President Obama made his most forceful case yet for American military action against Syria in a televised speech to the nation from the East Room of the White House Tuesday evening. But he pledged to give diplomacy a chance to succeed.
“It is in the national security interests of the United States to respond to the Assad regime’s use of chemical weapons through a targeted military strike,” Obama said, asserting later that “sometimes resolutions and statements of condemnation are simply not enough.”
Nonetheless, Obama, perhaps hemmed in by a lack of support from Congress and the American public, said he’d work with Russia, China, and others to seek a U.N. Security Council resolution requiring Assad to give up his chemical weapons peacefully. And he added that he’d asked the Senate to delay a vote on authorizing military force, perhaps stepping back from a potential standoff with lawmakers over the issue. (A top aide to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told NBC News that Obama had not officially asked, but had instead deferred to the Senate leader.)
Obama argued that a failure to respond to the chemical weapons attacks would pose “a danger to our security.”
“If we fail to act, the Assad regime will see no reason to stop using chemical weapons,” Obama said. And that, in turn, could lead others nations to follow suit, he argued, potentially endangering U.S. troops and our allies in the region, and making it easier for terrorists to acquire such weapons.
Obama also made a humanitarian case for action. “When dictators commit atrocities, they depend upon the world to look the other way until those horrifying pictures fade from memory,” he said. “But these things happened. The facts cannot be denied.”
Obama was at pains to present himself as reluctant to wage war, and as responsive to the concerns of a nation tired of overseas entanglements. He read letters he’d received from ordinary Americans, including a military veteran, raising concerns about the prospect of intervention, and declared: “I’ve spent four and a half years working to end wars, not start them.”
Obama stressed the limited nature of the action he’s urging. “I will not put American boots on the ground in Syria,” he said. “This would be a targeted strike to achieve a clear objective: deterring the use of chemical weapons and degrading Assad’s abilities.”
And Obama sought to appeal to a range of ideological positions on issues of war and peace. “To my friends on the right, I ask you to reconcile your commitment to America’s military might with a failure to act when a cause is so plainly just,” he said. “To my friends on the left, I ask you to reconcile your belief in freedom and dignity for all people with those images of children writhing in pain and going still on a cold hospital floor.”
The East Room speech was part of a final push by the Obama administration to win backing for a U.S. military strike on Syria, even as polls show that public support—not strong to begin with—has weakened lately. Members of Congress, too—from both parties—appear increasingly reluctant to authorize the use of force.
Obama addressed the nation on the eve of the 12-year anniversary of the 9-11 attacks—an event which triggered two long and difficult U.S. wars that have left Americans deeply skeptical of foreign intervention. Obama had used the East Room of the White House to announce the death of Osama bin Laden in 2011.
Russia proposed on Monday that the Assad regime turn its chemical weapons stockpiles over to international control as a way to avoid a U.S. attack. Syria has expressed support for the plan.
Obama said Tuesday night that it’s “too early too tell” whether the plan will succeed, but added that it had the potential to remove Assad’s chemical weapons without the use of force. He attributed the positive movement in part to the credible threat of U.S. military action.
Still, several sticking points remain.
Russian president Vladimir Putin said Tuesday that the idea could work only if the U.S. took the threat of airstrikes off the table completely. “It will function and will work out only if the U.S. and those who support it on this issue pledge to renounce the use of force, because it is difficult to make any country—Syria or any other country in the world—to unilaterally disarm if there is military action against it under consideration,” Putin told Russia Today.
In addition, the Russians appear to be opposed to a U.N. resolution.









