OBAMA: The Credibility Of The World And Congress Is On The Line Over Syria
APPresident Barack Obama said Wednesday that there was plenty of credibility on the line over the world's response in Syria - of Congress and of the international community as a whole.
"My credibility is not on the line," Obama said during a joint press conference in Sweden, where he spoke after a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt. "International credibility is on the line."
His remarks came as Congress is in the midst of debating a resolution that would authorize limited U.S. military force in response to alleged chemical weapons attacks by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad on his own people on Aug. 21.
The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will begin markup and debate Wednesday on a compromise resolution that authorizes military action for a 60-day period, while specifically barring any ground troops from being deployed in Syria.
Obama expressed confidence that Congress would pass a resolution because their credibility was on the line. He also said that Congress had a responsibility to uphold an international "red line" - a reference to a comment he famously made last August, when he said that the Assad regime's use of chemical weapons would be a "red line" that would "change [his] calculus" on U.S. intervention in the Syrian civil war.
On Wednesday, he said that the "red line" applied to all parties involved - because "98%" of countries, he said, signed on to the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention, which banned the production, stockpiling, preparation, and use of chemical weapons. Congress, he said, also set a "red line" when it ratified the treaty, as well as when it passed the Syria Accountability Act in 2003.
"So, when I said in a press conference that my calculus about what's happening in Syria would be altered by the use of chemical weapons - which the overwhelming consensus of humanity says is wrong - that wasn't something I just kind of made up," Obama said. "I didn't pluck it out of thin air. There's a reason for it."