Kerry, Paul spar over limits on ISIS fight
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) on Tuesday sharply criticized Secretary of State John Kerry for advocating an authorization of military force (AUMF) against Islamic militants without geographic limits.
Paul, who is expected to seek the presidency in 2016, said that a resolution that allows the Obama administration to go after groups that have “pledged allegiance” to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) would mean the U.S. could bomb Middle East cities such as Medina, Saudi Arabia.
{mosads}“No one’s talking about bombing everywhere,” Kerry replied during a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing.
Paul said that the AUMF would send a “signal to Middle East that no city is off-limits,” noting terror groups affiliated with ISIS are currently set up in Libya, Yemen and Saudi Arabia.
Kerry said Paul’s statement was made with “no input or, frankly, the consideration of the limits and strictures under which the United States is currently operating.”
He said the military is under the “most extraordinary constraints on where, when and how we can use force.”
Paul noted that Kerry did not object to limits, including the explicit ban of ground forces, last year when the committee approved an AUMF to strike the Syrian regime for 10 hours.
The nation’s top diplomat replied that was because it was an “entirely different situation” with limited strikes as opposed to a fight against ISIS that could take a “generation” as the president has suggested.
An authorization by Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) also lacks any geographic limit.
Paul said he “cannot vote for any resolution that doesn’t have a geographic restraint.”
The full committee is expected to mark up an AUMF on Thursday.
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