In a letter dated Aug. 28, 18 human rights, peace and religious organizations appealed to President Obama to reject military intervention in Syria. They urged the president to “intensify diplomatic efforts to stop the bloodshed.” One of the organizations, Credo Action, has issued an online petition that says in part “President Obama: With civilians being butchered and refugees suffering immensely, it is horrifying to watch the brutal civil war in Syria unfold. But U.S. military intervention is far more likely to make matters worse, not better. The U.S. should not bomb Syria.”

Below is the text of the letter. You can sign the Credo petition by clicking here.

Dear President Obama,

We, the undersigned organizations, are writing to express our grave concerns with your reported plans to intervene militarily in Syria. While we unequivocally condemn any use of chemical weapons along with continued indiscriminate killing of civilians and other violations of international humanitarian law, military strikes are not the answer. Rather than bringing an end to the violence that has already cost more than 100,000 lives, they threaten to widen the vicious civil war in Syria and undermine prospects to de-escalate the conflict and eventually reach a negotiated settlement.

In the course of more than 2 years of war, much of Syria has been destroyed and nearly 2 million people – half of them children – have been forced to flee to neighboring countries. We thank you for the generous humanitarian assistance the US has provided to support the nearly one in three Syrians – 8 million people – in need of aid. But such assistance is not enough.

As the U.S. government itself has recognized, there is no solution to the crisis other than a political one. Instead of pursuing military strikes and arming parties to the conflict, we urge your administration to intensify diplomatic efforts to stop the bloodshed, before Syria is destroyed and the region further destabilized.

Sincerely,

American Friends Service Committee

CREDO Action

Democrats.com

Fellowship of Reconciliation

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Historians Against the War

Just Foreign Policy

Oxfam America

Peace Action

Peace Education Fund

Presbyterian Church, USA

Progressive Democrats of America

RootsAction.org

Shomer Shalom Network for Jewish Nonviolence

United Methodist Church, General Board of Church and Society

USAction

Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)

Women’s Action for New Directions

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