The
United States could not have stopped the humanitarian crisis in Syria with
military strikes, President Barack Obama said in a television interview airing
on Friday, and said U.S. troops had reached their limits after long wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
Obama was asked in an interview with CBS
Evening News anchor Scott Pelley whether he regretted not applying U.S. force
in Syria, where the three-year civil war has killed more than 140,000 people
and displaced millions.
"It is, I think, a false notion that
somehow we were in a position to, through a few selective strikes, prevent the
kind of hardship that we've seen in Syria," Obama said.
"It's not that it's not worth it. It's
after a decade of war, you know, the United States has limits," he said.
Obama said the United States would have a hard
time committing to putting troops on the ground in Syria, a commitment he said
could have lasted "perhaps another decade."
American troops have been involved in a
decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"And it's not clear whether the
outcome in fact would have turned out significantly better," Obama said.
The interview was recorded before Obama
flew to Saudi Arabia where he discussed the Syrian conflict with Saudi king
Abdullah. Reuters
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