Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

top
US President Barack Obama with his VP Biden/FILE

World

Obama heads to Sweden, Russia to sell Syria strikes

US President Barack Obama with his VP Biden/FILE

US President Barack Obama with his VP Biden/FILE

WASHINGTON, Sept 4 – US President Barack Obama left for Europe on Tuesday, seeking tacit support for a plan to strike Syria without a UN mandate and a looming confrontation with Vladimir Putin.

Obama headed for Sweden and the G20 summit in Russia after making important political headway at home when top Republican leaders firmly backed his plan to punish President Bashar al-Assad for a chemical weapons attack.

The decision by House Speaker John Boehner and his right hand man Eric Cantor, represented a rare gesture of unity in deeply divided Washington, and left Obama aides increasingly hopeful of securing a vote for action in Congress next week.

In turn, the closing of the political ranks — despite public opinion running hard against a new US intervention in the Middle East — appeared to increase the chances of eventual military action and to shore up Obama.

The US president decided to seek congressional approval in a surprise development on Saturday. He says he is ready to launch “limited” action despite Russia’s decision to prevent the UN Security Council framing a mandate for action.

Obama will arrive in Stockholm early Wednesday in a somewhat delicate position — as a Nobel peace laureate on a mission to sell a military intervention in the home city of the Nobel Foundation, and will face pressure to explain his motives over Syria.

He may reprise some of the arguments he made when he picked up his Nobel prize in Oslo in 2009, when he effectively made a case for when a US president may choose to wage war — to protect American security, for humanitarian reasons, or to prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction.

Obama does not currently have any one-on-one meetings scheduled with Putin but the two leaders will run into each other at the inevitable photocalls of the G20. The US president warned Tuesday that Assad had violated a vital international norm by using chemical weapons.

“That poses a serious national security threat to the United States and to the region,” Obama said.

“And as a consequence, Assad and Syria needs to be held accountable.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

Obama will leave Washington at a crucial time, as his administration wages an intense campaign to convince lawmakers to back a Syria operation expected to include limited cruise missile strikes aimed at “degrading” Assad’s military capacity.

Officials say however, that with press conferences in Sweden planned for Wednesday and in Russia on Friday, the president will be able to make forceful interventions in the debate back home.

Vice President Joe Biden has canceled travel, remaining in Washington to continue the lobbying effort on Capitol Hill, while Secretary of State John Kerry will engage House of Representatives members in a hearing on Wednesday.

In St Petersburg for a G20 summit for developed and developing nations suddenly overtaken by the crisis over the chemical weapons attack in a Damascus suburb on August 21, Obama will seek support for his strategy for a “proportional” military response.

He will meet Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron for the first time since parliament in London effectively vetoed a military contribution to the Syrian operation by America’s closest ally.

Obama will also see French President Francois Hollande, who has stood firm in support of the US action and is willing to fight alongside Washington.

About The Author

Pages: 1 2

Comments
Advertisement

More on Capital News