[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 50 (Tuesday, March 27, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2065-S2068]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
UNANIMOUS CONSENT REQUEST--H.R. 1905
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Foreign
Relations Committee be discharged from further consideration of H.R.
1905, the Iran Threat Reduction Act, and the Senate proceed to its
consideration; that all after the enacting clause be stricken and a
substitute amendment
[[Page S2066]]
which is at the desk, which is the text of Calendar No. 320, S. 2101,
the Iran Sanctions Accountability and Human Rights Act as reported by
the Banking Committee, be inserted in lieu thereof; that the bill as
amended be read a third time and passed and the motions to reconsider
be laid upon the table, there being no intervening action or debate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
The Senator from Kentucky.
Mr. PAUL. Reserving the right to object, I am amazed the majority
party objects to an amendment that simply restates the Constitution.
Our Founding Fathers feared granting power to declare war to the
Executive. They were quite concerned that the Executive can become like
a King. Many in this body could not get boots on the ground fast enough
in a variety of places, from Syria to Libya to Iran. We don't just send
boots to war; we send our young Americans to war. Our young men and
women, our soldiers, deserve thoughtful debate. Before sending our
young men and women into combat, we should have a mature and thoughtful
debate over the ramifications of war, over the advisability of war, and
over the objectives of the war. James Madison wrote:
. . . that the Constitution supposes what history
demonstrates, that the Executive is a branch most interested
in war, and most prone to it. Therefore, the Constitution,
with studied care, vested that power in the legislature.
My amendment is one sentence long. It states that nothing in this act
is to be construed as a declaration of war or as an authorization of
the use of military force in Iran or Syria.
I urge that we not begin a new war without a full debate, without a
vote, without careful consideration of the ramifications of a third or
even a fourth war in this past decade. I, therefore, respectfully,
object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I am terribly disappointed. There is nothing
in the resolution that talks about war; in fact, it is quite to the
contrary. It is unfortunate. I know, I read the Constitution a few
times. My friend says he wants to restate the Constitution. That is a
strange version he just stated. I don't see that anyplace in the
Constitution. So I am deeply disappointed the Senate was not able to
enact additional critical sanctions against the Republic of Iran.
The sanctions that came out of the Banking Committee unanimously are
a key to our work to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons and
threatening Israel and jeopardizing the U.S. national security. It is a
bipartisan bill which passed unanimously out of the Senate Banking
Committee. It would have had much needed new sanctions put in place
right now, as we speak. We could pass this legislation this minute if
the minority would drop their opposition. We can't afford to delay
these sanctions or slow down this process in any way. I am willing to
move this bill without amendment also at any time.
I say to my friend, whom I respect, I say to my friend, if there are
additional things that should be done--I was told this morning that
Republicans want to offer amendments to this unanimous consent request.
I said, no, because Democrats want to also. But we are satisfied with
where we are. This is a wonderful piece of legislation, done on a
bipartisan basis in the Banking Committee. If people, such as my
friend, the junior Senator from Kentucky, want to do more, as do my
friends from this side and the Republican side, let's come up with
something else. But I think not to do this is unfortunate.
We are slowing down these sanctions. This is not a declaration of war
or even anywhere within the neighborhood of that. We are slowing down
these sanctions. That I believe is the way to avoid war. I am willing
to move this bill without amendments, at any time, I repeat. I am
hopeful my Republican colleagues will see the light and realize how
important it is to advance this measure and prevent Iran from obtaining
nuclear weapons.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent we can resume the
colloquy.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. DURBIN. At this point, I yield to the Senator from Arkansas, if
he would like to conclude his remarks.
Mr. BOOZMAN. I thank the Senator from Illinois. Again, I was making
the point that as we go to these African countries that want American
products, whether it is the newest country in Africa, South Sudan, or
the older countries, and we need to have the ability to supply them.
Both Senators have mentioned China. China is certainly lurking out
there. Again, it is not only China; it is India and a number of other
countries. The Senator might want to comment on that. Senator Coons.
Mr. COONS. Senator Boozman is right. There is a real challenge to the
United States in Africa, and it is not just a economic challenge. We
face competition from China, from Russia, from Brazil, from India, from
other rapidly growing countries.
But there is also a values change because, frankly, in countries I
visited--and I know both Senators, in their service to the public in
the House and Senate, have visited more countries on the continent than
I have--but I am concerned that China's agenda in Africa is sometimes
different from ours. It is not a values agenda. They are not there to
promote democracy, tolerance, transparency, protection of intellectual
property from piracy, from counterfeiting. There are lots of different
things we advance in partnership with trade opportunities that are not
part of their issues and are not part of what they try to advance. I am
impressed Senator Durbin has pulled together an all-of-government
strategy for dealing with this opportunity, and I would be interested
in hearing more about how the mechanics of this bill would actually
work to deploy all the great resources of the American Government.
Mr. DURBIN. This bill develops a comprehensive strategy to coordinate
the agencies of our Government in helping U.S. businesses export to
Africa. Currently, the U.S. export promotion and financing regime is a
patchwork of overlapping, loosely coordinated, and maybe in some cases
wasteful efforts that are difficult for U.S. businesses to navigate and
too often unresponsive to the real needs of real businesses.
This bill creates a special Africa export strategy coordinator to
ensure this is no longer the case. He will work with the existing
export agencies and make sure they are on the same page. The bill
establishes a minimum number of commercial Foreign Service officers to
be stationed at U.S. embassies in Africa and the multilateral
investment banks. These are the men and women who are contacted by
American businesses, wanting to do business. They can navigate them
through local government requirements as well as some of the other
cultural challenges they might face. The bill formalizes and
standardizes the training received by economic and commercial officers.
It also incrementally increases the amount of money Ex-Im can loan over
the next 10 years and creates a standard of accountability for those
loans. Remember, this is only an increase in the lending limit, and
these loans actually make money for the U.S. Treasury.
Lastly, the legislation gives the Export-Import Bank greater
incentive to aggressively counter concessional loans, below-market
loans such as the one I mentioned earlier in the case of Ethiopia and
China, that countries such as China often use to undercut our bidding
in the process.
After the Prime Minister of Ethiopia explained to me how the Chinese
were offering these concessional loans, he then said: But, of course,
then we turned around with the telecommunications contract and the
Chinese won that too. He said they are winning everything. That is not
good news for us. We have the capacity to produce goods and provide
services competitive with any nation in the world. But once they have
basically become a part of the local economy and once they are part of
the local culture, it is difficult for our companies to compete. That,
I think, is the real challenge we face.
That is what this bill basically does. I think it not only creates an
opportunity to create jobs here, but as has been mentioned by Senator
Boozman and Senator Coons, these are developing nations which are
reaching a
[[Page S2067]]
level of economic maturity. We want to be not only good trading
partners but partners with them in the future, developing not only good
markets but good values that are consistent with our view of democracy
and the participation of people who live in each of these countries.
I would like to yield at this point to Senator Boozman.
Mr. BOOZMAN. I agree with the Senator from Illinois. We trade not
only goods and services, but we trade ideas. That is so important as we
go on. Certainly, Africa is developing a very healthy middle class.
This is certainly something new that they have not seen before. Again,
they are hungry for American products.
I appreciate the way the legislation was crafted in the sense it is
revenue neutral so there is no cost to the taxpayer. What we are trying
to do is get a plan together to make it such, particularly our small
businesses, so they can compete in this huge continent that has so much
going for it. Again, it could be such a great help to a State such as
mine. In Arkansas, we are talking about we already export $5.6 billion
in merchandise. I think one of the ways we are going to climb out of
the economic doldrums we are in and create jobs is going to be through
exports, and certainly this gives us an opportunity.
We are almost--we could almost say, using the statistics from the
Senator from Illinois; he talked about 7 of the 10 top emerging
economies coming out of Africa--we are almost doing a disservice to our
small businesses by not going forward with this legislation.
Mr. COONS. That is right. I am grateful Senator Boozman has been an
active participant in helping pull together on this bill what has been
a bipartisan consensus in this body and in the House on the importance
of improving the access to the export opportunities of Africa for
businesses large and small in the United States.
Both of our States are well known for poultry exports. All three of
our States also have manufacturing exports, across all the different
sectors of our economy. We can't help but do better if we increase our
exports to Africa.
Fifty years ago, 70 percent of all U.S. funds that flowed toward
Africa were development or relief assistance from U.S. Government
sources. Today that is inverted. Today more than 80 percent of all
resources that go to Africa are direct investment by the private
sector. So Senator Durbin has led the effort to create a wise and smart
bill that uses that leverage, that makes, as Senator Boozman said, the
rapidly growing markets of Africa accessible to our home State
businesses, large and small, but also makes a more efficient, more
focused use of the dramatic resources of our Federal Government and
makes it more accessible.
What is next and where do we go from here?
Mr. DURBIN. I can tell the Senator from Delaware and the Senator from
Arkansas if you ask the average American to give you their image of
Africa, it will be an old image. The image of new Africa is a continent
that is changing dramatically as those numbers show. Listen to these
numbers: In the year 2000, 7 percent of the population of Africa had
access to the Internet. In 2009, the number was up to 27 percent. That
is almost a fourfold increase in access to the Internet.
There was also a revolution when it comes to mobile telephones. In
1998, there were fewer than 4 million phones on the entire continent.
Today there are 500 million. From 4 million to 500 million phones. Most
people have this image of a dusty little village in Africa where people
live under pretty primitive circumstances, and that is true in many
parts of Africa. But 78 percent of Africa's rural population has access
to clean water. Seventy-eight percent has access to clean water. Access
to information and the global market are the pillars of building a
middle class. In Africa this means a middle class hungry for goods and
services, and the United States can use that to our advantage.
I am openminded about this. I want us to be able to import from
Africa as well because that is the nature of a good trade relationship.
It cannot be all one-sided. Of course, our first priority is American
jobs in Arkansas, Delaware, Illinois, and Colorado. But let's
understand as the middle class grows, their productivity will grow too
and what they can provide us can make a big difference.
The world banks said recently in a report that Africa could be on the
brink of an economic takeoff much like China was 30 years ago and India
20 years ago. So this bill, promoting our trade into Africa, could not
come at a better moment.
I wish to yield to Senator Boozman at this point.
Mr. BOOZMAN. Well, I agree with the Senator from Illinois and the
Senator from Delaware. The bottom line is there is a tremendous
opportunity for our country. I think that our country, as we do start
the trade process, trading ideas along with goods, that, again, we are
givers. We can be very proud of the work we have done in Africa. Nobody
has done more when we are talking about food. I was one of the cochairs
of the malaria caucus. We can be very proud of the work the Congress
has done in the last several years. These are things that the Western
world can get together and eliminate.
As the continent settles down and develops a middle class, 60 percent
of the businesses that do exports are small businesses and certainly we
need to get in there. This bill challenges us to increase that by 200
percent and gives us the incentive and a template for how we do that so
we can stop this erosion by the Chinese where they are outdoing us by
about 3 to 1.
The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. COONS. Senator Boozman is absolutely right. The significant
investments that have been made by the last administration and the
current administration, by Congresses controlled by both parties, in
relief of the very broad health challenges throughout sub-Saharan
Africa have produced dramatic results. It has been both positive
results in terms of relieving human misery but also positive results in
terms of the view that most Africans have of the United States. This is
the continent on the Earth where we are most positively viewed. We need
to take that platform and use the tools Senator Durbin is trying to
craft through this legislation we support to make sure that businesses
large and small all across the United States see this continent clearly
as a continent of opportunity, as a continent where we have strong
potential partners, and get us back in the race.
Frankly, right now we have a wakeup call. When those of us who have
been to Africa repeatedly see it as a continent of great opportunity
perceive that we are allowing other countries to rapidly move past us,
with Senator Durbin's leadership with this bill, we can take that
opportunity, refocus our resources and make this the decade where the
United States and Africa, working in partnership, build and sustain
tremendous growth in imports, exports, and trade.
Mr. DURBIN. I hope we can change a few things in Washington as we
look at Africa. I hope the U.S. Commerce Secretary will travel to
Africa. That has not happened in years. I would encourage our Secretary
to discover the opportunities on this continent for the good of our
economy here in the United States.
It is hard to imagine, as well, the Commerce Department is actually
cutting its staff in Africa at this point, and the Export-Import Bank
doesn't have an African staff at this point. This can change. The
tremendous growth of the African economy and its middle class makes
lack of engagement inexcusable. We can reverse it, and this bill is a
step in the direction to reverse it.
As Senator Boozman said, it is modest, commonsense, and doesn't add
to the deficit. It thinks of ways to use current resources more
effectively. It moves us in that direction with low-cost steps that
will actually earn U.S. money while creating U.S. jobs.
I will yield on this issue and allow my colleagues to close if they
have closing remarks.
Mr. BOOZMAN. I thank the Senator. We appreciate his leadership.
Perhaps the three of us, and maybe others, can write a note to the
Secretary of Commerce and ask him to make a much-needed trip to Africa,
to look at this bill and not only do this, but use other ways as a
strategy to implement so we can get our small businesses trading more
with the continent, again, keeping up with the likes of China, India,
and all of the places we mentioned.
I think once it is all over, we will be very proud of our efforts,
just as I am
[[Page S2068]]
very proud, as was mentioned, of the efforts we have made in feeding
the hungry, helping those with HIV, those with malaria, and diseases
such as that. It is interesting that it is the place in the world where
we have the highest acceptability. The people are very pleased with
what the Americans have done there. Our State Department is doing a
great job. We are teaching people how to fish rather than feeding them,
and that has been very successful.
I appreciate everybody's efforts and hopefully we can get our
colleagues together and get this thing passed.
Mr. COONS. I thank Senator Boozman and Senator Durbin for the
opportunity to join together in this colloquy.
As Senator Boozman referenced, this is another example of how when
America leads with its values, America will find success for our
workers, our families, our communities at home in terms of increased
export opportunities, but also in terms of higher regard for our
values, for our priorities throughout the world. When we are willing to
take on the challenge of combating terrible diseases such as HIV-AIDS,
tuberculosis, and malaria in partnership with research universities, in
partnership with African universities, and doctors and health care
professionals, we can achieve remarkable results.
When we pull together with Senator Durbin's leadership on this bill
and we pull together all of our government, OPEC, Ex-Im, the Trade
Development Administration, the Department of Commerce, the Department
of State, and we deploy the strength and the capabilities of America's
entrepreneurs and small businesses, the sky is the limit in terms of
the difference we can make for the people of Africa and the people of
the United States.
I wish to thank Senator Durbin for his leadership on this important
bill. I am grateful for the chance to join him and Senator Boozman in
the colloquy today.
Mr. DURBIN. I thank my colleagues Senator Boozman and Senator Coons.
Mr. President, I ask that this colloquy be brought to an end, and I
be recognized individually in morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________