Paul: '50/50'
chance that
House will vote
down Syria
authorization
Press Pass
- Sun Sep 1, 2013 10:35 AM EDT
paul:'50/50' chance that House will vote down syria authorization
paul:'50/50' chance that House will vote down syria authorization
A leading skeptic of U.S. intervention
in conflicts abroad said Sunday that he believes there is only a
"50/50" chance that the GOP-controlled House will vote to authorize
the use of U.S military force in the Syria.
"I think it's at least 50/50
whether the House will vote down involvement in the Syrian war," Sen. Rand
Paul of Kentucky said on NBC's Meet the Press.
"I think the Senate will rubber
stamp what [Obama] wants but I think the House will be a much closer
vote," he added. "And there are a lot of questions we have to
ask."
Paul, a staunch defender of civil
liberties who has battled against members of his own party over the
government's use of drones and NSA data collection programs, said he believes
it's a "mistake" to get involved in a civil war in Syria that could
escalate "out of control."
But he praised President Barack Obama's
announcement Saturday that he will seek congressional authority for military
intervention in the civil war-torn country.
Other influential GOP leaders also
indicated Sunday that Obama may lose the vote.
"“I think it is going to be
difficult to get the vote through in Congress, especially when there's going to
be time over the next nine days for opposition to build up to it,” said New
York Rep. Peter King on Fox News Sunday. King, who sharply criticized Obama on
Friday for "abdicating his responsibility as commander-in-chief" for
seeking congressional authorization, said Congress would "probably"
reject authorization if the vote was held today.
Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma, the top
Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, also said he does not
believe Congress will authorize the strike.
But the Republican who heads the House
Intelligence Committee said he believes the authorization will ultimately
pass.
"I think at the end of the
day, Congress will rise to the occasion,” Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan
said on CNN. “This is a national security issue. This isn’t about Barack Obama
versus the Congress. This isn’t about Republicans versus Democrats.”
Secretary of State John Kerry said on
NBC's Meet the Press that he believes Congress will vote to authorize military
action, but he would not say if the president will act regardless of the
outcome of the debate on Capitol HIll.
"I said that the president has the
authority to act, but the Congress is going to do what's right here," he
said.
Shortly after Kerry's appearance on the
program, Paul shot back at Kerry, a decorated war veteran who became an
outspoken critic of Vietnam War after serving in that conflict.
"I see a young John Kerry who went
to war, and I wish he remembered more of how awful war is and that it shouldn't
be a desired outcome," Paul said.
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