By HELENE
COOPER and MARK LANDLERAUG. 26, 2014
The New York Times
WASHINGTON
— The United States has begun to mobilize a broad coalition of allies behind
potential American military action in Syria and is moving toward expanded
airstrikes in northern Iraq, administration officials said on Tuesday.
President
Obama, the officials said, was broadening his campaign against the Sunni
militants of the Islamic State in Iraq
and Syria and nearing a
decision to authorize airstrikes and airdrops of food and water around the
northern Iraqi town of Amerli , home to members
of Iraq ’s
Turkmen minority. The town of 12,000 has been under siege for more than two
months by the militants.
“Rooting
out a cancer like ISIL won’t be easy, and it won’t be quick,” Mr. Obama said in
a speech on Tuesday to the American Legion in Charlotte ,
N.C. , using an alternative name for ISIS . He said that the United States was building a
coalition to “take the fight to these barbaric terrorists,” and that the
militants would be “no match” for a united international community.