[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 122 (Wednesday, September 12, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H5869]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE STORMING OF OUR EMBASSIES: AN ATTACK AGAINST AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Nebraska (Mr. Fortenberry) for 5 minutes.
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Madam Speaker, last year, an intense debate was
under way in Congress as to how to respond to the turmoil in Libya. The
imminent slaughter of the people of Benghazi by former dictator Qadhafi
led the United States to sustain a NATO-led coalition to stop the
bloodshed. Now our Ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, is dead--killed
by the very people we went there to save. Americans can tolerate
ingratitude; Americans can tolerate insult, but Americans cannot
tolerate the senseless killings of the official representative of our
country and three other diplomatic personnel.
The governing structures of Libya must respond in the strongest way.
They should publicly state their condemnation and commitment to
restoring order. Democracy is not an election. It is the understanding
of the protection of the inherent dignity and rights of each person
supported by the structures that bring about the just rule of law.
We honor Ambassador Stevens, Foreign Service Officer Sean Smith, and
two others whose names I do not yet have for their heroic service. May
they rest in peace.
Similarly, in Cairo, Egypt, the storming of our Embassy represents an
attack on America. By the norms of international law, custom and
tradition, the scaling of the walls of our Embassy severely threatens
America's longstanding relationship with Egypt so fruitfully solidified
after the peace accords in the Middle East in the 1970s.
President Morsi must decide: Will his government tolerate chaos and
violence? Will he abandon Egypt's leading role as a force for stability
in the Middle East? Will he use democracy for the consolidation of
power while rejecting its central tenets?
The responsibility of President Morsi's is also to speak swiftly and
state clearly that the Egyptian Government, duly elected, is committed
to its international responsibilities and the deeper responsibilities
of self-government.
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