Without offering specifics as to the time or nature of any planned remarks, press secretary
his decision to involve U.S. forces in the Libyan campaign.
“I think that the American people do expect and will
get from this president what they have gotten in the past, which is a
very clear explanation of the decisions he makes when he makes the
significant decision to engage in military action,” Carney said at his
afternoon briefing.
When Obama launched Operation Odyssey Dawn, it was from
Though he spoke broadly of U.S. goals before his departure and took
questions on the operation during his trip, he has yet to deliver the
kind of address presidents have typically made when launching military
strikes.
Tuesday, the president is set to visit
On Friday afternoon, Obama was speaking by phone with a group of senior lawmakers. The president returned to
House Speaker
to participate in Friday’s conference call, said that Obama “left some
fundamental questions about our engagement unanswered.”
Carney defended the president’s decision to take action when he did.
“Had he waited for
had he … taken more time to debate and consult on this issue, I think
there’s very little doubt that Benghazi would have fallen and that many
people would have died,” he said.
Asked at the briefing about a Gallup poll showing
only lukewarm support for the operation, Carney said it was
understandable given that Americans had “a lot on their mind and a lot
on their plate.”
“It’s a lot for anybody to process,” he said. “We’re confident that the president’s decision is the right one.”
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