US Secretary of State John Kerry urged lawmakers Wednesday to give President Barack Obama new war powers to strike against Daesh jihadists at "a pivotal hour" in the battle against the militants.
But senators pressed Kerry, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and top US military officer Martin Dempsey on whether a new resolution would lead to "mission creep" that could see hundreds of US ground troops sent back into the Middle East.
"Our nation is strongest when we act together -- and we simply cannot allow this collection of murderers and thugs to achieve its ambitions," Kerry told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Daesh group, which has captured a large swath of territory in Iraq and Syria, wanted to ensure "the death or submission of all who oppose it" as well as "the incitement of terrorist acts across the globe," he said.
Kerry called for a united vote in favor of a new authorization for use of military force (AUMF) to give Obama "a clear mandate to prosecute armed conflict against Daesh and associated persons or forces."
Tantamount to a declaration of war, the authority would provide Obama political cover at home and a firmer legal basis on which to prosecute the fight, particularly among allies abroad who have joined a US-led international coalition.
So far, the Obama administration has used the existing authorization approved in the days after the September 11, 2001 attacks to go after Al-Qaeda militants and the Taliban as justification for the war on Daesh, also known as Daesh.
"The president already has statutory authority to act against Daesh, but a clear and formal expression of your backing would dispel any doubt anywhere that Americans are united in this effort," Kerry said.
- No 'enduring' ground mission -
The top US diplomat also insisted that the "administration sees no need for US forces to engage in enduring offensive ground combat operations against Daesh."
Obama took office in 2009 vowing to end the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, amid battle fatigue among Americans. But he has already sent military advisors back to Iraq to combat Daesh, and is weighing whether to slow down the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan.
Carter stressed that "the proposed AUMF does not authorize long-term, large-scale offensive ground combat operations like those we conducted in Iraq and Afghanistan, because our strategy does not call for them."
But Senator Bob Menendez warned that "we all know that it may be the intent of someone not to have any large-scale, long-term offensive combat troops, but that intention can honestly change along the way."
Carter, however, highlighted that the new war powers resolution would expire in three years and "wisely does not include any geographical restriction because Daesh already shows signs of metastasizing outside of Syria and Iraq."
"I cannot tell you our campaign to defeat Daesh will be completed in three years," he said, but including a so-called "sunset clause" would give the next president and "the American people the chance to assess our progress" at the end of that period.
Protesters twice interrupted the hearing with one demonstrating against giving the administration the power to wage "another endless war, the killing of innocent people" before being escorted out.
Source: AFP
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