White House officials have said that President Obama is prepared to follow through with military action on Syria even as a British measure to do so failed in parliament Thursday night and new polling showed Americans against it.
Senior Obama administration officials briefed congressional leaders on Syria Thursday night as it worked to shore up support for the strike.
New York Democrat Eliot Engel of the House Foreign Affairs Committee told NBC News that during the 90-minute call, Obama administration officials told members of Congress they had intercepted “communications from high level officials” proving the Bashar al-Assad regime was responsible for the most recent chemical weapons attack in Syria.
Engel also said the administration pointed toward “movement of personnel around Damascus just prior” to the attack as evidence that “would be in line with chemicals about to be used.”
The White House sought to stress its efforts on collaboration with lawmakers, some of whom have rebuked the administration for not seeking a vote. “The views of Congress are important to the president’s decision-making process, and we will continue to engage with members as the president reaches a decision on the appropriate U.S. response to the Syrian government’s violation of international norms against the use of chemical weapons,” it said in a statement after the call.
Obama’s efforts to build an international coalition have been blocked. On Thursday the British Parliament rejected a motion to allow military action–a slap at the president and his closest ally, Prime Minister David Cameron. A UN Security Council resolution to act against Assad would likely be stopped by Russia and China. But Obama may find support in France. President Francois Holland seemed to support a military strike, saying in an interview with French paper Le Monde that the Syrian regime “must not go unpunished” for the suspected chemical weapons attack and that France is among those ready to strike.
After the British vote, the White House made clear that it was disappointed but not deterred. “President Obama’s decision-making will be guided by what is in the best interests of the United States,” said the statement. “He believes that there are core interests at stake…and that countries who violate international norms regarding chemical weapons need to be held accountable.”
Although several Democratic lawmakers issued statements of support after the group call, skepticism in Congress about any U.S. involvement in Syria may be growing.
There’s no reason to think the American public is eager to engage in Syria, especially when the region is already unstable. Fifty percent of Americans opposed U.S. military intervention in Syria, according to a NBC poll released Friday. And Obama hasn’t articulated a persuasive argument for U.S. military involvement–especially if it would be unilateral.
Nancy Pelosi issued a statement describing the briefing as “informative and beneficial.” But she said she agreed with Speaker Boehner that more “consultation” and “additional transparency” were necessary, and “the case needs to be made to the American people [who are] weary of war.”
She said she had expressed appreciation for the “measured, targeted and limited approach the president may be considering.”
That last phrase may be key. In other words, Pelosi (and others on the call) may have gotten the picture that Obama has already decided to go ahead with a “targeted and limited” strike against the Syrian military–whether or not he has anybody else’s support.
It’s unclear whether a strike without Congress’s consent would be legal but the murky technicalities may not actually matter.
Public opinion is another issue.









