Republicans
say Obama shows weakness, Syria strategy a 'mess'
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[November 02, 2015]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
presidential candidates accused President Barack Obama on Sunday of
showing weakness in U.S. policy in Syria, doubting that his small
deployment of special operations troops will make much difference
without a coherent broader strategy.
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"I don't have a problem with the tactics of it. And the numbers
might even have to be larger at some point," Florida Senator Marco
Rubio said of the Obama administration's disclosure on Friday of the
deployment of fewer than 50 special operations troops on the ground
in northern Syria in the coming weeks.
"I think the broader issue is: what is the strategy?" Rubio said on
the CBS program "Face the Nation."
The announcement marked a reversal of Obama's vow not to send U.S.
ground troops into Syria's civil war, raging since 2011.
South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham called Obama's move "a failure
on all fronts," saying American special forces are heading "into a
very bad spot with no chance of winning."
"What we're about to accomplish is to turn Syria over to Russia and
Iran, and to make sure that we never destroy ISIL on Obama's watch,
and pass this mess on to the next president," Graham said on the
"Fox News Sunday" program, referring to the Islamic State, also
called ISIS.
Obama's term ends in January 2017.
"Sending 50 American special forces into Syria in the eyes of ISIL
shows that Obama is not 'all in,' it is a sign of weakness to ISIL,"
Graham added. "They have sized Obama up, and they think he's weak."
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, appearing on NBC's "Meet the
Press," said he was troubled with Obama's "incrementalism" in Syria.
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Bush applauded Obama for deciding to deploy special forces. "But we
can't get into a quagmire. There should be a real strategy to take
out ISIS and to take out Assad," Bush added, referring to Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad.
Former Hewlett Packard chief executive Carly Fiorina said she also
is glad Obama is sending special forces.
"On the other hand, it's also too little too late. I think this is a
reflection of the reality that when America does not act, when we do
not lead as we have not the last three years under this president,
our options become very constrained and the situation becomes more
dangerous," Fiorina told "Fox News Sunday."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; editing by Ralph Boulton)
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