Reuters) - President Barack Obama won the backing of key figures in the
U.S. Congress, including Republicans, in his call for limited U.S.
strikes on Syria to punish President Bashar al-Assad for his suspected
use of chemical weapons against civilians.
Speaking after the
United Nations said two million Syrians had fled a conflict that posed
the greatest threat to world peace since the Vietnam war, Obama said the
United States also has a broader plan to help rebels defeat Assad's
forces.
In remarks that appeared to question the legality of U.S.
plans to strike Syria without U.N. backing, Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon said the use of force is only legal when it is in self-defense
or with Security Council authorization.
If U.N.
inspectors confirm the use of chemical weapons in Syria, the Security
Council, which has been deadlocked on the 2-1/2-year Syrian civil war,
should overcome its differences and take action, Ban said.
Having
startled friends and foes alike by delaying a punitive attack on Assad
until Congress reconvenes and agrees, Obama met congressional leaders at
the White House to urge a prompt decision and assure them it did not
mean another long war like Iraq or Afghanistan.
John Boehner, the
Republican speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, and House
Majority Leader Eric Cantor both pledged their support for military
action after the meeting.
Votes are expected to be held in the
Senate and House next week, with the Republican-led House presenting the
tougher challenge for Obama.
The House leadership has indicated
the votes will be "conscience votes," meaning they will not seek to
influence members' votes on party lines. All the same, it would have
been a blow to Obama if he had not secured the backing of the top two
Republicans.
"I believe that my colleagues should support this call for action," Boehner told reporters.
The
president said strikes aimed at punishing the use of chemical weapons
would hurt Assad's forces while other U.S. action would bolster his
opponents - though the White House has insisted it is not seeking
"regime change."
"What we are envisioning is something limited.
It is something proportional. It will degrade Assad's capabilities,"
Obama said. "At the same time we have a broader strategy that will allow
us to upgrade the capabilities of the opposition."
Assad denies deploying poison gas that killed hundreds of civilians last month.
The
Syrian opposition, which said a forensic scientist had defected to the
rebel side bringing evidence of the Assad forces' use of sarin gas in
March, has appealed to Western allies to send them weapons and use their
air power to end a war that has killed more than 100,000 and made
millions homeless.
ACCELERATING HUMAN COST
The presence in
rebel ranks of Islamist militants, some of them close to al Qaeda, has
made Western leaders wary, while at the same time the undoubted - and
apparently accelerating - human cost of the conflict has brought
pressure to intervene.
Top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi also
voiced support for military strikes after meeting Obama, but he will
still have to persuade some lawmakers, including Democrats, who have
said they are concerned the president's draft resolution could be too
open-ended.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of
Defence Chuck Hagel took the administration's message to a Senate
Foreign Relations Committee hearing, where they were pressed on whether
the resolution put to Congress would explicitly rule out the use of
ground troops.
Kerry said the language of the resolution was
still being worked out, but it was important to leave options open for
using troops in a scenario where "Syria imploded" and stockpiles of
chemical weapons needed to be secured from extremists.
"I don't
want to take off the table an option that might or might not be
available to the president of the United States to secure our country,"
he said at the hearing.
When some senators objected to the idea
of "boots on the ground", Kerry said the administration would work with
Congress to draft a resolution that addressed concerns about ground
troops.
"I know the administration has zero intention of putting
troops on the ground and within the confines of this authorization, I'm
confident we'd have zero problem with including some kind of prohibition
there if that makes you comfortable," he told the senators.
A
Reuters/Ipsos poll showed on Tuesday that Obama has failed so far to
convince most Americans. Some 56 percent of those surveyed said the
United States should not intervene in Syria, while only 19 percent
supported action, essentially unchanged from last week.
The U.N.
High Commission for Refugees said there had been a near tenfold increase
over the past 12 months in the rate of refugees crossing Syria's
borders into Turkey, Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon - to a daily average of
nearly 5,000 men, women and children.
This has pushed the total number of Syrians living abroad to more than 2 million.
That
represents some 10 percent of Syria's population, the UNHCR said. With a
further 4.25 million estimated to have been displaced but still
resident inside the country, close to one third of all Syrians are
living away from their original homes.
Comparing the figures to
the peak of Afghanistan's refugee crisis two decades ago, U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres, said: "Syria has become the
great tragedy of this century - a disgraceful humanitarian calamity with
suffering and displacement unparalleled in recent history.
"The
risks for global peace and security that the present Syria crisis
represents, I'm sure, are not smaller than what we have witnessed in any
other crisis that we have had since the Vietnam war," said Guterres, a
former Portuguese prime minister.
Russia, backed by China, has
used its veto power in the U.N. Security Council three times to block
resolutions condemning Assad's government and threatening it with
sanctions. Assad, like Russia, blames the rebels for the August 21 gas
attack.
OBAMA "COMFORTABLE" WITHOUT U.N.
Obama has said he
is "comfortable going forward without the approval of a United Nations
Security Council that so far has been completely paralyzed and unwilling
to hold Assad accountable.
Syrian U.N. Ambassador Bashar
Ja'afari had sharp words for Obama's administration after a closed-door
meeting between U.N. disarmament chief Angela Kane and the 37 U.N.
member states that asked Ban to investigate the August 21 poison gas
attack.
"Who asked Mr. Obama to be the bully of the world?" Ja'afari said.
Obama
was due to leave Washington on Tuesday for a G20 meeting in Russia.
France said foreign ministers of some of the G20 member states will
convene on the sidelines of the meeting to discuss Syria.
The
conflict has divided the Middle East on sectarian lines, with Shi'ite
Iran backing Assad and Washington's Sunni Arab Gulf allies supporting
the mainly Sunni rebels. It has also revived Cold War-style tensions
between the Western powers and Moscow.
In an interview in Le
Figaro, Assad told the French newspaper: "Everybody will lose control of
the situation when the powder keg blows. There is a risk of a regional
war."
The influential pro-Israel lobby group AIPAC urged U.S.
lawmakers to approve a resolution authorizing strikes to punish Assad.
"This is a critical moment when America must also send a forceful
message of resolve to Iran and Hezbollah - both of whom have provided
direct and extensive military support to Assad," AIPAC said in a
statement.
The rebels have been struggling to hold ground in
recent months, let alone advance. According to one opposition report,
government forces took the strategic northwestern town of Ariha on
Tuesday, though others said the battle was not over.
While
Obama's wait for Congress to return from its summer recess seems to rule
out Western military action this week, Israeli forces training in the
Mediterranean with the U.S. Navy set nerves on edge in Damascus with a
missile test.
When Moscow raised the alarm that its forces had
detected the launch of two ballistic "objects" in the Mediterranean,
thoughts of a surprise strike on Syria pushed oil prices higher.
Clarification
came only later when the Israeli Defence Ministry said that its troops
had - at the time of the Russian alert - fired a missile that is used as
a target for an anti-missile defence system during an exercise with
U.S. forces.
(Additional reporting by Tom Miles and Stephanie
Nebehay in Geneva, Steve Gutterman and Timothy Heritage in Moscow,
Jeffrey Heller and Dan Williams in Jerusalem, Dasha Afanasieva in
Istanbul and Phil Stewart, Arshad Mohammed, Susan Cornwell and Andy
Sullivan in Washington.; Writing by Claudia Parsons.; Editing by
Christopher Wilson and Jim Loney
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