CBS NEWS
President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shown during a welcoming ceremony upon Obama's arrival at Ben Gurion airport near Tel Aviv on Wednesday.
(CBS NEWS) -- President Barack Obama plunged into the turbulent Middle East on a
mission aimed primarily at assuring America's top ally in the region and
its friends back home that it will not be forsaken amid bitter domestic
political squabbles and budget crises in Washington.
But
Mr. Obama's trip has been overshadowed by claims that chemical weapons
have been used in neighboring Syria, which has been mired in a civil war
for more than two years - a development that, if true, could draw the
U.S. deeper into the conflict, reports CBS News chief White House
correspondent Major Garrett.
The Assad regime and Syrian rebels traded accusations Tuesday that
chemical weapons were used in the northern city of Aleppo - claims that
could not be backed up by definitive evidence. The White House is
sifting through conflicting data and has not reached a conclusion, but
Rep. Mike Rogers, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said
on "CBS This Morning" Wednesday that there was a "high probability" a
chemical agent was deployed.
Rogers said the U.S. knows
"there has been some forensic evidence that at least small quantities"
of chemical agents used, but cited no concrete evidence other than the
regime's pattern of escalating attacks, including the firing of Scud
missiles into opposition-controlled areas.
President Barack Obama has declared that the use, deployment or transfer of the weapons would be a "red line" for possible military intervention by the U.S. in the Syrian conflict.
Rogers
said "the time to act. Don't wait until we have 5,000 dead," though he
didn't advocate the use of American ground troops, saying "we have lots
of capabilities in the United States arsenal, where it wouldn't require
boots on the ground ... to remove their capability of using these
particular weapons."
A senior Israeli official also said Wednesday that it is "apparently
clear" that chemical weapons were recently used in Syria, and that the
alleged attack will be a main topic of conversation with Mr. Obama.
Yuval
Steinitz, the newly appointed minister of intelligence and strategic
affairs, did not say how he came to the conclusion that the weapons were
used. He would not comment on whether it was Assad forces or the rebels
that used them, saying it was not important.
Israel has
repeatedly expressed concern that Syria's chemical arsenal could fall
into the hands of anti-Israel militants like Lebanon's Hezbollah, an
Assad ally, or an al Qaeda-linked group fighting with the rebels.
Even as American and Israeli officials suggested the chemical weapons
had been used, some experts cast doubt on the claims. Hamish de
Bretton-Gordon, a chemical weapons expert and chief operating officer of
British firm SecureBio, told CBSNews.com Tuesday that based on video he
had seen of victims in Aleppo hospitals, the symptoms were "not really
those that are identified with nerve agents or mustard gas, which are
the ones most likely to be used" inside Syria.
Bretton-Gordon
noted that none of the people in the hospitals treating the attack
victims were wearing protective clothing. If a chemical agent had been
dispersed, he said, anybody coming into contact with the victims would
also be affected; "doctors treating them would be overcome."
A
U.S. official, speaking anonymously to the Associated Press Tuesday,
also said there was no evidence of a chemical attack. Also expressing
doubts was the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons,
which reported no independent information of chemical weapons use.
Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, Mr. Obama joked to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu that he was "getting away from Congress."
Israeli
President Shimon Peres welcomed Obama, declaring that "a world without
America's leadership, without her moral voice, would be a darker world. A
world without your friendship, would invite aggression against Israel."
Obama called the U.S. Israel's "strongest ally and your greatest friend."
In
a veiled reference to tensions and regime changes in the region, he
added: "The winds of change bring both promise and peril."
After an arrival ceremony at the airport, Mr. Obama headed to Jerusalem for meetings with Israeli leaders.
Mr.
Obama arrived to face an Israeli leadership and public anxious to hear
the president affirm America's commitment to the security of the Jewish
state while standing on their soil.
Mr. Obama sparred
frequently with Netanyahu over the Palestinian peace process during his
first term. And despite public assurances from both sides that relations
otherwise remained solid, the president endured four years of criticism
from pro-Israel advocates and conservatives in the U.S. and numerous
commentators in Israel for not doing enough to back the Mideast's only
stable democracy in the face of growing threats to its existence.
So
even though U.S. officials have set expectations low and previewed no
significant policy announcements, there is a clear metric to measure the
success of Mr. Obama's three-day stay in Israel and the West Bank: how
much he is able to reverse the perception that his administration is not
fully committed to Israel's security.
The centerpiece of
the first leg of the trip will be a speech to Israeli university
students on Thursday, during which Mr. Obama is expected to renew U.S.
assurances to stand by Israel as it seeks to counter threats from Iran
and protect its people in the midst of civil war in neighboring Syria,
where new questions were raised Tuesday about the Assad regime's
possible use of chemical weapons.
Before he left Ben
Gurion airport for the 45-minute helicopter flight to Jerusalem, Mr.
Obama stopped to view an Iron Dome battery, part of the missile defense
system that the United States has poured hundreds of millions dollars
into developing. Israeli officials credit Iron Dome with significantly
reducing the impact of rockets fired into its territory from militants
in the Gaza Strip and Lebanon and don't want to see U.S. funding cut due
to budget constraints.
Once in Jerusalem, a potent
religious symbol as well as one of the main obstacles to an
Israeli-Palestinian peace deal, Mr. Obama will make several cultural
stops - to see some of the ancient Dead Sea Scrolls and pay tribute to
the founder of modern Zionism - intended to show his appreciation for
the Jewish people's millennia-old connection to the land that is now
Israel as well as the horrors of the Holocaust. He will also visit the
Church of Nativity, which is revered throughout Christiandom as the site
where Jesus was born.
Mr. Obama will make an almost
perfunctory visit to the cash-strapped Palestinian Authority's
headquarters in the West Bank, where he will meet embattled Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas to assure him that an independent Palestinian
state remains a U.S. foreign policy and national security priority.
Despite not coming with any new plan to get the stalled peace process
back on track, Mr. Obama plans to make clear that his administration
intends to keep trying to get talks relaunched.
Preventing
Iran from developing a nuclear weapon and the Syrian crisis from
spilling over into the broader region are top priorities of Israel and
the United States, although they have differed in the past on precisely
how to achieve both ends.
Iran, in particular, has been a
vexing issue, as Iranian leaders continue to defy pressure from the
U.S. and other world powers to prove that its nuclear program is
peaceful and not, as many suspect, cover for atomic weapons
developments.
Israel repeatedly has threatened to take
military action should Iran appear to be on the verge of obtaining a
bomb. The U.S. has pushed for more time to allow diplomacy and economic
penalties to run their course, though Obama insists military action is
an option.
But there are differences over a timeline for
possible military action. Netanyahu, in a speech to the United Nations
in September, said Iran was about six months away from being able to
build a bomb. Obama said last week that the U.S. thinks it would take
"over a year or so for Iran to actually develop a nuclear weapon."
Mr.
Obama will close out his Mideast trip with a 24-hour stop in Jordan, an
important U.S. ally, where his focus will be on the violence in Syria.
More than 450,000 Syrians have fled to Jordan, crowding refugee camps
and overwhelming aid organizations.
In his talks with
Jordan's King Abdullah, Mr. Obama also will try to shore up the
country's fledgling attempts to liberalize its government and stave off
an Arab Spring-style movement similar to the ones that have taken down
leaders elsewhere in the region.