government, in an
effort to bolster its case, released a declassified summary of French intelligence that it said ties Mr. Assad’s government to the use of chemical weapons on Aug. 21.
In Russia, Foreign Minister Sergey V. Lavrov dismissed
as unconvincing the evidence presented by Mr. Kerry of chemical weapons
use by the Syrian government. “We were shown certain pieces of evidence
that did not contain anything concrete, neither geographical locations,
nor names, nor evidence that samples had been taken by professionals,”
Mr. Lavrov said in a speech at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations.
In Israel, President Shimon Peres offered strong support
for Mr. Obama’s decision to seek the backing of Congress, saying he had
faith in the president’s “moral and operational” position. “I recommend
patience,” Mr. Peres said in an interview on Army Radio. “I am
confident that the United States will respond appropriately to Syria.”
In Washington, the White House’s “flood the zone” effort, as one
official called it, will continue. Classified briefings will be held for
all House members and senators on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday.
On Tuesday, Mr. Obama has invited the Republican and Democratic leaders
of the House and Senate defense, foreign affairs and intelligence
committees to the White House. But that night, he will depart on a
long-planned foreign trip, first to Sweden and then to Russia for the
annual Group of 20 summit meeting of major industrialized and developing
nations, a forum that is sure to be dominated by talk of Syria, and
bring Mr. Obama face to face with Mr. Assad’s chief ally and arms
supplier, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.
House Democrats on the conference call with administration officials,
which lasted 70 minutes, said Mr. Kerry, who has been the most
aggressive and public prosecutor for military action, took the lead.
Democrats said he had portrayed not only the horrors of chemical weapons
inflicted on Syrian civilians in the Aug. 21 attacks outside Damascus,
but also the potential threat, if left unanswered, that such weapons
posed to regional allies like Israel, Jordan and Turkey.
Mr. Kerry argued that inaction could embolden Iran or nonstate
terrorists to strike those allies, and further encourage Iran and North
Korea to press ahead with their nuclear programs.
“One of the important propositions that Kerry put to members was, are
you willing to live with the consequences of doing nothing?” said
Representative Gerald E. Connolly, a Virginia Democrat.
The secretary of state addressed lawmakers’ concern that the United
States should have international support. “The United States will not go
it alone,” he said at one point, according to a senior Democrat who
declined to be identified. Offers of “military assets” have come from
France, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates, he said,
without identifying the assets, and more are expected.
In the week since the Obama administration began moving toward a
military strike on the Assad government, Mr. Kerry said, the Syrian
military has had about 100 defections, including 80 officers.
General Dempsey reviewed the range of possible targets and how the
Pentagon is planning strikes that would minimize risk to civilians.
Despite reports that Syrian commanders were moving troops and equipment
into civilian neighborhoods, General Dempsey told lawmakers, as he had
assured Mr. Obama, that delaying military action would not weaken the
effectiveness of any military attack. He suggested that military
officials would adjust their targets to address changes on the ground.
The general acknowledged that the United States could not prevent the
Assad government from using chemical weapons again, but said the
military had “additional options” should a first missile strike not
deter a retaliatory strike by Mr. Assad, including in defense of
critical allies, presumably Israel, Jordan and Turkey. That possibility,
however, describes just the escalating conflict some opponents fear.
“My constituents are skeptical that a limited effort will not mushroom
into a full-blown boots on the ground,” said Representative Elijah E.
Cummings, a Maryland Democrat.
Mr. McCain, who has been arguing for two years that the United States
should support a moderate Syrian opposition, said he strongly urged the
president on Monday to provide anti-tank and antiaircraft systems to the
opposition and to attack the Syrian Air Force.
Mr. Obama indicated that “he favorably viewed the degrading of Bashar
al-Assad’s capabilities as well as upgrading the Free Syrian Army,” Mr.
McCain said in an interview.
Administration officials have told Congress that the C.I.A.'s program to
arm the rebels would be deliberately limited at first to allow a trial
run for American officials to monitor it before ramping up to a larger,
more aggressive campaign. American officials have been wary that arms
provided to the rebels could end up in the hands of Islamic extremists
with ties to Al Qaeda.
Officials Make Case for Strike Before Senate Panel
By THOM SHANKER and MICHAEL R. GORDON
Two secretaries and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs sought to persuade
senators on the Foreign Relations Committee to support military action
against Syria.
Allies’ Intelligence on Syria All Points to Assad Forces
By DAVID E. SANGER and STEVEN ERLANGER
The United States and its allies differ on some intelligence estimates
when it comes to chemical weapons use in Syria, but all agree that only
the Assad government had the means to launch attacks.
Israel and U.S. Conduct Missile Test in Mediterranean
By JODI RUDOREN
The testing of the Sparrow target missile caused concern in Russia and
Syria, given the tensions over a possible American military strike on
Syria.
U.N. Chief Reaffirms Opposition to Force
By RICK GLADSTONE
Ban Ki-moon, the secretary general, said he welcomed President Obama’s
efforts to engage Congress but insisted that the Security Council should
approve any military action.
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