Posted on 09/17/2014 5:43:40 PM PDT by markomalley
The House overwhelmingly voted Wednesday to grant President Obama authority to train and arm moderate Syrian rebels waging war against Islamic extremists.
Despite vocal opposition from both war-weary liberals and defense hawks who feel the Syria plan should include more robust steps, majorities in both conferences voted 273-156 to back Obamas plan to give military aid to vetted members of the Free Syrian Army.
The yes vote was made up of 159 Republicans and 114 Democrats; opposition was just as bipartisan, with 85 Democrats and 71 Republicans voting no. The Syria language was considered as an amendment to a stopgap funding bill to avert a government shutdown on Oct. 1. A coalition of unusual bedfellows voted against the amendment, including Democratic Reps. Jim McGovern (Mass.) and Barbara Lee (Calif.) and Republican Reps. Michele Bachmann (Minn.) and Steve Stockman (Texas). Members on such opposite sides of the ideological spectrum rarely vote together on major issues.
That $1 trillion continuing resolution (CR) easily cleared the House in a 319-108 vote and was sent over to the Senate, which is expected to pass it on Thursday.
You saw Republicans and Democrats come together, the new majority whip, Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.), told reporters after the vote. The president asked for an authorization, and we approved that authorization with some accountability steps in place.
Earlier in the day, Obama pledged that he would not send in ground troops to fight the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), saying its more effective to support military allies so they can secure their own countries future.
The presidents comments were aimed at soothing members unnerved by comments a day earlier from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Gen. Martin Dempsey raised the possibility that U.S. ground troops could be used against ISIS on a case-by-case basis.
I will not commit you, and the rest of our Armed Forces, to fighting another ground war in Iraq, Obama declared flatly during an appearance at Floridas MacDill Air Force Base, which houses U.S. Central Command.
Wednesdays vote teed up a larger debate over whether Congress should vote to authorize a broader war against ISIS fighters. Members of both parties said Congress should consider a full authorization of military force against the terror group or at least have that fight out in the open.
I think more and more members are beginning to understand that this is the beginning of what I think is going to be a very necessary and intense debate about what we should be doing there, said Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-Ariz.), co-chairman of the Progressive Caucus and a no vote on the Syria amendment and CR.
I think it will be a lame-duck debate, he said.
The narrower Syria amendment, introduced by House Armed Services Committee Chairman Buck McKeon (R-Calif.) and backed by congressional leaders in both parties, places some restrictions on the presidents authority.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel would have to notify lawmakers at least 15 days before beginning any training of Syrian rebels, and would have to ensure all fighters being trained in the program receive background checks. The Pentagon also would be required to provide status briefings to Congress every 90 days.
But the McKeon amendment explicitly does not authorize the use of military force against ISIS.
White House officials have argued that the military authorization passed by Congress in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks has allowed them to carry out targeted air strikes against ISIS in Iraq.
But there are Republicans and Democrats alike who want to see a vote on a full-scale military authorization in the near future a way to ensure Congress doesnt cede its constitutional power to declare war.
Bachmann, who voted against the amendment, said that the U.S. should establish a full-scale military authorization instead of using potentially unreliable Syrian rebels as a proxy to fight ISIS.
It seems to me we should take our best possible tool, which is the United States military, and with all resources at our fingertips, defeat the Islamic State as quickly as we possibly can, said Bachmann, who serves on the Intelligence Committee.
Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mike McCaul (R-Texas), who backed the Syria measure, said it would be his strong desire for Congress to vote on full authorization.
Youve got the War Powers Act expiring, he told The Hill, but I think with the threat landscape evolving the way it has been, youd have to update it.
Despite opposition from many anti-war Democrats, Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), who serves as chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said that supporting the proposal was better than if the U.S. were to do nothing in response to ISIS.
ISIL is not just a threat. It is a savage threat. And what message do we send to the potential beheaders around the world if we bury our head in the sand? Israel said.
Other liberal Democrats remained skeptical that arming the Syrian rebels and becoming involved in a Middle East conflict would effectively protect the U.S. from a terrorist threat from ISIS.
I cannot support what could turn into a war on three fronts: fighting ISIS in Iraq, fighting ISIS in Syria and potentially [President Bashar] Assad in Syria, said Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.).
Reports coming out of eastern Syria Monday revealed that several factions within the Syrian opposition force known as the Free Syrian Army (FSA) have pledged services to the Islamic State, the group formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS). Sources and eyewitnesses said that the FSA has handed over its weapons to the Islamic State in large numbers.
The Free Syrian Army was said to be a moderate and secular force, which was used as the rationale by U.S. officials to supply the opposition force with weapons and training.
Sources told Homs, Syria-based Zaman Alwasl newspaper that several factions within the FSA, including Ahl Al Athar, Ibin al-Qaim, and Aisha have pledged to support the Islamic State.
Idiots.
I have a new term: LIL, and it stands for Low Information Legislator, just a STUPID as the voters.
Yes, so we will be arming and training terrorists who will turn their US supplied weapons on Americans, Christians and other minorities wherever they can reach them.
This will end badly.
Oh yea a background check. What is your name? “Mohammad Mohamed Hussein”. Next and your name is? “Mohamed Hussein Mohammad”. Next...Helping Syria in any capacity will not bode well for us. Helping Israel out more would be the most productive outcome and the most efficient for dealing with terrorist. We are stepping into the wrong side of history.
Money down the rathole emerging on the other side to ISIS. Craziness. If we want them dead we have to kill them ourselves and by we I mean those willing and able to do that.
those gop who voted to arm ISIS have no excuses. They can’t claim they were lied to. They trusted Obama vetted reasoning
Active Duty ping.
The Arm Al Qaeda Act.
Who's in a safe district? Who's not? I guarantee that's how these votes split.
UNBELIEVABLE why am I not surprised.
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Ding ding ding! We have a winner!
Should be some kind of prize for the most astute 5-word post of the day.
I wonder sometimes if I've actually moved on to some "great-beyond" designed by Rod Serling.
The US Govt has not the slightest ability to discern the “moderateness” or the “radicalness” of any particular faction, and even if they did, this is not a fixed attribute. These are sects and fragments of armies, they can and do shift alliances all the time, they are not in any way above lying to get US arms, they know damned well that the US is desperately looking for a “partner” in their Mideast stumbles to avoid having to bring troops back to Iraq or wherever and they will cheerfully yet deliberately work to deceive the US as to their true aims. ISIS has tremendous funding at the disposal and can buy off any of these factions easily. They also know that once begun, the US will again, be desperately unable to to admit they made an error, so this arming of whatever faction or factions will go on long after being proven wrong, even multiple times, over years. Just a classic boondoggle.
This is will not end well, but we’ll never hear the truth about it. It will ultimately end up in a lot more dead US bodies, that much is a certainty.
Morons.
They know and have known
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December 2013
US suspends aid to Syrian rebels
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/12/12/us-suspends-aid-to-syrian-rebels/
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September 2014
Vetted Moderate Free Syrian Army Commander Admits Alliance with ISIS
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This is a mistake.
However, in my mind it’s a trade between a couple of powers allowing a form of hegemony in different parts of this overall middle eastern region: A Saudi/US/Sunni alignment and an Iranian/Russian/Shia alignment.
Sunni influence returns to Syria which is led by a Shia Assad.
I wonder what the other players get. Russia probably can count on Ukraine for playing along.
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