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President Donald Trump's sudden decision to order airstrikes against the Syrian government was an overnight evolution for a president who long warned against deeper American involvement in one of the world's most stubbornly violent conflicts.
As he soberly announced the assault on Thursday night, Trump argued that the move was still within the framework of his "America First" foreign policy agenda.
Yet Trump's actions left no doubt that – at least in this instance – his view of America's role in the world has been altered.
Trump is hardly the first president to reconsider his views after assuming the responsibility of controlling the world's most powerful military. But with a major shift coming just 77 days into his presidency, his may be one of the fastest transformations in recent memory.
He mourned the “beautiful babies” who were among the dozens killed by the deadly gases and accused Syrian President Bashar Assad of having “choked” his own citizens.
His sentiment – the United States' "responsibility to protect" – echoed those often used by some of Trump's ardent detractors. That doctrine, espoused most notably by President Barack Obama's former ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power, holds that world powers have an obligation to defend civilians from conflict, particularly from their own governments.
Trump campaigned on a wholly different vision for the nation's foreign policy, one that bordered on isolationism and centered on recalibrating trade deals with international partners.
Yet in the short term, Trump's decision to plunge the US deeper into the Syria conflict won him plaudits from his own party. Even some Democrats were muted in their response, a signal of how frustration with US inaction in Syria has permeated both parties.
Trump's decision was all the more remarkable for his strident public opposition to launching a strike on Syria when the decision weighed on his predecessor.
In September 2013, Trump repeatedly took to Twitter to urge Obama not to attack Syria after another chemical weapons attack. He wrote:
He followed two days later with another tweet declaring, "There is no upside and tremendous downside" to an attack.
Obama nearly ordered strikes, but ultimately pulled back. He called for a vote in Congress that never came, then rallied behind a Russian-backed plan to remove Syria's chemical weapons stockpiles – an agreement that appeared to have failed, given this most recent attack.
Though Trump castigated Obama for appearing weak and indecisive, he maintained as a candidate that Syria was a morass the US should avoid.
The long-term implications of Trump's sudden policy shift are deeply uncertain. But his supporters seemed willing to accept his decision.
"President Trump has tonight more than earned a second or third look from a lot of doubters – both at home and abroad," said Kevin Kellems, a Republican strategist who briefly worked on Trump's campaign and also advised former Vice President Dick Cheney.
Kellems singled out in particular "the speed and precision of the decision to strike".
In addition to the blunt message sent to Assad, the strikes are also a signal to Russia and Iran, Syria's main benefactors, as well as China, which the US believes isn't doing enough to stop North Korea's nuclear pursuits.
Trump ordered the attack while hosting Chinese President Xi Jinping at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida amid an ongoing struggle between Washington and Beijing over how to rein in Pyongyang's nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes.
(Julie Pace is an AP White House Correspondent. This article has been published in an arrangement with AP.)
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