The Senate on Thursday approved President Obama’s controversial proposal to arm and train moderate Syrian rebels in effort to defeat the terrorist group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
Senators passed the legislation with 78 to 22 votes. It now goes to Obama to sign into law.
“I want to thank leaders in Congress for the speed and seriousness with which they approached this issue,” Obama said in brief remarks Thursday evening after the Senate vote.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel echoed the president’s sentiments and added that “While it will take time to strengthen the moderate Syrian opposition forces, they and the Iraqi Security Forces and Kurdish forces are central to confronting ISIL. The U.S. military will work closely with regional partners, including Saudi Arabia, to recruit and vet the opposition forces, and we will continue to build and sustain a broad coalition to implement our strategy.”
PHOTO ESSAY: Syria’s tragic descent
Sen. Harry Reid also lauded the bipartisan action. “Today, Democrats and Republicans spoke with one voice to tell the ISIS terrorists: we will find you and destroy you,” he said in a statement. “The Senate has passed a strong bill to arm and train vetted Syrian opposition fighters as part of the President’s strategy to destroy ISIS without repeating the mistakes of the past in the Middle East. America will lead a coalition that includes our friends and allies in European and Arab nations in a targeted, strategic mission to destroy ISIS.”
On Wednesday, the Republican-led House voted in favor of the measure by a 273 to 156 vote, with significant opposition from both parties — 71 Republicans and 85 Democrats voted against it.
Nonetheless, the green light from Congress is being viewed as a significant foreign policy win for Obama, something the president desperately needs at a time when polls show Americans broadly disapproving of his handling of foreign affairs as the administration grapples with escalating crises in the Middle East and Ukraine.
The measure, which includes no new money to pay for the operation, was part of a larger spending bill that will fund the U.S. government through Dec. 11 and avoid a partial government shutdown.
While lawmakers agree that ISIS is a threat to America, several on both sides of the political aisle have expressed concerns that weapons given to the rebels could end up in the hands of terrorists. Others say Obama’s plans do not go far enough while some are concerned about the U.S. getting embroiled in yet another war.
Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky called the plan “ludicrous” on the Senate floor before the vote. “No one knows where these arms are going to wind up … We don’t even know who these groups are.” Paul — known for his non-interventionist approach — said “we need to stay the heck out of their civil war … It is their war and they need to fight it.”
During a heated speech Wednesday on the Senate floor, Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia said he would vote against Obama’s request and described the commander-in-chief’s strategy as “insanity.”
“The first principle of war is to know your enemy,” he said. “… It is equally important to know our allies and I am not confident we know who our allies are.” While he’s in favor of the recent U.S. airstrikes, Manchin prefers neighboring countries use their forces rather than arming the rebels.
“We have been at war in that part of the world for the last 13 years. If money and military might could make a difference, it would have by now,” added Manchin.








