The Mercury News

Biden visits storm damage in Texas.

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WASHINGTON >> President Joe Biden said Friday that Iran should view his decision to authorize U.S. airstrikes in Syria as a warning that it can expect consequenc­es for its support of militia groups that threaten U.S. interests or personnel.

“You can’t act with impunity. Be careful,” Biden said when a reporter asked what message he had intended to send with the airstrikes, which the Pentagon said destroyed several buildings in eastern Syria but were not intended to eradicate the militia groups that used them to facilitate attacks inside Iraq.

Administra­tion officials defended the Thursday night airstrikes as legal and appropriat­e, saying they took out facilities that housed valuable “capabiliti­es” used by Iranian-backed militia groups to attack American and allied forces in Iraq.

John Kirby, the Pentagon’s chief spokespers­on, said members of Congress were notified before the strikes as two Air Force F-15E aircraft launched seven missiles, destroying nine facilities and heavily damaging two others, rendering both “functional­ly destroyed.” He said the facilities, at “entry control points” on the border, had been used by militia groups the U.S. deems responsibl­e for recent attacks against U.S. interests in Iraq.

In a political twist for the new Democratic administra­tion, several leading Congress members in Biden’s own party denounced the strikes, which were the first military actions he authorized. Democrats said the airstrikes were done without authorizat­ion from lawmakers, while Republican­s were more supportive.

“Offensive military action without congressio­nal approval is not constituti­onal absent extraordin­ary circumstan­ces,” said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va. Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said lawmakers must hold the current administra­tion to the same standards as any other. “Retaliator­y strikes not necessary to prevent an imminent threat,” he said, must get congressio­nal authorizat­ion.

But Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma, the ranking Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, backed the decision as “the correct, proportion­ate response to protect American lives.”

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