U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., poses an interesting theory that might open up some questions about the relationship between the president of the United States and his top diplomat.
Secretary of State John Kerry delivered an impassioned, emotional speech about the need to make Syria pay dearly for its use of chemical weapons on civilians — and then President Obama decided to ask the Congress for authorization before taking any action.
Rangel thinks Kerry should be “embarrassed” by the sudden switch.
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/319883-rangel-of-course-its-embarassing
I have to agree with Rangel.
The timing of the two events does seem odd and more than a little clumsy. Kerry’s speech has been labeled one of the finest of his public career. Obama, meanwhile, had been talking tough and appeared to have been ready to strike at Syrian dictator Bashar al Assad’s forces. Then he stopped. Did the president flinch? Has he left the secretary of state, to borrow a phrase from the Watergate era, “twisting slowly in the wind”?
We’ll know in short order whether the juxtaposition of these events has damaged one of the Obama administration’s most critical relationships.