In shock move, Obama
puts
Image
released by The White House shows US President Barack Obama and Vice
President Joe Biden on August 31, 2013.AFP
President Barack Obama postponed threatened missile strikes
against
To general surprise, the
This effectively pushed military action back until at least
September 9, when
Obama insisted that he reserves the right to strike regardless
of Congress' decision, and a White House official said the pause would also
allow him time to build international support.
The Arab League meets in
But the toughest battle, and perhaps the most dangerous for
Obama's credibility, may yet be with his own former colleagues in Congress,
where support for strikes is far from assured.
Indeed, observers warned that he faces the same fate as Prime
Minister David Cameron, who on Friday lost his own vote on authorizing
military action in the British parliament.
"The chairman of the joint chiefs has informed me that we
are prepared to strike whenever we choose," Obama warned, in an address
given in the White House Rose Garden.
"Moreover, the chairman has indicated to me that our
capacity to execute this mission is not time sensitive. It will be effective
tomorrow or next week or one month from now."
At least five
And
"The Syrian army is fully ready, its finger on the
trigger to face any challenge or scenario that they want to carry out,"
Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi said.
And the head of
"The fact that the Americans believe that military
intervention will be limited to within Syrian borders is an illusion,"
said commander Mohammad Ali Jafari.
Shortly before Obama's remarks, a team of UN inspectors left
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said
that analysis of samples taken at the site would take up to three weeks.
A UN spokesman promised they would give a fair report after
conducting these lab tests, but Washington and its allies insist they already
know all they need to know.
Obama's administration says it already has reliable
intelligence that the regime launched a chemical onslaught that killed 1,429
people, including at least 426 children.
That brought a contemptuous response from President Vladimir
Putin of
"It is a very serious thing indeed when President Obama
tries to take the place of UN bodies, and that he has tried and convicted the
Syrian government, and that he has decided to invade, to militarily attack
the people of Syria, and that he has chosen the US Congress as as a sort of
high world court in place of the UN Security Council," Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro said in Guyana.
In
Residents were seen stocking up with fuel for generators in
case utilities are knocked out by a strike.
The
Officials said Obama would lobby world powers on the sidelines
of next week's St Petersburg G20 summit, while at home the White House was
reaching out to lawmakers.
Obama's Democrats control the Senate but the House of Representatives
is in the hands of his Republican foes and both sides are divided on the
issue, making the outcome uncertain.
Late Saturday the White House formally asked Congress for
authorization to conduct military strikes in
The document says support from Congress would "send a
clear signal of American resolve."
"The objective of the
Republican Senator Bob Corker, who supports a limited
"surgical" strike against
"I think it is problematic and it could be problematic in
both bodies," Corker warned.
In a further complication, hawkish senators John McCain and
Lindsey Graham, said they could not support Obama's plan for limited strikes
that would not topple Assad.
More than 100,000 people have died since the Syrian conflict
erupted in March 2011, and two million have become refugees, half of them
children, according to the United Nations.
AFP
|
Chủ Nhật, 1 tháng 9, 2013
Đăng ký:
Đăng Nhận xét (Atom)
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét