
Missile strike on Syria
CBS News national security correspondent David Martin and former deputy director of the CIA Michael Morell join CBSN to discuss President Trump's decision to launch a missile strike against Syria.
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CBS News national security correspondent David Martin and former deputy director of the CIA Michael Morell join CBSN to discuss President Trump's decision to launch a missile strike against Syria.
President Trump ordered a missile strike against Syria on Thursday in response to a deadly chemical attack in the country earlier this week. Jessica Ashooh, deputy director of the Middle East Strategy Task Force at the Atlantic Council, joins CBSN to discuss the military action in Syria.
In response to the chemical attack against Syrian civilians, President Trump ordered the launching of more than 50 Tomahawk missiles targeting a government airfield in Syria. Charles Lister, a senior fellow and resident scholar at the Middle East institute, joins CBSN to discuss.
U.S. warships in the Mediterranean launched cruise missiles against a government airfield in Syria Thursday night in response to a chemical attack that left dozens of civilians dead. CBS News' David Martin has more from the Pentagon
U.S. forces launched a cruise missile strike on a Syrian government airfield Thursday night in response to the chemical attack that left dozens of civilians dead. CBS News' David Martin at the Pentagon has more in this CBS News Special Report.
Just last week the White House said Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad could remain in power. Now, days after the chemical weapons attack, the administration is suggesting Assad should be removed. CBS News' Margaret Brennan joins CBSN from Palm Beach, Florida where President Trump is hosting the president of China.
The U.S. appeared ready to launch cruise missiles from the Mediterranean Thursday night against the Syrian regime in response to a suspected chemical attack that killed scores of civilians. David Martin has more.
Last week, the Trump administration reversed U.S. policy and said the Syrian dictator Bashar Assad did not have to leave power. The nerve gas attack came five days later, and now, the administration reversed its policy again. Margaret Brennan reports.
The Trump administration signaled that it's considering a military response to Syria's chemical attack that left dozens of civilians dead. As Holly Williams reports from southern Turkey, while the Syrian regime denies responsibility, the evidence continues to mount against it.
Ash Carter served for nearly two years as President Obama's secretary of defense. Carter, who was recently named director of the Belfer Center at the Harvard Kennedy School, joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss Russia "fueling" the Syrian civil war and nuclear threat from North Korea.
U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley suggests the Trump administration will take action if the international community fails to respond to the apparent chemical attack in Syria. Holding up photos of victims, Haley blamed Russia for protecting the Assad government. Holly Williams reports from along the Turkey-Syria border.
President Trump said Wednesday the chemical weapons attack in Syria that killed nearly 100 people changed his view on the country's six-year civil war and the dictatorship of Bashar al-Assad. Major Garrett reports.
President Trump said the use of apparent use of chemical weapons on Syrian citizens, including children, crossed "a lot of lines." Molly Hooper of The Hill and Franco Ordoñez of McClatchy DC join "Red & Blue" to discuss.
U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley condemned the apparent chemical attack in Syria on Wednesday while President Trump called it an "affront to humanity." Politico senior foreign affairs correspondent Michael Crowley joins "Red & Blue" to break down the administration's change in tone toward Syria, and what we can expect from the Chinese president's visit to Mar-a-Lago on Thursday.
President Trump on Wednesday said the apparent chemical attack in Syria "crossed a lot of lines for me." Calling the attack "unacceptable," Trump said it took the conflict in Syria "to a whole different level." CBSN political contributor and TIME political reporter Zeke Miller discusses the evolution of Trump's stance on Syria.
President Trump called an apparent nerve gas attack on Syrians an "affront to humanity" at a press conference with the king of Jordan; Kristin Vines, 56, is a four-time USA fencing champion who still competes and coaches her Baylor school team in Tennessee.
President Trump called an apparent nerve gas attack on Syrians an "affront to humanity" at a press conference with the king of Jordan. But Mr. Trump declined to say how the U.S. would respond and touted his ability to be "flexible." Major Garrett has more.
The U.S. has tried diplomacy with Syria and Russia to end the suffering of civilians in the Syrian civil war, but none of it has worked. CBS News correspondent Holly Williams has been covering the conflict for years and says that the other options, like military intervention, are not ideal either.
President Trump met with Jordan's King Abdullah II Wednesday, a day after a suspected chemical attack in Syria. Matt Viser, deputy Washington bureau chief for the Boston Globe, joins CBSN to discuss what the president could be planning regarding the ongoing brutal war in Syria.
At a joint news conference with King Abdullah of Jordan at the White House, President Trump called yesterday's Syrian chemical attack "an affront to humanity." Trump also said, "We will destroy ISIS and we will protect civilization." See the full CBS News Special Report on the news conference.
During a joint news conference with Jordan's King Abdullah II Wednesday, President Trump called the attack in Syria "an affront to humanity." He didn't, however, say exactly what he'll do, or that Syrian President Bashar Assad should step down, CBS News' Margaret Brennan reports.
A suspected chemical weapons attack has killed dozens in northern Syria. CBS News' Holly Williams reports on the investigation into who's responsible.
In what may be the latest crime against humanity in the ongoing Syrian civil war, at least 58 civilians were killed in an apparent nerve gas attack, a weapon banned by the civilized world; The Vatican Museum is one of the busiest tourist sites on Earth, but after hours, one man has much of it to himself
After making a statement that the attacks on Syria were "reprehensible" and "heinous," President Trump's White House put blame on the Obama administration for not following through on threatened airstrikes in 2013. At the time, Mr. Trump supported Mr. Obama's decision. Margaret Brennan reports.
In what may be the latest crime against humanity in the ongoing Syrian civil war, at least 58 civilians were killed in an apparent nerve gas attack, a weapon banned by the civilized world. Holly Williams has more.
President Trump said on Saturday he will send troops to Portland, Oregon, as his deployments expand to more cities across the U.S.
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Among the dead were those hit by two strikes in the Nuseirat refugee cam, including women and children, according to staff at al-Awda Hospital.
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