America
US Congress set to toughen measures against Turkey
Washington, Oct 18
The Democrats and Republicans in the US Congress have said that they were prepared to toughen measures against Turkey for its offensive against the Kurds in northern Syria.
A day after the Democratic Party-controlled House of Representatives passed a draft resolution against the withdrawal of American troops from the Middle Eastern country, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Thursday said the initiative had encouraged him to seek a stronger response against Ankara, reports Efe news.
"I believe it's important that we make a strong, forward-looking strategic statement. For that reason, my preference would be for something even stronger than the resolution that the House passed yesterday, which has some serious weaknesses," McConnell said in a Senate floor speech.
On Wednesday, the House passed a legislative proposal with 354 votes in favour and 60 against condemning the US' withdrawal from northern Syria, but it remained unclear whether the Senate would ratify the resolution.
McConnell criticized the motion for remaining "curiously silent on the issue of whether to actually sustain a US military presence in Syria, perhaps to spare Democrats from having to go on the record on this key question".
Legislators continued to assess how to respond to President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw US troops, announced days before a Turkish offensive in Syria against Kurdish militias began on October 9 following a telephone conversation between the President and his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Also on Thursday, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen presented a bipartisan draft bill to impose new sanctions on Turkey.
If approved, these sanctions would punish any US or foreign citizen providing aid to the Turkish Armed Forces in their offensive in Syria.
In a press conference, Graham said that "what Turkey did in Syria is unacceptable".
"Turkey's incursion into Syria hurts America's national security," he said, adding that it endangered the Kurds, whom the Senator described as US allies.
Senators Jim Risch (Republican) and Bob Menendez (Democrat), the senior members of the Foreign Relations Committee, proposed another bill restricting arms sales to Ankara and imposing sanctions against Turkish officials and those supplying weapons to them
Earlier this week, the US government sanctioned three ministers in the Turkish government, announced an increase in tariffs on Turkish steel of up to 50 per cent and closed the door to a possible trade agreement between the two countries in response to Ankara's offensive.
While the Republicans expressed their discontent with the way Trump is handling the situation in Syria, the Democrats on Thursday spoke out against the President, who on Wednesday had a tense disagreement with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the White House.
The Speaker accused Trump of benefiting Russia and its President Vladimir Putin, through his Syria policy.
On Wednesday, Pelosi and other Democratic leaders had abruptly abandoned a White House meeting on Syria because of Trump's alleged insults at the Speaker.
Shortly after, Trump called Pelosi "sick" on Twitter and posted a picture of her standing up and pointing at him in the White House, which the Democratic leader reacted to by making the image her profile banner on that social network.
When asked about the picture, Pelosi said on Thursday: "I think I was excusing myself from the room."
A day after the Democratic Party-controlled House of Representatives passed a draft resolution against the withdrawal of American troops from the Middle Eastern country, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Thursday said the initiative had encouraged him to seek a stronger response against Ankara, reports Efe news.
"I believe it's important that we make a strong, forward-looking strategic statement. For that reason, my preference would be for something even stronger than the resolution that the House passed yesterday, which has some serious weaknesses," McConnell said in a Senate floor speech.
On Wednesday, the House passed a legislative proposal with 354 votes in favour and 60 against condemning the US' withdrawal from northern Syria, but it remained unclear whether the Senate would ratify the resolution.
McConnell criticized the motion for remaining "curiously silent on the issue of whether to actually sustain a US military presence in Syria, perhaps to spare Democrats from having to go on the record on this key question".
Legislators continued to assess how to respond to President Donald Trump's decision to withdraw US troops, announced days before a Turkish offensive in Syria against Kurdish militias began on October 9 following a telephone conversation between the President and his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Also on Thursday, Republican Senator Lindsey Graham and Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen presented a bipartisan draft bill to impose new sanctions on Turkey.
If approved, these sanctions would punish any US or foreign citizen providing aid to the Turkish Armed Forces in their offensive in Syria.
In a press conference, Graham said that "what Turkey did in Syria is unacceptable".
"Turkey's incursion into Syria hurts America's national security," he said, adding that it endangered the Kurds, whom the Senator described as US allies.
Senators Jim Risch (Republican) and Bob Menendez (Democrat), the senior members of the Foreign Relations Committee, proposed another bill restricting arms sales to Ankara and imposing sanctions against Turkish officials and those supplying weapons to them
Earlier this week, the US government sanctioned three ministers in the Turkish government, announced an increase in tariffs on Turkish steel of up to 50 per cent and closed the door to a possible trade agreement between the two countries in response to Ankara's offensive.
While the Republicans expressed their discontent with the way Trump is handling the situation in Syria, the Democrats on Thursday spoke out against the President, who on Wednesday had a tense disagreement with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in the White House.
The Speaker accused Trump of benefiting Russia and its President Vladimir Putin, through his Syria policy.
On Wednesday, Pelosi and other Democratic leaders had abruptly abandoned a White House meeting on Syria because of Trump's alleged insults at the Speaker.
Shortly after, Trump called Pelosi "sick" on Twitter and posted a picture of her standing up and pointing at him in the White House, which the Democratic leader reacted to by making the image her profile banner on that social network.
When asked about the picture, Pelosi said on Thursday: "I think I was excusing myself from the room."

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