There is no one in Congress standing in the way of what the Obama administration wants to do to combat the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Rep. Mike Rogers said on Thursday.
“The way it’s going to happen I think you’ll find lots of requirements and different layers of oversight that we may not have seen before based on the challenging facts on the ground, and there are no good outcomes here,” Rogers, House Intelligence chair, said on AMR.
Last month President Obama’s administration confirmed the use of chemical weapons by Assad and pledged to increase support to the Syrian opposition fighters. But the promise to assist could be too late.
Politicians, including Rogers, pressured the administration to make a decision earlier, but the longer it went the more confusing the battlefield became.
Syrian refugees in Jordan spoke to Sec. of State John Kerry on Thursday about the failure of the United States to deliver on its promise of weapons to the rebels as Assad continues to win the battle.









