[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 102 (Wednesday, September 6, 2000)]
[House]
[Page H7248]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL MISSILE DEFENSE
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Tancredo). Under a previous order of the
House, the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr. Weldon) is recognized for 5
minutes.
Mr. WELDON of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, this past Friday, President
Clinton gave a major foreign policy speech at Georgetown University
announcing his decision not to move forward with the plan to deploy a
national missile defense. It took the President 7 years and 8 months of
his administration to finally make a speech about missile defense. He
did not make a speech after 26 young Americans came home in body bags
because we could not defend against a low complexity Scud missile.
He did not make a speech after in January of 1995 the Russians almost
responded with an attack on the U.S. because they misread a Norwegian
rocket launch, an attack that we could not defend against; and he did
not make a speech 2 years ago after the North Koreans test-fired their
three-stage missile which the CIA now claims can hit the U.S. directly.
But he did make a speech this past Friday.
I was not surprised, because his position has been consistent with
both he and Al Gore for the past 8 years. In fact, Mr. Speaker, I could
respect the President if he would have come out publicly and simply
said, ``I disagree with the Congress and the American people. I don't
support missile defense and will not during my administration move
forward.'' That is what he has done for 8 years. In fact, the day that
my bill came up on the House floor for a vote just a year ago he wrote
a letter to every Member of the House opposing the bill, saying please
vote against it. Yet 103 Democrats joined 215 Republicans in giving a
veto-proof margin to move this country forward. So the President did
what he does so frequently. He used a political game and pretended that
he really was for missile defense.
Mr. Speaker, again I could respect him if he simply said that he
opposed missile defense as he did in that letter to every Member a year
ago in March. But, instead, the President of the United States in his
speech before Georgetown University publicized around the world last
Friday told half-truths, misrepresented factual information and, Mr.
Speaker, sadly he just downright lied.
Mr. Speaker, beginning tomorrow, at a speech before the National
Defense University, I will respond to the President factually, I will
respond to his specific words, and I will show the American people how
this President and this Vice President have chosen to ignore the
reality of the threats that are emerging. I will focus on four key
areas the President focused on: The emergence of the threat, the arms
control record of this administration, the Russian and world response
to missile defense, and the technology readiness, because those are the
issues the President spoke to, and I will take apart word by word
taking the opportunity to define ``is'' as the President defines
``is,'' and I will show the American people that again this President
and this Vice President just do not get it.
This Congress voted overwhelmingly with veto-proof margins in the
House and the Senate to move forward. And this President, in a typical
election-year maneuver the Friday before Labor Day, before he was to
travel to the U.N. this week, chose to give the American people bad
information.
The American people deserve to hear the other side. Beginning
tomorrow, I will give the other side and through a series of special
orders over the next several months will outline for the American
people the factual response to President Clinton's falsehoods that he
outlined at Georgetown this past Friday.
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