As Obama Pushes To Punish Syria, Lawmakers Fear Deep U.S. Involvement -- Reuters
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama and his aides pressed U.S. lawmakers on Monday to approve military force against Syria but many members of Congress were worried that an attack would only drag America into another Middle Eastern conflict with no end in sight.
Obama's abrupt decision to halt plans for a strike against the government of President Bashar al-Assad and instead wait for congressional approval has generated a raging debate just as the president prepares to go to Sweden and Russia this week.
Armed with evidence they say proves Syria's government killed over 1,400 people with nerve agent sarin, Obama's top national security aides made their case to Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives in a 70-minute conference call, urging them to back Obama's request.
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More News On President Obama Beginning To Lobby Congress For Their Approval Of A Military Strike Against Syria
White House Girds for Battle With Congress on Syria -- Wall Street Journal
McCain: Blocking Syria Strike Would Be “Catastrophic” -- Time
McCain: Inaction on Syria would be 'catastrophic' -- NBC
McCain, Graham express optimism on Obama Syria plan -- USA Today
McCain has guarded optimism after White House meeting on Syria -- FOX News
GOP Senators Say Details Needed on Syria Strategy -- AP
Obama Plans to Meet With Key Lawmakers to Push Syria Plan -- New York Times
Lawmakers warn congressional vote on whether to strike Syria could fail -- CBS
Members of Congress split over Syria decision -- CNN
Obama authorization for Syria too broad for some lawmakers -- Reuters
John Kerry: Congress faces a 'Munich moment' -- NBC
Why Congress could reject military action in Syria -- Aaron Blake, Washington Post
Syria crisis: Obama's gamble on Congress -- Mark Mardell, BBC
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