USA TODAY US Edition

Syria policy a rift in GOP

Republican­s unite with Dems against Trump

- Christal Hayes and Ledyard King

WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump’s decision to pull U.S. troops from Syria, clearing the way for Turkey’s assault on Kurdish allies who helped in the fight against the Islamic State, has created a rare rift with congressio­nal Republican­s who have sharply criticized the decision.

For the president, the timing is poor. Trump’s move has helped unite Democrats and Republican­s against him at a moment when he needs conservati­ves in Congress to fend off a fast-moving impeachmen­t inquiry looking into the president’s efforts to push Ukraine to investigat­e former Vice President Joe Biden, one of his top political rivals.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican and a close Trump ally, has been one of the harshest GOP critics of Trump’s decision, tweeting last week that abandoning the Kurds would “put every radical Islamist on steroids.”

Minutes after Trump tweeted Mon

day afternoon that he “would much rather focus on our Southern Border” to protect U.S. security, Graham shot back that the southern border “should be our LAST line of defense against radical Islam.”

“Our FIRST line of defense is the U.S. military working with partners in radical Islam’s backyard keeping them over there so they can’t hurt us here at home or hurt our allies like Israel,” Graham wrote.

Other GOP senators, including Marco Rubio of Florida, Cory Gardner of Colorado, and Mitt Romney of Utah, have joined Graham in blasting the president’s pullout.

Support from Republican­s who control the Senate will be critical for Trump in the coming months. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., launched the impeachmen­t inquiry last month.

The Constituti­on gives the House the option of bringing articles of impeachmen­t against a president – similar to an indictment in a court proceeding.

If the Democratic-led House decides to impeach Trump, the Senate would have to hold a trial with senators acting as jurors.

Removal from office would require at least twothirds of the Senate, or 67 votes.

“This is the worst possible time for Trump to have a major break with Senate Republican­s,” said Alex Conant, a GOP strategist and former aide to Rubio. “At the end of the day, he needs those Republican senators to fight for him. And that’s hard to do when they’re fighting with him on Syria.”

But another Republican strategist, Ford O’Connell, said he didn’t think the Syria issue would make GOP lawmakers any less likely to defend Trump on impeachmen­t.

“They’ve compartmen­talized it largely as a policy difference with Trump,” O’Connell said of the Syria pullout. “They knew that he’s been saying this and he prides himself as someone who tries to deliver on his promises.”

Republican senators have concluded they can’t win in 2020 without Trump on the ballot, O’Connell said. He pointed out that every Senate seat up for election in 2016 was won by the party whose presidenti­al nominee also captured that state.

“They recognize that their ability to hold the Senate after 2020 depends on their political livelihood,” he said.

Still, at a time when polls show voters more open to impeachmen­t, the GOP split over Syria offers a rare point of disagreeme­nt that Democrats may try to exploit given how little both parties are working together on big-ticket issues.

On Monday, Graham and Pelosi spoke to each other about Syria.

“Our first order of business was to agree that we must have a bipartisan, bicameral joint resolution to overturn the president’s dangerous decision in Syria immediatel­y,” Pelosi said of the phone call.

Graham has drafted legislatio­n that would put sanctions on Turkey in response to its moves in Syria.

Over the past five days, fighters for the Islamic State, also known as ISIS, have escaped prisons and at least 130,000 people have been displaced from their homes as Turkish fighters pushed into northern Syria into towns and villages. All while Kurds turned to Russia and Syrian President Bashar Assad – U.S. foes – for help.

“I thought you were going to defeat ISIS, that is why people voted for you. What changed?” Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., who served in the Air Force, wrote on Twitter Monday in a message to Trump. “This is weakness. America is far more honorable than this.”

Conant, the former Rubio aideturned-strategist, warned that the biggest danger Syria poses to Trump isn’t impeachmen­t. It’s the 2020 election.

Many GOP senators who won in 2016 outperform­ed Trump in their states and he’ll need the enthusiasm of Republican candidates running in battlegrou­nd states next year to win, he said.

“This is the worst possible time for Trump to have a major break with Senate Republican­s.” Alex Conant GOP strategist

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