Obama's Syrian airstrikes get Bill Clinton's approval
Former President Bill Clinton told CNN he agrees with President
Barack Obama's decision to authorize airstrikes against the terrorist
group ISIS and arm Syrian rebels working to defeat them.
During a panel hosted by
CNN's Erin Burnett at the Clinton Global Initiative on Wednesday, the
former president unequivocally said, "I support what they (the Obama
administration) are doing."
"I personally believe the
way they have thought this through and planned it and limited our
involvement, avoids ISIS achieving their objective of suckering us into
their fight," Clinton said of the airstrikes. "We should give support
for people who are fighting for their lives."
On arming Syrian rebels,
the former president said the administration has "reached the judgment
that it is... worth the gamble, I think, to try to make it work."
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Clinton and his wife,
former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, have not always been as
supportive of the Obama administration's policy regarding Syria.
As America's top
diplomat, Hillary Clinton urged the president to arm Syrian rebels and
made clear that she disagreed with Obama's decision not to arm them in
her much-talked-about memoir. Earlier this week, Bill Clinton echoed his
wife.
"I agree with her, and I would have taken the chance," the former president told CNN's Fareed Zakaria on Sunday.
But on Wednesday, the former president was supportive of Obama's new position on Syria.
"Any time you do
anything, it might not work. We don't have 100 percent control," Clinton
said. "You just make a judgment over whether it is more likely than not
to work. The President has made that judgment to arm the Syrians who
want an inclusive Syria."
Hillary Clinton, too, was supportive of Obama's decision Wednesday.
"The situation now is
demanding a response and we are seeing a very robust response," Hillary
Clinton said during a panel with CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta. "It is
something that I think the president is right to bring the world
attention to and say."
The United States and a
coalition of member countries conducted their second day of airstrikes
in Syria and Iraq overnight on Tuesday.
While the strikes, which
were authorized by Obama last week, are targeting ISIS members in both
countries, they are not limited to the terrorist group that has risen to
prominence in the last year.
Also targeted were members of the Khorasan group,
a new terrorist organization that the United States government says is a
collection of al Qaeda members who have moved into Syria.
Bill Clinton told
Burnett that although the group is made up of core al Qaeda members, the
United States is not fighting the same terrorists they fought after the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
"Some of them survived," Clinton said. "Nobody said we had a 100 percent kill rate on that."
Bill Clinton's full interview with Burnett aired Wednesday night at 9 p.m. ET on CNN.
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