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After a passionate plea by US
Secretary of State John Kerry not to succumb to "armchair
isolationism" after last month's attack in a Damascus suburb, lawmakers
drafted a bipartisan measure imposing a 90-day deadline for any US military
intervention.
It would also ban the deployment of
any
The dramatic developments came as the
UN refugee agency released grim new statistics revealing more than two
million people had now fled the violence in
"This is not the time for
armchair isolationism. This is not the time to be spectators to a slaughter.
Neither our country nor our conscience can afford the cost of silence,"
Kerry told the Senate Foreign Relations committee.
He warned that other countries such
as
"They are listening for our
silence," Kerry intoned, during a sometimes heated debate with his former
Senate colleagues.
His words were echoed by Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel, who said a
"The word of the
At earlier White House talks with
congressional leaders, Obama said he hoped for "prompt"
Congressional votes next week on authorizing "proportional" and
"limited strikes" against
He was speaking before he left late
Tuesday for
After the nearly four-hour
hearing,the Senate committee re-worded the resolution put forward by the
White House to restrict it to "limited and tailored use of the United
States Armed Forces against Syria, according to a copy of the draft obtained
by AFP.
The authorization provided by the
resolution "shall terminate 60 days after the date of the enactment of
this joint resolution, except that the president may extend, for a single
period of 30 days, such authorization" if he deems it necessary.
It did "not authorize the use of
the United States Armed Forces on the ground in
House Speaker John Boehner and House
Majority Leader Eric Cantor -- leading Republicans who have had frosty
relations with Obama on domestic policy -- have now both said they would
support his plan.
"This is something that the
But in a sign of the deep public
misgivings over wading into another foreign conflict, the hearing was
interrupted several times by protesters.
Two polls released Tuesday showed
strong opposition to a
A poll by the Washington Post-ABC
found a similar margin of nearly six in 10 Americans opposed to missile
strikes.
The Syrian opposition meanwhile said
it feared a fresh chemical attack by the regime of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad, after spotting three convoys of vehicles believed to be filled with
such arms.
The Syrian army had also retaken
control of the strategic town of
An influential Republican Senator
John McCain lambasted the administration for delaying its response for so
long, before now signalling its intent.
"You tell the enemy you're going
to attack them, they're obviously going to disperse and try to make it
harder," he said.
Obama said the August 21 attack,
which
"As a consequence, Assad and
Kerry stressed the aim of any strikes
would be to degrade Assad's military capabilities.
But he seemed to indicate that the
administration would like to preserve the option of sending in troops
"in the event Syria imploded, for instance, or in the event there was a
threat of a chemical weapons cache falling into the hands" of
Al-Qaeda-linked fighters.
UN leader Ban Ki-moon meanwhile
warned that a western military strike could make things worse.
"We must consider the impact of
any punitive measure on efforts to prevent further bloodshed," Ban said.
Source: AFP
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Thứ Tư, 4 tháng 9, 2013
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