Sunday, September 1, 2013

A hawkish Kerry emerges as point man in Obama's push to punish Syria


WASHINGTON |(Reuters) - When the Senate takes up whether to back White House plans to attack Syria, there may be few more effective or passionate lobbyists for the administration than Secretary of State John Kerry, who was a member of that exclusive club for 28 years.
Kerry last week described Syria's suspected use of chemical weapons as "a moral obscenity" and, in a separate appearance, called Syrian President Bashar al-Assad "a thug and a murderer."

According to people with knowledge of the administration's debates, Kerry has argued for a more muscular U.S. involvement in the conflict even as he has been its point man on searching for a diplomatic solution.
"He has been much more open-minded about potential lethal action than others in the administration," said a former U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The son of a U.S. diplomat, Kerry came to the job of secretary of state after nearly three decades in the Senate, all of them on the Foreign Relations Committee, and a record as a Vietnam veteran.
That experience could come in handy as the White House makes its case to Congress for action on Syria in retaliation for the military's August 21 attack that U.S. officials say killed more than 1,400 people.
Kerry's strong remarks came on an issue where other top U.S. officials, including President Barack Obama at times, have kept a lower profile.
Obama on Saturday said he believed that military force should be used against Syria but backed away from an imminent strike to seek the approval of Congress.
"The value of John Kerry getting out there to the president is that he can speak to that audience, and he can speak to the international audience, and he can speak to the American people," said Tamara Cofman Wittes, director of the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution think tank.
In a sign Kerry will actively advance the president's approach, he was scheduled to appear on several major U.S. television talk shows on Sunday morning.
The timing of a U.S. response, most likely with cruise missiles from U.S. Navy destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean, is unclear given the decision to seek congressional approval.
DISCORDANT NOTES
That Kerry has become a primary exponent of the Obama administration's policy might come as a surprise given his penchant for making statements that have given officials at the White House and the State Department heartburn.
Speaking in June of the U.S. effort to bring the warring parties in Syria to the table, Kerry said, "This is a very difficult process, which we come too late," a statement that can be read as an implicit criticism of Obama's largely hands-off policy over the previous two years.
And earlier this summer he said the Egyptian military had been "restoring democracy" when it toppled first freely elected president, Islamist Mohamed Mursi, in July - a widely criticized endorsement of the military rulers who brutally cracked down on Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood supporters.
Those discordant notes aside, the White House appears to see Kerry, the 2004 Democratic presidential nominee, as one of its most effective spokesmen when it comes to reaching out to the American public, Congress and the wider world.
Last week, Kerry was Obama's main advocate for using force, belying the former Massachusetts senator's reputation as a somewhat wooden speaker.
"The indiscriminate slaughter of civilians, the killing of women and children and innocent bystanders, by chemical weapons is a moral obscenity," Kerry said on Monday.
"If we choose to live in a world where a thug and a murderer like Bashar al-Assad can gas thousands of his own people with impunity, even after the United States and our allies said no, and then the world does nothing about it, there will be no end to the test of our resolve and the dangers ... from those others who believe that they can do as they will," he said on Friday.
'TOUGH NEW POSITION'
"On both Egypt and Syria, Kerry led the administration's articulation of a tough new position," said Jon Alterman, head of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington.
The Syrian civil war has presented the White House with policy options that it found unpalatable at best for a U.S. president elected in part on the premise that he would get the United States out of wars in the Muslim world.
Loath to be drawn into another one, Obama has tried to keep his distance from the conflict, holding off for months before calling for Assad to go in August 2011 and rejecting advice from then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and CIA Director David Petraeus in 2012 that he give U.S. arms to the Syrian rebels.
Kerry, who took over from Clinton on February 1, has been an advocate for doing more to help the Syrian rebels.
In Rome in late February, during his first foreign trip as secretary of state, Kerry unveiled a marked U.S. policy shift - a decision to send non-lethal assistance such as medical supplies and food directly to the rebels.
After striking a deal with Russia on May to try to revive moribund efforts to bring both sides of the conflict to the negotiating table, Kerry hinted two weeks later that the West might arm the rebels if Syria refused to come to the talks.
Obama eventually decided to take that step, but it is unclear whether any U.S. weaponry has reached the rebels.
Kerry's diplomatic initiative, however, had begun to unravel within a month when Syrian government forces in early June retook the strategic town of Qusair, which lies on a cross-border supply route with Lebanon.
A week later on June 12, in a meeting of Obama's top national security team, Kerry argued for the United States going beyond arming opposition fighters by employing air strikes, a person familiar with the talks said.
Martin Dempsey, who as chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs is the United States top military officer, pushed back strongly, arguing that such a mission would be complex and costly.
Kerry appeared to have lost that argument, until now.
(Editing by Alistair Bell and Philip Barbara)

No comments: