Analysis:
Obama growing isolated on Syria as support wanes
White
House efforts to convince the U.S. Congress to back military action
against Syria are not only failing, they seem to be stiffening the
opposition.
8
September, 2013
That
was the assessment on Sunday, not of an opponent but of an early and
ardent Republican supporter of Obama's plan for attacking Syria, the
influential Republican chairman of the House intelligence committee,
Mike Rogers.
Rogers
told CBS's "Face the Nation" the White House had made a
"confusing mess" of the Syria issue. Now, he said, "I'm
skeptical myself."
Congress
will be in session on Monday for the first time since the August
recess. Debate on Syria could begin in the full Senate this week,
with voting as early as Wednesday. The House of Representatives could
take up the issue later this week or next.
Obama
is expected to spend the next several days in personal meetings with
members.
Some
Democratic opponents of a military strike, meanwhile, were looking
for a way to spare Obama's administration the effects of a "no"
vote.
Representative
Jim McGovern of Massachusetts suggested that the president withdraw
his request before it is defeated, saying on CNN's "State of the
Union" that there was insufficient support for it in Congress.
There
are no signs that Obama is considering that, but speculation about
the possibility that the administration might delay a vote surfaced
on Sunday when Secretary of State John Kerry, speaking in Paris after
meeting Arab foreign ministers, did not rule out returning to the
United Nations Security Council to secure a Syria resolution.
A
U.S. official who asked not to be named later squelched that
speculation: "We have always supported working through the U.N.
but have been clear there is not a path forward there."
Obama
is scheduled to address the American public on television on Tuesday,
but even his political allies fear that his acknowledged power as an
orator will be tested, given that polls show a majority of Americans
opposed to his plan for military action.
White
House Chief of Staff Dennis McDonough suggested that the speech will
repeat points Obama has already made several times.
"What
he'll tell the country is what this is, which is a targeted, limited,
consequential" use of military force, McDonough said during a
round of appearances on Sunday TV shows.
"He'll
also tell the country what this is not. This is not Iraq. This is not
Afghanistan. This is not an extended air campaign like Libya."
'FLOOD
THE ZONE' IS NOT WORKING
Most
opponents of the proposed U.S. military strike do not contest the
administration's view that the Syrian government gassed its own
people on August 21. Their expressed concerns focus instead on the
effectiveness and potential unintended consequences of a U.S.
military response.
Only
about a quarter of the Senate's 100 members and fewer than 25 members
of the 435-seat House have been willing to go on record in support of
Obama's request, according to a tally by the Washington Post.
Seventeen senators and 111 House members are on record against.
Leaders
of both parties have characterized Syria as a "conscience vote,"
not subject to the usual pressure for party discipline. House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, for example, has not made a personal
pitch for votes in any of the five "Dear Colleague" letters
she has sent her fellow Democrats.
The
White House plans to step up what it has called a "flood the
zone" lobbying effort this week, with briefings on Capitol Hill
by Secretary of State John Kerry and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.
The
influential American-Israel Public Affairs Committee will deploy
hundreds of activists to lobby Congress in support of Obama's plan.
However, similarly intense lobbying by the White House last week
proved unsuccessful.
Rogers,
among others, faults Obama for not starting months ago to build
congressional and public support on Syria.
"They
don't have strong relationships in Congress today - that's a huge
problem for them," said Rogers. "I think it's very clear
he's lost support in the last week.
As
for the lack of public support, Rogers added: "You have a
reluctant commander in chief, first of all, who's trying to come to
the American people and say, 'I'm going to do something, but I'm not
going to do a lot.' They're not sure exactly what we're trying to
do."
Another
Republican supporter, Illinois Representative Adam Kinzinger, said on
ABC's "This Week" that he had "reached out to the
White House and said, 'hey we support the strike on Syria, we're
going to help you round up support if you need it.' I haven't heard
back from the White House yet."
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