By Congress. No. They're still waiting to see how the operation goes first. If it goes badly, they're going to be against it. If it goes well, well they were for it from the beginning. They just wanted clarification, but they were always for it.
Yes, and I've been thinking something similar about why Obama has waited so long to make his big speech on this (tonight).
First, he himself may not know what the objective is. Secondly, he got to sit back and watch everybody debate it. He can see what lines of 'objectives' were heavily criticized, and what 'objectives' were better received.
So far we've had the 'Qaddafy must go' objective, the 'fair fight' objective, the 'humanitarian' objective, the 'Arab League asked us' objective.
These have all received substantial criticism/questioning (e.g., why not help in Syria if we help in Libya/where is the line drawn? Etc.)
This weekend Hillary came up with another one: We must help keep the 'Arab Spring' going. This argument assumes that the other countries with uprisings will become democracies (IMO, very optimistic) and that our attacking Qaddafy somehow encourages more of these uprisings. The latter I find potentially problematic. It seems to rest on the notion that others will feel emboldened to rebel, presumably because we will help them against gov forces trying to quell the uprising. We're gonna look pretty bad if people believe they can depend on us, then (as often the case) we fail to show. We'll be open to all kinds of criticism.
Of course, if we
do show up in even more countries to fight as in Libya, I don't it's going to sit well here in the USA.
In any case, we'll know tonight what reason he'll choose (assuming he doesn't go all "Washington doublespeak and vague' on us.)
Fern