Each Senator and Congressman voting to 'bomb' must be voted out or impeached!


 President Barack Obama will give 16 television interviews on Monday to the 
three network news  anchors, as well as to anchors from PBS, CNN, and Fox, more 
evidence of a "full court press" strategy ahead of pivotal congressional votes 
on  military strikes in Syria. The interviews will be taped on Monday afternoon 
and will air during  each network's Monday evening news broadcast, the White 
House said.  (Reporting by Roberta Rampton, for Reuters). Obama will address 
the nation on the evening of Tuesday, September 10. If he does intend to attack 
Syria, the attack will take place concurrent with his speech or – probably more 
likely – a few hours later, in the early morning hours of Wednesday September 
11, banking on the annual "rally around the flag" 9/11 memorials to rally 
public support or at least dampen public opposition. 
Damascus Notes: Late Night “Town Meetings” before the American Attack
This observer judges that the  Persians, whose bright, articulate students are 
well known  internationally, and with whom he has been honored to discuss  
international politics on several occasions, may well have met their  
intellectual match in the Syrian Arabs. This assessment is  based on what is 
happening among the people in Damascus, not just in the universities and 
schools, but during impromptu “marketplace of ideas”  sessions that are 
increasingly taking place in the streets and in coffee houses and places of 
public gathering.
Last night was one example. Way past  this observer’s bedtime, some friends 
came to see me and wanted to sit  outside “for a few minutes” to discuss the 
latest speculations from  Washington and St. Petersburg. We ended up sitting on 
concrete slabs  that divide Al Bahsa Street, where no cars are allowed in front 
of my  hotel for more than three hours! Miss Hiba, a wild and wonderful  
Palestinian journalist born in Yarmouk camp, interpreted for us. The  
assemblage very quickly grew, as a few soldiers, shabiha and national  defense 
force types, showed up to see what was going on. Some even  joined in the 
fast-moving animated discussions.
There were several students and  neighborhood residents in the group, and, even 
at the start of the  “seminar,” it quickly became apparent that Syrians are 
carefully  tracking developments in the run-up to the widely expected “9/12/13  
Black Thursday,”  now less than a week away. It is on this date that many 
Damascenes and  foreign observers believe the American attack will begin.
On the surface, life appears fairly  normal in Demascus, but there is no 
question that tensions are rising  and people are alarmed at the prospect of an 
American attack. This  observer was educated by these Syrians with many views 
of the conflict  raging here and of how events locally and internationally are 
apt to  unfold.
One view in particular is virtually  unanimous. It is that, for all the White 
House smooth talk, it is simply not credible that the purpose of the American 
attack–without benefit of UN Security Council approval–will be limited and 
short, and designed  only to send a message to, or to punish, the Syrian 
leadership. This is  especially so, because, in the last couple of days, the 
President’s team has frequently used the term “degrade” (as in demolish and 
utterly  destroy) to describe the purpose of the strikes it plans.
An elderly gentleman who owns a pharmacy around the corner explained: “It’s 
regime change here and in Tehran, and nothing less! They will bomb  anywhere at 
will, because their top 75 listed targets have already been  emptied and keep 
shifting. We are all working to provide Obama with no  targets.”
This observer was dumbfounded at the  sophistication and quality of the 
projections posited by the impromptu  gathering. One student preparing to 
return to classes late this month at Damascus University rattled off statistics 
regarding vote prospects in  the U.S. Congress. She explained to the growing 
assemblage that the  House of Representatives count as of 9/4/13 included 47 
firm or  tentative Yes votes, 187 firm or tentative No votes, and 220 unknown 
or  undecided votes. Then she expressed her view that she was pretty certain 
the President will be forced to withdraw the resolution or postpone a  vote in 
the House.
Another lady, whom I have seen around my hotel garden, mentioned yesterday’s 
report in the Washington Post that the Conference of Presidents of Major 
American Jewish Organizations has linked up with the Israeli lobby AIPAC to 
wage an all-out public  campaign for a U.S. war on Syria. I had no idea about 
this, and wondered how she could be so current with her information. She told 
me,
“So far, only 21 senators have said they support or are likely to support  the 
Obama resolution; thirteen have said they oppose or are likely to  oppose the 
resolution; and 66 votes are undecided or unknown.”
The episode that ended our gathering  early this morning started when one young 
man, presumably a law student, zeroed in on this observer and started reciting 
from memory–not a  summary, mind you, but rather word for word–Article One, 
Section Eight,  Clause 11 of the United States Constitution: “The Congress 
shall have Power To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make 
 Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water. 
He then explained that this passage  mandates no specific form the legislation 
must have in order to be  considered a “Declaration of War.” Nor does the 
Constitution itself use  this term.
Then came the zinger. “Sir, can you  compare and contrast this Article and 
Clause with the 1973 War Powers  Act, and share with us your interpretation of 
both with respect to what  your President is threatening to do to my country?”
“Who is this guy?” I thought to myself, and I began to stutter and think in 
anguish,
“Where is Professor Richard Falk* when I need him?”
I did not know where or how to  begin to answer the gentleman. I started to 
mumble something like,  “That’s an excellent question. Can we meet later to 
discuss it, because  it’s very late now.”
But, just as I glanced at my watch and noticed it was 4:28 a.m., mercifully, we 
all heard the Adhan (the Islamic call to prayer)  emanating from a muezzin at 
the nearby mosque. The eerie, but somehow  reassuring, strains wafted around 
us, and it was time for al fajr (Dawn) prayers.
It was this observer’s very good luck  that I could duck the young man’s 
question about the Constitution and  the War Powers Act. The soldiers on the 
street fell silent and listened, and became contemplative. One can only imagine 
what they were thinking  about next week’s likely American bombing campaign. 
They then started to disperse, as did about half of the gathering.
I was saved, though with no thanks to Professor Falk.
The people of the Syrian Arab Republic  are politically very sophisticated and 
amazingly well informed about the details of the current crisis, including its 
external players and their plans.
One can only wish the Syrian  people well, and join with them and all people of 
good will–as many  Christians and, reportedly, more Muslims, will do–for the 
day of fasting and prayer that his Holiness Pope Francis has called to be 
observed on  September 7, 2013.
*Note: Richard Falk, a Professor of International Law at Princeton, is widely 
known for his peace  activism and his controversial reports as a UN appointee 
on the the  situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territories.
________________________________
 
Franklin Lamb is doing research in Syria and Lebanon and can be reached 
c/[email protected] 

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