Top GOP senators: Aleppo 'will be a testament to our moral failure and everlasting shame'
"The words 'never again' ring hollow today with reports that Aleppo is falling to Assad regime forces," the senators wrote, amid reports that forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad were on the brink of fully recapturing the besieged city of Aleppo from opposition forces.
"For four long years, Aleppo has been at the center of the Assad regime's war on the Syrian people," the statement continued. "Together with its Russian and Iranian allies, the Assad regime has relentless targeted women and children, doctors and rescue workers, hospitals and bakeries, aid warehouses and humanitarian convoys."
Rebel officials inside Aleppo announced Tuesday that they had reached a cease-fire deal with Russia, an ally of Assad, to evacuate roughly 40,000 civilians from the city. Rebel fighters with light arms would be allowed to leave, too.
The talks between Russia and members of the opposition, which came amid reports that pro-government forces had summarily executed dozens of civilians as they moved to clear rebel-held areas on Monday, were being mediated by Turkish officials in Ankara.
McCain and Graham said in their statement that reports of a cease-fire deal "were not a cause to celebrate."
"There are now reports that a 'ceasefire' has been reached in the city," the statement read. "This is not a cause to celebrate, but a sure sign of the fate that awaits other Syrian cities ... the Assad regime will use the ceasefire to reset its war machine and prepare to slaughter its way to victory across the rest of the country."
Previous cease-fire deals have been criticized by both the government and the opposition. Each has accused the other of using pauses in the fighting to regroup.
The senators charged that the brutality of the war, the refugee crisis it spawned, and the rise of the Islamic State's "terrorist army" were "the inevitable result of hollow words and inaction, red lines crossed without consequences, tarnish moral influence, 'leading from behind,' and a total lack of American leadership."
President Barack Obama's decision not to attack Assad after he crossed Obama's so-called "red line" by using chemical weapons against Syrian civilians in August 2013 has been characterized as one of the most decisive moments of the war.
Last week, US Secretary of State John Kerry admitted that not following through on the "red line" threat damaged the US' credibility in the region.
"I know the cost - this has been a topic of conversation here - of the president's decision when he decided not to enforce the red line through the bombing," Kerry said at the annual Saban Forum. "The lack of doing it perception-wise cost us significantly in the region. I know that and so does the President."
In their joint statement, McCain and Graham used Obama's own words against him.
In 2013, the senators wrote, "President Obama addressed the UN General Assembly: 'Should we really accept the notion that the world is powerless in the face of a Rwanda, or Sbrenica? If that's the world that people want to live in, they should say so, and reckon with the cold logic of mass graves.'"
"That reckoning," wrote McCain and Graham, "is now upon us. The cold logic of mass graves confronts us again, and the name Aleppo will echo through history, like Srebrenica and Rwanda, as a testament to our moral failure and everlasting shame."