US
preparing for military action in Syria, top US general says
President
Barack Obama is considering using military force in Syria, and the
Pentagon has prepared various scenarios for possible United States
intervention.
RT,
18
July, 2013
Army
Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the
Obama administration is deliberating whether or not it should use the
brute of the US military in Syria during a Thursday morning Senate
hearing.
Gen.
Dempsey said the administration was considering using “kinetic
strikes” in Syria and said "issue is under deliberation inside
of our agencies of government,” the Associated Press reported from
Washington.
Dempsey,
61, is the highest ranking officer in the US military and has been
nominated by Pres. Obama to serve a second term in that role. The
Senate Armed Services Committee questioned him Thursday morning as
part of the nominating process when Dempsey briefly discussed the
situation in Syria.
Last
month, the Obama administration concluded that Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons during the ongoing battles.
Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben
Rhodes said, “The intelligence community estimates that 100 to 150
people have died from detected chemical weapons attacks in Syria to
date; however, casualty data is likely incomplete.”
Pres.
Obama said previously that the use of chemical weapons would cross a
“red line” and likely trigger American intervention. When the
White House concluded Assad had relied on chemical warfare, Rhodes
said, “both the political and the military opposition . . . is and
will be receiving US assistance."
That
claim was met with skepticism, though. The Syrian Foreign Ministry
called Obama’s claims a “caravan of lies.” Vitaly Churkin,
Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations, later presented to the
UN evidence supplied to his government that suggested the Syrian
opposition fighters used chemical weapons.
With
regards to foreign intervention, UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon
said, “Providing arms to either side would not address this current
situation.” Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) and his father, former
congressman Ron Paul (R-Texas) have also cautioned the White House
against aiding Syrian rebels.
“You
will be funding today the allies of al Qaeda” by aiding Syrian
rebels, Sen. Paul said in May.
On
his part, the retired lawmaker from Texas insisted that the
administration’s lead up to possible intervention is “identical
to the massive deception campaign that led us into the Iraq War.”
That
isn’t to say the GOP is entirely opposed to taking any action.
Although directly using the American military — either through
boots-on-the-ground or unmanned aircraft — has been rarely
discussed in public, Sens. John McCain (R-Arizona) and Lindsey Graham
(R-SC), two long-time leaders within the Republican party, have been
relentless with efforts to equip opposition fighters.
"I
don't care what it takes," Graham told Foreign Policy’s The
Cable earlier this year. "If the choice is to send in troops to
secure the weapons sites versus allowing chemical weapons to get in
the hands of some of the most violent people in the world, I vote to
cut this off before it becomes a problem."
Other
US officials have previously said Washington is considering
implementing a no-fly zone above Syria, and last month the Pentagon
left a fleet of F-16 fighter planes and its Patriot anti-missile
system on the border of neighboring Jordan following a routine
military drill.
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