United States .
Politicians Reactions from members of Congress were largely supportive but not uniform by political party.
Paul Ryan (R–WI), the
speaker of the United States House of Representatives, said the strike was "appropriate and just". House Majority Leader
Kevin McCarthy (R–CA) said, "Assad has made his disregard for innocent human life and long-standing norms against chemical weapons use crystal clear. Tonight's strikes show these evil actions carry consequences." House minority leader
Nancy Pelosi (D–CA) said, "Tonight's strike in Syria appears to be a proportional response to the regime's use of chemical weapons." Senate majority leader
Mitch McConnell (R–KY) said the strike was "perfectly executed and for the right purpose". Senate minority leader
Chuck Schumer (D–NY) said, "Making sure Assad knows that when he commits such despicable atrocities he will pay a price is the right thing to do." Senator
Bill Nelson (D–FL) expressed his support, and said, "I hope this teaches Assad not to use chemical weapons again." Senator
Marco Rubio (R–FL) called it an "important decisive step". Quoting the president's statement, Senator
Orrin Hatch (R–UT)
tweeted, "'No child of God should ever suffer such horror.' Amen." In a joint statement, Senators
John McCain (R–AZ) and
Lindsey Graham (R–SC) said, "Unlike the previous administration, President Trump confronted a pivotal moment in Syria and took action. For that, he deserves the support of the American people." Their sentiment was shared by fellow Senators
Bob Corker (R–TN),
Tom Cotton (R–AR),
Joni Ernst (R–IA),
Cory Gardner (R–CO),
David Perdue (R–GA),
Ben Sasse (R–NE), and
Thom Tillis (R–NC). Other lawmakers criticized the President's actions, or urged caution. Representative
Adam Schiff (D–CA), the Ranking Member of the
House Intelligence Committee, was informed of the strike by
Dan Coats, the
director of national intelligence, as it was happening. He urged the administration "not to make this a military effort to
change the regime". In a joint statement, Representatives and
Iraq War veterans
Seth Moulton (D–MA) and
Steve Russell (R–OK) said, "We cannot stand by in silence as dictators murder children with chemical weapons, but military action without clear goals and objectives gets us nowhere." Senator
Chris Coons (D–DE) said he was "gravely concerned that the United States is engaging further militarily in Syria without a well-thought-out, comprehensive plan". Representative
Ted Lieu (D–CA) and Senator
Tim Kaine (D–VA) called the strike unconstitutional, Representative
Tulsi Gabbard (D–HI) gave a more critical message, and said, "This escalation is short-sighted and will lead to the death of more civilians, more refugees, the strengthening of
al-Qaeda and other terrorists, and a possible
nuclear war between the United States and Russia." Other lawmakers expressing criticism included Senators
Michael Bennet (D–CO),
Ben Cardin (D–MD),
Ted Cruz (R–TX),
Dick Durbin (D–IL),
Ed Markey (D–MA),
Jeff Merkley (D–OR),
Elizabeth Warren (D–MA), and Representatives
Joaquín Castro (D–TX) and
Steny Hoyer (D–MD). Senator
Rand Paul (R–KY) tweeted, "While we all condemn the atrocities in Syria, the United States was not attacked." Representatives
Justin Amash (R–MI) said, "Airstrikes are an act of war. Atrocities in Syria cannot justify a departure from Constitution, which vests in Congress the power to commence war", and
Thomas Massie (R–KY) called it a "big mistake".
Public segment that discusses the attacks with members of the public. Major U.S. media outlets, such as
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
MSNBC and
CNN, were all generally supportive of the administration's decision to use airstrikes against Syria;
Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting, a progressive
watchdog group, claimed that out of the 47 most-read American newspapers which published editorials about the airstrike, 39 expressed varyingly favorable opinions of it, seven were more ambiguous in tone, and only one (the
Houston Chronicle) was explicitly negative. to protest the bombings. A poll conducted by
The Washington Post and
ABC News reported that a "bare majority" of Americans supported the missile strikes and a similarly narrow majority opposed any further military action against the Syrian government. A poll conducted by
The Huffington Post and
YouGov reported that around 51% of Americans supported the decision, and slightly more than one-third opposed both the decision and any further military action, with 45% unsure regarding future action. A poll conducted by
CBS News reported that a small majority (nearly 6/10) supported the attack, but the appearance of consensus ends regarding future action. A poll conducted by
Politico and
Morning Consult reported that 66% supported the strikes, which includes 35% who strongly support and 31% who somewhat support them. Some right-wing populist commentators criticized Trump's reversal of policy towards war in Syria and the Middle East.
Ann Coulter pointed out that Trump "campaigned on not getting involved in Mideast" and this was one of the reasons many voted for him.
Syria and allies A joint command center of Russian and Iranian military in Syria, who support the Syrian government, said the strike crossed "red lines" and threatened to "respond with force" to "US aggression".
Syria Syrian
state media condemned the strike, calling it an "act of aggression", and claiming it caused unspecified losses. The
Syrian Army said that its response will be to continue to "crush terrorism" and restore "peace and security to all Syrians". The Governor of Homs, Talal Barazi, said that the strike proves that the United States is supporting terrorism within Syria. Barazi told the
Syrian News Channel that "they are not surprised today to see the supporting parties interfering directly after the failure of terrorists in targeting Syria". The spokesperson for Syrian president
Bashar al-Assad called the missile strikes "unjust and arrogant aggression", and an "outrageous act", and that the attack "does not change the deep policies" of the Syrian government. The Syrian Ambassador
Bashar Jaafari at the UN Security Council session stated that "this act makes America a partner of
ISIL,
Al-Nusra and other terrorist groups", and it was a violation of the U.N. Charter. Najib Ghadbian, a representative of the
National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, welcomed the strikes: "They are first good steps but we would like them to be part of a bigger strategy that would put an end to the mass killing, an end to impunity and eventually we hope that they will lead to a kind of a political transition [in Syria]." The pro-Turkish
Kurdish National Council welcomed the missile strikes in Syria. "All
Syrian people, including
the Kurds, are happy and welcoming such an air campaign by the United States", a leader in the Kurdish Unity Party, part of the KNC, stated.
Salih Muslim Muhammad, co-leader of the
Democratic Union Party, stated that the attack "must yield positive results since the parties who did not believe in a political solution" will "reconsider" and "see that there is no military solution", and the US was "forced" to execute the attack. The
PYD "hoped" that the US will not only attack the Syrian government, but "other parties have also used it, in
Sheikh Maqsood, in
Rojava, and
Raqqa".
Russia The
Russian President's spokesperson said the U.S. strike was "an act of aggression against a sovereign country violating the norms of international law under a trumped-up pretext", which "substantially impair[ed]"
Russia–United States relations. The Russian Government also alleged that the strike was an attempt to distract the world from
civilian casualties in Iraq (an apparent reference to
U.S. airstrike in Mosul that killed more than 200). The Russian foreign ministry denounced the strike as being based on false intelligence and against international law, suspended the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Prevention of Flight Safety Incidents that had been signed with the U.S., and called an emergency meeting of the
United Nations Security Council. Russian foreign minister
Sergey Lavrov compared the strike to the
2003 invasion of Iraq. Russian prime minister Dimitry Medvedev said the attack had placed the U.S. on the cusp of warfare with Russia. Russia has sent the frigate
Admiral Grigorovich to the east Mediterranean in response, and warned that the US strike could have "extremely serious" consequences.
Iran Iran's
president Hassan Rouhani condemned the U.S. military strike, saying Trump had claimed that "he wanted to fight terrorism, but today, all terrorists in Syria are celebrating the U.S. attack". According to Iranian foreign minister
Mohammad Javad Zarif's tweet, "Not even two decades after
9/11, U.S. military fighting on same side as al-Qaida & ISIS in Yemen & Syria. Time to stop
hype and
cover-ups." He described U.S. concerns regarding chemical attacks as hypocritical, inasmuch as the United States
had supported Iraqi forces under
Saddam Hussein as they
massively used chemical weapons during the
Iran–Iraq War. During Friday prayers in
Tehran, worshipers protesting the strike chanted "
Death to America" and "Death to Al Saud" – referring to the
Saudi royal family. Ayatollah
Mohammad Emami Kashani, who led the Friday prayers, called the United States "crazy" and blasted its "crimes". Ayatollah
Kashani said that the Americans "gave chemical weapons and substances to the terrorists, while creating terrorists all over the world". According to an analyst writing for
HuffPost, the
2017 Deir ez-Zor missile strike by Iran suggests that the country has shifted its three decades-long policy of testing, but not using missiles, as a reaction to Donald Trump's escalation in the Middle East, including "needless increase" in America's military involvement in the Syrian proxy war.
International The governments of Albania, Australia, Bahrain, Bulgaria, Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom generally supported the strike, some calling it a just response and strong message against the use of chemical weapons. The
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the
European Union have also expressed support for the attack. During the 10 April
European Union summit in
Madrid, the leaders of southern EU nations (Cyprus, France, Greece, Italy, Malta, Portugal, Spain) said that a US missile strike on a Syrian airbase in retaliation for a suspected chemical attack was "understandable". Luxembourg's foreign minister,
Jean Asselborn, noted that the U.S. and Trump's change in policy toward Assad government was surprising, and considered an international diplomatic effort as a solution. Slovakia and Netherlands said they understood why the strike was carried out, but that it is important to de-escalate the situation as soon as possible. Finland stressed the role of the UN Security Council to work for a ceasefire and political negotiations to achieve sustainable peace. Austria also called for de-escalation of the situation and consider there can be only a political and not military solution for the conflict in Syria. The government of
Cyprus believes the strike is not beyond international law if it concerns a serious violation of humanitarian law. The Chinese, Greek, and Swedish governments offered neutral responses to the attack while the Indonesian government expressed concern over the attack. Trump told
Xi Jinping,
China's
paramount leader and his guest at
Mar-a-Lago, that he had ordered the attack; the missiles were near their targets as the Chinese leader left the resort. Xi told Trump that he understood the need of a military operation to respond when children were killed, according to
Rex Tillerson. The Egyptian foreign ministry called on the United States and Russia to "contain the conflict" and reach a comprehensive and final resolution to the crisis, as did
Hungarian Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó who said that the civil war "cannot be resolved without an American-Russian accord" and
Colombian President and
2016 Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Juan Manuel Santos who called for a political solution to the conflict in Syria and dialogue between the United States and Russia to avoid escalating the already complex situation. The government of Switzerland has urged the international community to tackle the escalating Syrian crisis through diplomatic means rather than military confrontation. Taoiseach
Enda Kenny of
Ireland has described the strike as a "matter of grave concern" The governments of Belarus, Brazil, Bolivia, Russia and Venezuela criticized the strikes, with Bolivia describing the actions as a violation of international law and Iran arguing that the strike would strengthen terrorists and complicate the war. while Venezuela described the attack as a violation of Syria's sovereignty. Brazilian Minister of Foreign Affairs
Aloysio Nunes Ferreira condemned the “unilateral use of force” by the United States without authorization from the United Nations. North Korea said that the strikes were an unforgivable act of aggression and that the strikes demonstrate why the country is entitled to
its nuclear weapons program. The U.N. Secretary-General
António Guterres appealed "for restraint to avoid any acts that could deepen the suffering of the Syrian people", and that "there is no other way to solve the conflict than through a political solution". ==See also==