- The White House wants Congress to authorize the Pentagon to fight the militants without 'an enduring offensive combat' role
- President Obama's request for authorization for the use of force would expire after three years but could be renewed
- The resolution makes no mention of ground troops but leaves the door open for them in the future by being purposefully vague.
- Obama stressed in a televised statement this afternoon that the resolution 'does not call for the deployment of US ground combat forces'
- Ground troops would only be used in cases of 'unforeseen circumstances,' he promised
- 'The commander in chief needs to have the ability to order that military action, and to do it quickly, without seeking additional, specific authorization from the Congress,' Obama's spokesman said
- Senate Foreign Relations Chair Bob Corker says AUMF is not enough; the president also needs to 'lay out a clear strategy' for defeating ISIS, he said.
- House Speaker John Boehner said he had concerns about Obama's request; we need 'robust authorization, not one that limits our options'
Conservative Commentary/Opinion on Local, State & National issues. Hours 6am to 7pm to respond to comments
Saturday, February 14, 2015
ISIS says they will burn 17 Kurdish prisoners alive
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