A Syria decision hadn't been made when Trump tweeted missiles 'will be coming'
A final decision on how to respond to the weekend's chemical attack in Syria had not yet been made when Trump issued his tweet, the White House said later on Wednesday.
"We're
maintaining that we have a number of options and all those options are still on
the table. Final decisions haven't been made yet," press secretary Sarah
Sanders said. "The President has a number of options at his disposal and
all of those options remain on the table."
Top military
officials were at the White House on Wednesday afternoon to discuss options for
Syria, according to senior aides. Defense Secretary James Mattis and Gen.
Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, were seen entering
the White House shortly after 1 p.m. ET and departing roughly two hours later.
"Russia vows to shoot down
any and all missiles fired at Syria. Get ready Russia, because they will be
coming," Trump wrote early Wednesday. "You shouldn't be partners with
a Gas Killing Animal who kills his people and enjoys it!"
While Trump did not
specify when a missile strike might come or where it could target, the message
made clear he plans retaliatory action soon for the suspected chemical gas
attack that killed at least 40 people.
Sanders indicated
to reporters that missile strikes were not his only option.
"That's
certainly one option, but that doesn't mean it's the only option or the only
thing that the President may or may not do," she said.
The President's
message raised the ire of at least one influential Republican, Senate Foreign
Relations chairman Bob Corker, who said on Wednesday he believes action should
come soon.
"The only
thing I worry about is that it's not going to happen," Corker said on
Capitol Hill. "Now we're announcing what we're going to do and
unfortunately it puts us in a place where possibly it creates a greater
conflict."
Trump remains
engaged in intensive consultations with US partners, principally French
President Emmanuel Macron and British Prime Minister Theresa May, on a
coordinated response to the attack. But those leaders have yet to reach firm
agreement on the scale or timing of a response, the officials said, and it's
possible that strikes don't begin until the end of the week.
Trump has pressed
his foreign counterparts and his aides to develop
options that
go further than strikes he ordered last year on a Syrian airfield in response
to another chemical weapons attack. Those strikes did little to dampen the
Syrian regime's abilities to carry out these type of attacks, and reports at
the time indicated planes were taking off from the airstrip soon after the US
strikes ended.
This time, Trump
has pressed for a more muscular response that would more credibly deter Syrian
leader Bashar al-Assad from carrying out chemical attacks on civilians in the
future, officials said. But questions remain about how much bigger the response
this time may be, and how willing US partners are to join in.
US officials had
suggested that parliamentary approval in the UK could hamper May's ability to
join in a coordinated effort in a significant way, though on Wednesday May
sounded firmer in her determination to join allies in responding to the attack.
She has not said whether she will seek approval from MPs before approving any
action, and Trump has pressed his counterparts that urgent steps are necessary,
according to people familiar with the conversations.
Earlier this week,
US officials said that a lack of firm evidence had led to concerns from May
about launching strikes too early. But speaking in Birmingham on Wednesday, May
said "all the indications" are that the Syrian regime was responsible
for a chemical weapons attack in Douma, adding that the use of such weapons
"cannot go unchallenged."
France also appears
poised to play a leading role. Macron would not require parliamentary approval
to launch strikes and he has described chemical weapons use as a red line that
must be upheld.
While Trump has
made clear he believes the Syrian regime is responsible for the attack,
observers have struggled to gain access to the scene and neither the US nor its
allies have been able to provide firm evidence of culpability.
Speaking Wednesday,
Sanders nevertheless pinned the blame on Syria and its backers in Moscow.
"The President
holds Syria and Russia responsible for this chemical weapons attack," she
said.
Earlier Wednesday,
Mattis told reporters the US was "still assessing the intelligence"
on whether the Assad regime is to blame for the attack.
"We stand
ready to provide military options if they are appropriate as the President
determined," Mattis said.
Responding to
Trump's Tweet, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova wrote on
Facebook that a missile strike could destroy evidence on the ground,
interrupting the work of international investigators.
"Smart
missiles should fly toward terrorists, not the legal government that has been
fighting international terrorism for several years on its territory,"
Zakharova wrote.
Russia has blamed
Syrian opposition forced for the alleged chemical attack. In subsequent tweets
on Wednesday, Trump bemoaned the poor state of relations between Washington and
Moscow, something he's vowed to fix as president.
Those efforts, he
wrote, have been hindered by the special counsel's investigation into Russian
election meddling.
"Much
of the bad blood with Russia is caused by the Fake & Corrupt Russia
Investigation, headed up by the all Democrat loyalists, or people that worked
for Obama," he wrote.
Even as the Syria
discussions are proceeding at the White House, Trump has remained preoccupied
with special counsel Robert Mueller's probe. Most recently his anger has
reached new heights after the FBI raided the office and hotel room of his
private attorney Michael Cohen.
On Tuesday, Trump
canceled a planned trip to South America to monitor the response in Syria. The
trip was supposed to have started on Friday, though the White House declined to
say whether that timing indicated a strike was more likely at the end of the
week.
A Pentagon
spokesman referred all inquiries on Trump's tweet warning Russia to "get
ready" because missiles "will be coming" to the White House.
"The
department does not comment on potential future military actions,"
Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Michael Andrews said in a statement.
That echoes what
Trump has long maintained would be his own posture as President and a stance he
angrily chided then-President Barack Obama for violating in 2013.
"Why do we
keep broadcasting when we are going to attack Syria," he wrote then.
"Why can't we just be quiet and, if we attack at all, catch them by
surprise?"
"In war, the
elememt (sic) of surprise is sooooo important.What the hell is Obama
doing," he added later.
It's the second
time in recent weeks that Trump has appeared to signal his intentions in Syria
ahead of time. He announced during an event in Ohio that US troops would soon
return from the country, where they are helping to battle Islamic State.
And while he did
not set a timeline for the withdrawal, he's told his top military advisers he
wants the ISIS battle to conclude within six months and American servicemen to
return.
Labels: International News




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