[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 193 (Thursday, December 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8976-H8977]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ISRAEL, TOGETHER WE STAND
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Pennsylvania (Mr. Murphy) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MURPHY of Pennsylvania. A few months ago, Prime Minister of
Israel Benjamin Netanyahu addressed a joint session of Congress in this
very Chamber.
He was welcomed by Members with a standing ovation. Several times
during his speech, Congress responded with applause. When a person in
the gallery attempted to disrupt his speech, the entire House stood and
applauded to show support for the Prime Minister over the disruption.
The Prime Minister noted that people can speak out in a democracy
that supports free speech. We all know what happens when citizens
challenge their governments in Syria, Iran, Libya, and other repressive
countries. The Prime Minister clearly laid out his concerns for the
Middle East, support for a two-state solution and a clear and
unequivocal message against Iran's nuclear weapons development.
And following his speech, the joint session of Congress gave the
Prime Minister a closing standing ovation.
Recently, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman commented on
Congress' response to the Prime Minister.
He said: ``I sure hope that Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu, understands that the standing ovation he got in Congress
this year was not for his politics. That ovation was bought and paid
for by the Israel lobby.''
Now, Madam Speaker, I don't know if Mr. Friedman was in the Chamber
at the time, and I do not know if he interviewed Members of Congress
following the Prime Minister's speech. I certainly know he did not
speak with me nor many of my colleagues before he came to this wrong
conclusion. So for the record, I wanted to make it clear why I and
others stood when the Prime Minister of Israel addressed the joint
session of Congress.
I rose for the Prime Minister because he is a leader of state. We
always show respect for such leaders--but in this case, there were
greater reasons for our action.
I also rose because Prime Minister Netanyahu is the leader of a
nation I respect, of a people I admire, and of a culture that I
cherish.
I stood up in support of a nation that protects religious freedom for
all religions even when they are surrounded by other nations that will
not permit Christian churches nor synagogues to be built and are
surrounded by those
[[Page H8977]]
whose people burn down Coptic Christian churches.
For Israel's tenacity, courage, intelligence, creativity,
inventiveness, and endurance over thousands of years, I stood in
respect.
When Iranian leader Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Israel must be ``wiped
off the map'' and ``the uniform shout of the Iranian nation is forever
`death to Israel' '' and that the Western powers ``launched the myth of
the Holocaust . . . They lied; they put on a show and then they support
the Jews,'' I stood up in support of Israel and stood against these
hostile and hateful and false comments.
While Iran continues to develop nuclear weapons and openly threatens
Israel and the Middle East and Europe, while some may cower in fearful
silence, we will stand against nuclear proliferation by these rogue
nations. That is why we passed strong sanctions against Iran and why we
support all options to protect our friends.
We stood in support of Israel's continuous support of the safety and
security of the people of the United States. When we were attacked by
terrorists, Israel stood by us and continues to stand by us, and they
take personal risks in doing so. We stood to show our gratitude to the
people of Israel.
Now, like any relationship, ours is not perfect nor without differing
thoughts and opinions. To be sure, there are times when we honestly
disagree. That is the nature of governments elected by the people.
There will be debate, but we must use these as opportunities to learn
from each other, to reaffirm our promises, and to grow. All of that
strengthens our bonds because we put respect, true resolution and a
commitment to peace above all else.
Mr. Friedman would do well to understand the true issues behind our
support. We are jointly committed to peace, to a two-state solution, to
fighting terrorism, to supporting the tolerance of other religions, to
supporting democracy, to standing up against those who would rain
thousands of rockets on an innocent people.
We will not be silent. We will speak out against terrorism, and we
will stand together.
So, for all of these things, I and others stood in respect, in
support, and in an open show of our joint commitment to peace and
civility.
And together we will stand again.
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