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- Charles M. Blow
- David Brooks
- Frank Bruni
- Roger Cohen
- Gail Collins
- Ross Douthat
- Maureen Dowd
- Thomas L. Friedman
- Nicholas Kristof
- Paul Krugman
- Joe Nocera
- Charles M. Blow
- David Brooks
- Frank Bruni
- Roger Cohen
- Gail Collins
- Ross Douthat
- Maureen Dowd
- Thomas L. Friedman
- Nicholas Kristof
- Paul Krugman
- Joe Nocera
President Obama on Friday. The president was harshly criticized for confessing two weeks ago that he did not have a strategy for dealing with the militants in Syria. Credit Doug Mills/The New York Times
WASHINGTON â President Obama will address the nation at 9 p.m. on Wednesday about how the United States plans to confront the threat from the Sunni extremist group, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
In the speech, Mr. Obama will lay out a strategy for âdegrading and ultimately destroying the terrorist group,â Josh Earnest, the White House press secretary, said in a statement.
The decision to schedule the address during prime time, from the state floor of the White House, underscores the gravity of the challenge from ISIS. It comes after an intense internal debate and diplomatic outreach to assemble a coalition to target ISIS.
Mr. Obama plans to meet with Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate on Tuesday afternoon to build Congressional support for his action. On Monday evening, he and Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. invited nine foreign-policy experts to a three-hour dinner to preview his policy.
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Mr. Obama, who was joined by Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., Secretary of State John Kerry, and other senior officials, looked âforward to engaging with this group and hearing their views on a range of national security and foreign policy issues,â the White House said in a statement.
But the purpose of the gathering seemed more for Mr. Obama to give his guests, several of whom are fixtures on television talk shows and op-ed pages, a preview of the plan for confronting the threat from the Sunni militant group the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, a plan he has promised to reveal on Wednesday.
On Tuesday afternoon, the president will meet at the White House with Republican and Democratic leaders of the House and Senate, hoping to build congressional support for what administration officials warn could be a prolonged military campaign against ISIS.
The White House has said little about the details of Mr. Obamaâs speech, which officials said was still being written Monday. But the carefully orchestrated buildup underscored the stakes for a president who was harshly criticized for confessing two weeks ago that he did not have a strategy for dealing with the militants in Syria.
The guest list, which included national security advisers to three former presidents from both parties, represented a full range of views about the risks of returning to Iraq.
Two of the guests â Stephen J. Hadley and Richard N. Haass â worked for the George W. Bush administration and have direct experience with the Iraq war and its chaotic aftermath. Mr. Hadley was national security adviser to Mr. Bush in 2007, when his administration undertook the troop surge in Iraq. Mr. Haass was director of policy planning at the State Department during preparations for the war in 2003.
Now the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, Mr. Haass recently criticized what he views as Mr. Obamaâs overstretched foreign policy. âThere is a growing mismatch between the rhetoric and the policy,â he said. âThe world has proved to be a far more demanding place than it looked to this White House a few years ago.â
Two of the other guests, Samuel R. Berger and Zbigniew Brzezinski, advised Democratic presidents during foreign crises: Mr. Berger, while Bill Clinton was weighing airstrikes in Bosnia and Kosovo; Mr. Brzezinski, while Jimmy Carter was dealing with the Iran hostage crisis.
Mr. Obama also invited three veterans of his administration who were involved in counterterrorism policy: Tom Donilon, a former national security adviser; Michele Flournoy, the former No. 2 official at the Pentagon; and Michael J. Morell, a former deputy C.I.A. director.
Rounding out the table were Strobe Talbott, the president of the Brookings Institution, who served in Mr. Clintonâs State Department, and Jane Harman, a former Democratic congresswoman from California who now runs the Woodrow Wilson Center. Ms. Harman criticized Mr. Obama last week for not making a public statement immediately after the beheading of the second American journalist, Steven J. Sotloff, by an ISIS militant. âI think itâs time for him to say more and do more,â she said on CNN.
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