[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 169 (Saturday, December 18, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S10696-S10698]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING AMBASSADOR RICHARD HOLBROOKE
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the
Senate proceed to the immediate consideration of H. Con. Res. 335 just
received from the House and at the desk.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The bill clerk read as follows:
A concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 335) honoring the
exceptional achievements of Ambassador Richard Holbrooke and
recognizing the significant contributions he has made to
United States national security, humanitarian causes, and
peaceful resolutions of international conflict.
There being no objection, the Senate proceeded to consider the
concurrent resolution.
Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, today the Senate has been asked to concur
with our colleagues in the House and approve a resolution honoring our
friend and a great public servant, Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, who
passed away on Monday.
We remember Richard not just as one of America's most distinguished
and accomplished statesmen, but as a man who--from Vietnam to his last
mission in Afghanistan--really was a warrior for peace. It is fitting
that we honor him by approving this resolution.
Richard was an incredible combination of the best qualities of the
human spirit--a serious thinker who embraced relentless action; a
tough-as-nails negotiator who commanded an enormous and infectious
sense of humor; and perhaps above all, a diplomat who knew firsthand
just how difficult and frustrating engagement could be, but in his
life's legacy reminded all of us just how much engagement could
accomplish.
Richard's passing is almost incomprehensible, not just because it was
so sudden, but because I cannot imagine Richard Holbrooke in anything
but a state of perpetual motion. He was always working. Always hard-
charging in the best sense of the word--he had an immense presence--and
a brilliance matched only by his perseverance and
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his passion. He once complained that the bureaucracy in Washington all
too often saw suffering around the world as an abstraction. He took
Hannah Arendt's famous phrase and flipped it around, saying that
sometimes our biggest battles were against the ``evils of banality.''
Well, Richard waged--and won--his share of battles against banality
and inertia. He was always a man on a mission, the toughest mission,
and that mission was waging peace through never-quit diplomacy--and
Richard's life's work saved more lives in more places than we can
measure. He simply got up every day knowing that--even in difficult
circumstances where history's verdict is yet to be handed down--every
ounce of energy and every drop of sweat held the promise of making
things better for people.
Yes, Richard had an outsized personality, and it was one that he
himself could joke about, even relish. He earned the nickname ``The
Bulldozer'' for a reason. But Richard did not push people away. He drew
people to him. He was incredibly appreciative of those who worked with
him and was unfailingly loyal to them. I remember last January, when
Richard came to the Foreign Relations Committee to testify on the war
in Afghanistan, he stopped the hearing to introduce his top staff--some
16 people. More than just colleagues, they were his partners. He knew
their families and he knew the names of their children. At the State
Department he didn't just create an office for Afghanistan and
Pakistan, he built a family.
His staff returned his affection and loyalty many times over. Foggy
Bottom is filled with men and women inspired and mentored by Richard.
Ever since Richard fell ill last Friday morning, dozens of friends and
family and staff gathered in the lobby of George Washington Hospital to
show their support and wait for news of his condition. When I stopped
by on Sunday night, I couldn't help but be moved by the love and the
concern. And when news of his passing spread, people began
spontaneously gathering at the hospital. And then--something that
Richard would have understood and appreciated--they went out together
and shared stories about him.
It was impossible to know Richard and not come away with ``Holbrooke
stories.'' Certainly I have my share. Our public careers were
intertwined in so many ways, from Vietnam to my Presidential campaign
to the conflict in Afghanistan. There were long conference calls,
impromptu policy debates when we found ourselves on the same shuttle to
LaGuardia, stories shared about our children and lessons learned about
being modern Dads, and wonderful wine-filled dinners where we came up
with brilliant plans for peace that didn't always seem so brilliant--if
they were remembered at all--in the light of day. Richard always made
it fun because it is a pleasure to be in the company of someone who
loved the job they were doing for the country they loved. And make no
mistake--just shy of 70, with a back-breaking schedule--Richard
Holbrooke loved what he was doing.
And so, wherever chaos and violence threatened American interests and
human lives for nearly a half century, wherever there was a need for
courage and insight, Richard Holbrooke showed up for duty. He spent his
formative years as a young Foreign Service officer in Vietnam, where he
worked in the Mekong Delta and then on the staffs of two American
ambassadors, Maxwell Taylor and Henry Cabot Lodge. Given the storied
expanse of his career, people sometimes forget that Richard wrote a
volume of the ``Pentagon Papers,'' the seminal work that helped turn
the course of the Vietnam war. And as with all of us who served in
Vietnam, Richard's experience there informed his every judgment, and
left him with the conviction that time spent working even against long
odds to see that peace and diplomacy prevailed over war and violence,
was time well-invested for the most powerful of nations and the most
determined of diplomats.
He was a pragmatist devoted to principle. He believed that the United
States could help people around the world at the same time as we
defended our interests. Richard once wrote about a meeting he attended
in the Situation Room in 1979, when he was Assistant Secretary for East
Asia and the Pacific. The South China Sea was being flooded with tens
of thousands of refugees from Vietnam. They were fleeing the regime
there, looking for safe haven somewhere else. But most of them were not
making it. Instead, they were drowning.
The Seventh Fleet was nearby and could divert to rescue them. But
there were those in our government who did not want the Navy to be
distracted from its other missions. And besides, what would we do with
the refugees? And wouldn't our actions just encourage more people to
set sail in rickety boats in an attempt to find freedom? Back and forth
the debate went. Ultimately, Vice President Mondale made the decision:
America would not stand idly by while people drowned. Richard wrote
this: ``At this time and distance it may be hard to conceive that the
decision, so clearly right, was almost not made. There are people who
are alive today because of Mondale's decision; of very few actions by a
government official can such a thing be said.''
Well, we can certainly say that--and more--of Richard Holbrooke.
Earlier this week, we marked the 15th anniversary of what was perhaps
his greatest legacy. On December 14, 1995, the Dayton Peace Accords
brought an end to a 3\1/2\ year war in Bosnia that had claimed tens of
thousands of lives and displaced millions. It is a war that would have
inflicted far more misery if Richard had not tirelessly shuttled
between the Serbs and the Croats and the Bosnians. He laid the
groundwork for the peace talks. And then, over 20 days, he charmed, he
cajoled, and ultimately he convinced the three principal leaders to end
a war. In the years since, ``Dayton'' has become a byword for the kind
of aggressive diplomacy that Richard practiced. At Dayton, Richard
Holbrooke brought himself and the Nation he represented great honor.
We loved that energy, we loved that resolve--that is who Richard was,
and he died giving everything he had to one last difficult mission for
the country he loved. It is almost a bittersweet bookend that a career
of public service that began trying to save a war gone wrong, now ends
with a valiant effort to keep another war from going wrong. Over the
last 2 years, he and I worked closely together on our policy in
Afghanistan and Pakistan. His honesty could be bracing, and I loved
that about him. He was always solution-seeking--and always so committed
to the mission that he never hesitated to leverage the skills of those
around him because it was success he sought, not spotlights.
Through this resolution, we acknowledge his extraordinary public
service and we extend our heartfelt sympathy to his family, especially
his extraordinary wife Kati; Richard's two sons, David and Anthony; his
stepchildren Elizabeth and Chris Jennings; and his daughter-in-law
Sarah. We are reminded how much richer all of our lives have been
thanks to the intelligence, humor, and warmth that Richard brought to
every day of his life. And we mourn your loss with you.
I will miss working with Richard Holbrooke. And I will remember
something he said last year about his enduring faith in America despite
the many trials we now face. He said, ``I still believe in the
possibility of the United States . . . persevering against any
challenge.'' It is difficult to imagine wrestling with the challenges
of Afghanistan and Pakistan without him, but we are all sustained by
the decades-long example Richard set making the possibility of American
perseverance more of a reality. And for that our Nation will always be
grateful.
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I thank Ambassador Holbrooke for
the Dayton Accords, held in Dayton, OH, in which Ambassador Holbrooke
played such a key roll in bringing forward.
I ask unanimous consent that the concurrent resolution and preamble
be agreed to en bloc; the motions to reconsider be laid on the table en
bloc; and that any statements relating to the concurrent resolution be
printed in the Record.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 335) was agreed to.
The preamble was agreed to.
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