The White House said Obama will hold the meeting of his National Security Council and give remarks, just days after he gave an Oval Office primetime address on the terror threat that received a mixed response from Americans.
No major policy changes are expected, but Obama will again try to convince a skeptical public that his administration is charting the correct course in tackling the Islamic State group.
Even before an Islamist attack in San Bernardino, California killed 14 people, polls showed that more than 60 percent of Americans disapprove of the way Obama is handling the Islamic State and the broader terror threat.
Instead, he has advocated a multipronged strategy of airstrikes, special forces operations, financial sanctions and diplomacy aimed at making Syria less chaotic.
"You're going to receive an update from the president's national security team on the campaign to degrade and destroy that terrorist organization," said White house spokesman Josh Earnest, previewing Obama's visit.
"The president has tasked his team with constantly assessing the performance of different aspects of our strategy."
While Obama was praised for trying to tamp down anti-Muslim rhetoric in his Oval Office address, his overall strategy has faced withering criticism, most shrilly from Republicans trying to replace him in the White House.
Obama's address "outlined no new tactics, no new military deployments, no innovative ways to speed the enemy's destruction," said Robert Satloff, director of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a think tank.
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