President Obama's plan to train and equip "moderate" Syrian rebels has passed Congress, despite misgivings.
Syrian refugees crowd a Turkish border fence on ThursdayThe Senate backed the measure by 73 votes to 22, a day after it was approved by the House of Representatives.
Leaders of both parties are backing Mr Obama's strategy to help Syrian insurgents take on the Islamic State extremists, but the rank and file in each chamber expressed grave reservations.
"Intervention that destabilises the Middle East is a mistake," said Republican Kentucky Senator Rand Paul, a potential 2016 presidential candidate.
"And yet here we are again wading into a civil war."
A jihadist gunman looks at bottles of perfume at a shop in Raqqa, SyriaDemocratic Alaska Senator Mark Begich said he also disagreed with Mr Obama's strategy, adding: "It is time for the Arab countries to...get over their regional differences."
The administration dispatched its top officials to Capitol Hill for a second day to assure lawmakers there would be no US troops fighting in the Middle East.
The Pentagon chief is the latest official to rule out ground forcesDefence Secretary Chuck Hagel told a House panel that Mr Obama "is not going to order American combat ground forces into that area".
Secretary of State John Kerry told another committee the administration appreciated the danger of a "slippery slope".
Focusing lawmakers' minds, the Islamic State paraded their latest hostage on Thursday.
They released a video showing a British journalist, who they said he was their prisoner.
The extremists have already beheaded three Westerners after capturing a third of Syria and Iraq.
A protester is removed as the Defence Secretary testifies before the HouseThe group also took over 21 villages in northern Syria this week, according to the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The House approved the Obama proposal by 273-156 on Wednesday.
Republicans, usually stalwart antagonists of the president, backed the measure by more than double the margin of his war-weary Democratic allies.
The Islamists took 21 Syrian villages this week, sparking a refugee exodusThe plan, which is an amendment to a short-term spending bill, does not include the $500m (£300m) the White House says it needs to arm and train the rebels.
The idea is that US troops will train Syrian rebels at camps in Saudi Arabia, a process that could take a year, say military officials.
Defence officials have said they expect to recruit and train about 5,000 non-extremist rebel fighters.
But lawmakers have expressed doubt this will be enough to take on the Islamic State, who the CIA estimates can muster up to 31,000 fighters.
Mr Obama's strategy is to use American warplanes to help Kurdish peshmerga fighters and national forces in Iraq and the rebels in Syria do the fighting on the ground.
Fears of mission creep were raised two days ago when the nation's top military leader, General Martin Dempsey, raised the possibility of US ground troops eventually fighting in Iraq.
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