[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 8 (Wednesday, January 23, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S199-S200]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO FEDERAL EMPLOYEES
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, as we get started on this next Congress--
and I wish to congratulate the Presiding Officer for joining this
Chamber. As someone who has had the opportunity to preside during my
first 2 years in the Senate, I commend the Presiding Officer for those
actions and look forward to working with you on a variety of projects.
What I want to do today is continue a tradition that I actually
inherited from one of our former colleagues, Senator Ted Kaufman of
Delaware. Senator Kaufman, who had been a long-time employee of the
Senate, came to this floor on a fairly regular basis during his time
here to basically celebrate and acknowledge--in most cases--the
tireless, unsung work of so many of our Federal employees. As we debate
budgets, debt, and deficit, we oftentimes
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recognize we have to make extraordinary and difficult choices in cuts.
In many instances, behind all of those cuts are Federal employees who
do remarkable work in keeping us safe, providing services, and helping
our country grow.
Ted Kaufman used to come down here on a regular basis and celebrate
some of those unsung heroes. I was proud to continue his tradition
during the last Congress and look forward to carrying it on through
another session.
I start this next Congress actually celebrating two great Federal
employees, I might add, who both happen to be Virginians who serve as
excellent role models. They represent the thousands of professionals
who work quietly every day across our intelligence community to keep
our Nation safe.
Very often these professionals work in anonymity and many risk their
lives in troubled spots far away from the limelight, and that is how it
should be. Recently we have seen certain incidents abroad, and
sometimes they pay with the highest sign of sacrifice in terms of their
lives.
For their service, their late nights and early mornings away from
their families, the risks they take, and the sacrifices they make every
day--and because they do not hear this nearly enough--allow me to say
thank you to those members of the intelligence community.
Jeanne Vertefeuille
Today I wish to briefly tell the remarkable stories of two
extraordinary women who built their careers at the Central Intelligence
Agency. Jeanne Vertefeuille, who is pictured here, passed away on
December 29 at the age of 80 after a brief illness.
In announcing her death to the CIA family, Acting Director Michael
Morell appropriately described Ms. Vertefeuille as an icon within the
agency. If her story were not true, it would read like a spy novel.
Jeanne joined the CIA when she graduated from college in 1954. It was
the year I was born and a year Dick Durbin was also young. This was a
time when the American intelligence community could be best described
as an old boys' club. She was hired at the CIA as a GS-4 typist. This
is a woman coming out of college in 1954 hired as a typist.
Over her career, which stretched over nearly a half century, Jeanne
Vertefeuille blazed a trail for women in the national clandestine
service. She methodically worked her way up to leadership positions.
There were overseas postings in Ethiopia, Finland, and The Hague. She
became an expert in Soviet intelligence and spycraft. She retired as a
member of the Senior Intelligence Service in 1992.
Even after her retirement, she continued her work for the agency as a
contractor, making still more valuable contributions and working
without a day's break in service until she became ill last summer. As
her obituary reads:
She remained a quiet agency soldier . . . purposefully
nondescript and selflessly dedicated.
She lived alone and walked to work.
But if she was a great figure at the agency, Ms.
Vertefeuille was also a tenacious and effective one, and in
October of 1986 was asked to lead a task force to investigate
the disappearance of Russians whom the CIA had hired to spy
against their own country.
Together, with colleagues at the CIA she invested years in the
methodical and painstaking hunt for a mole. It was through her efforts,
and the good work of many others, that we ultimately unmasked the
notorious traitor Aldrich Ames in 1984. Remember, this is a woman who
joined the CIA in 1954 as a typist.
Aldrich Ames turned out to be one of the most dangerous traitors in
the Nation's history. Thanks in large measure to Ms. Vertefeuille, he
was convicted of espionage and is now serving a life term without
parole.
Sandy Grimes
Jeanne Vertefeuille's story does not end there. The Washington Post
recently described how one of her colleagues, Sandy Grimes--another
Virginian who worked with her on the Ames task force--stepped up over
the past year to care for Jeanne as she was battling cancer.
Sandy Grimes, a career CIA employee whose parents worked on the
Manhattan Project, ultimately served as Jeanne's primary caregiver. She
sat with her each day during the final 3 months of her remarkable life.
She monitored Jeanne's care and tried to make sure she remained
comfortable. She often brought personal messages of support and
appreciation from their former colleagues. Ms. Grimes said:
I felt an obligation to be there with her. I can't imagine
not doing it. I was the one Jeanne would accept. I owed it to
her as a friend.
By all accounts Jeanne Vertefeuille was an intensely private woman,
and she doubtless would recoil at the attention she is now receiving.
One cannot help but be inspired by this true-life story of service,
patriotism, and friendship demonstrated by these two great employees,
Sandy Grimes and the late Jeanne Vertefeuille. Their service reflects
well on the thousands of other intelligence professionals whose names
can never be revealed. Both of them deserve our recognition and thanks.
During the last Congress I joined 14 Senators in a Joint Resolution
to mark the U.S. Intelligence Professionals Day. At some point during
this Congress, I hope we can gather more supporters so we can have a
day designated on a more formalized basis to recognize the enormous
contributions made by intelligence professionals. Again, this is an
effort to bring respectful attention to these quiet professionals who
literally--as a member of the intelligence committee, I can testify to
this--keep our Nation safe every day without any thought of
recognition.
Again, I look forward to working with my colleagues so we can
introduce this resolution in the next Congress.
As I conclude my remarks, I see my friend the distinguished majority
whip. We have spent a lot of time over the last 2\1/2\ years grappling
with the challenges around the debt and deficit and trying to make some
of the very hard choices we are going to need to make as a Nation.
While it appears that we may be avoiding some of the immediate
consequences of the so-called debt ceiling debate, which I am glad to
see, never should the full faith and credit of the United States be
used as a political hostage. Again, I want to compliment my friend the
Senator from Illinois who has been as stalwart as anyone in this
Chamber at stepping up and who has been willing to speak truth to even
those who are the most supportive about some of the challenges and
choices we have to make.
We are going to have to proceed at a level of spending that is less
than what we have had in the past. As we think about cutting back
budgets, I think it is important to remember that behind many of these
budgets, there are not just numbers but there are incredible
professionals who give their life's service to making this a stronger
Nation. So with this tribute to Jeanne and Sandy, I commend these two
great Federal employees.
I will be back on a regular basis to celebrate Federal employees
throughout this Congress because too often in today's day and life,
government service is disparaged. But for Jeanne Vertefeuille and Sandy
Grimes we might not have as safe a Nation as we do today.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I will accept my colleague from Virginia's
kind words with at least an indirect apology for the defamation which
he included in his speech suggesting that I was somehow an Ancient
Mariner here in the Senate. I wear my trousers rolled but not quite as
rolled as my friend suggested.
I thank the Senator for his leadership on this deficit and debt
issue. We have a lot to do and we have to do it thoughtfully. I am glad
my colleague highlighted the two employees.
I read the obituary of the one the Senator from Virginia highlighted.
It was an extraordinary story of a woman who persevered in an agency
which didn't have much use for women beyond the secretarial staff. I am
glad the Senator continues this tradition of acknowledging these
important Federal employees.
I thank my friend from Virginia.
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