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Debating a Military Strike on Syria

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Monday, September 9, 2013   

ST. LOUIS, Mo. - Congress is debating a possible military strike against Syria. Strike supporters have said the U.S. has no choice but to punish Syria for a chemical attack on its people. Others oppose the action because they are afraid it will draw the U.S. into a costly war, like Iraq. Secretary of State John Kerry has said it would only be a limited strike. U.S. destroyers are positioned in the Mediterranean, loaded with Tomahawk missiles - the same type used in a limited strike on Libya in 2011.

Mattea Kramer, director of research, National Priorities Project, has crunched the numbers. She said each one of those missiles costs American taxpayers $1.5 million, and the military used a lot of them.

"In the first hour of our strike on Libya, we launched 110 of those missiles," Kramer said.

The total bill for Libya, Kramer added, turned out to be more than $1 billion, and there is no way of predicting how much military intervention in Syria would cost. However, she pointed out that the Bush administration predicted that intervening in Iraq would cost no more than $60 billion, and 10 years later the bill is up to $814 billion.

Faith communities in St. Louis and around the state prayed for peace over the weekend, and some plan to hold candlelight vigils tonight. Mary Zerkel, co-coordinator of the Wage Peace campaign, American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), said her organization has had people in the region for a very long time, and they understand that Syria's problems are complicated. She pointed out it is not just about two choices: to bomb or not to bomb.

"There are more than two options," she said. "We have to look at a cease-fire, the comprehensive arms embargo, the humanitarian assistance on the ground."

President Obama has told reporters that he is aware of American opposition to a military strike, but he said Congress must make a decision that is right for the country.

Prof. Marjorie Cohn, Thomas Jefferson School of Law, said even if Congress approves the strike, it would be illegal under international law. She pointed out that the United States has not met the two conditions that the United Nations Charter requires for such action: "either acting in self defense or if the Security Council approves it. The Security Council has not approved this military strike."

When Obama makes his case to the American people, he may have a tough time convincing them. The AFSC is opposed to military intervention, as are the pope and nearly 60 percent of the Americans who were polled last week.

More information is available from the American Friends Service Committee at goo.gl/2cZf3J; from the National Priorities project at NationalPriorities.org; and from Reuters at goo.gl/lnbVDR.


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