[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 86 (Monday, June 17, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S4518]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SYRIA
Mr. UDALL of New Mexico. Madam President, like many others, I am
deeply disturbed by the current situation in Syria, the appalling
atrocities, the tragic loss of life, the reported use of chemical
weapons. This deserves the clear condemnation of the international
community.
I am also concerned by the push for intervention in this war, by the
rush to judgment for the United States to yet again become entangled in
a civil war. The President has decided to send arms to the rebels to
fight the government of the Bashar al-Asad. The full scope of this
intervention is not yet clear, but this path is dangerous and
unnecessary.
The Asad regime is cruel and corrupt. We can all agree on that point.
Many of the groups fighting against him do not share our values and
could be worse. They may pose long-term risks to us and our allies.
Asad's enemies may very well be America's enemies. The fact is that we
do not know. A number of experts, including our military brass, have
sounded alarms warning that the options to intervene in Syria range
from bad to worse and could prove damaging to America's strategic
interests. By flooding Syria with weapons, we risk arming those who
ultimately may seek to do us harm.
We have been down this road before. Recent history tells a cautionary
tale. In the 1980s the United States supported a rebel insurgency to
repel the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Back then as now, many
Members of Congress pushed for arming these rebels. The United States
supplied weapons, intelligence, and training, with the goal to defeat
the Soviets in Afghanistan.
Our short-term victory had tragic consequences for the future.
Radical members of the insurgency formed the Taliban regime, giving
safe haven to terrorist training camps, providing material support to
Osama bin Laden and his fledgling al-Qaida movement. Through state-
sponsored terrorism in Afghanistan, al-Qaida thrived and perpetrated
attacks on the USS Cole and the World Trade Center on 9/11. The
aftermath has been more than a decade of war, with tragic loss of
American lives and treasure.
This is history to learn from, not repeat, and yet many who advocated
for previously disastrous Middle East interventions are leading the
charge to arm groups we know little about and to declare war through
air strikes on another Middle Eastern country.
What little we do know about the Syrian rebels is extremely
disturbing. The opposition is fractured. Some are sympathetic to the
enemies of the United States and our allies, including Israel and
Turkey. There are reliable reports that some of the rebels even include
Iraqi Sunni insurgents--the same groups who killed many U.S. troops and
still target the current Iraqi Army and Government.
We know American law currently considers some of the rebel elements
to be terrorist groups. The United States has designated one of the key
opposition factions, the Nursa Front, as a terrorist organization for
being an al-Qaida-affiliated group.
The Syrian opposition is very unorganized. They lack a chain of
command, they are subject to deadly infighting, and if they are able to
defeat Asad, they may turn on each other or worse the United States or
our allies.
Simply put, once we have introduced arms, neither we nor their
fighters may be able to guarantee control over them. Such weapons could
end up in the hands of groups and people who do not represent our
interests, possibly including terrorists who target the United States,
our allies, such as Israel and Turkey, and the Iraqi Army and
Government--an Iraq that we spent billions of dollars and thousands of
American lives to establish.
Given this reality, those who are pushing for military intervention
should answer three basic questions: Can arms be reasonably accounted
for and kept out of the hands of terrorists and extremist groups? Can
they assure us those arms will not become a threat to our regional
allies and friends, including Israel, Turkey, and the Government of
Iraq? And if the answer to the two previous questions is no, can they
then explain why transferring our weapons to the rebels, whose members
may themselves be affiliated with terrorist and extremist groups, is a
sensible option for the American people? What national interest does
this serve?
I do not believe those questions have been answered. I think the
majority of the American people agree. They do not see the
justification of our intervention in this civil war. We need to slow
down this clamor for more weapons to Syria and war and take a step back
from this plunge into very muddy and dangerous waters.
Stopping radicalism and protecting our allies is of vital importance;
however, we come to the ultimate question, one that has not been
adequately answered: Will this hasty march to intervene in another
Middle East conflict achieve these goals or will it ultimately harm the
interests of the United States, leading to yet another bloody, costly,
overseas conflict and, ironically, worsening the terrorist threat?
We should listen to the lessons of history. After over a decade of
war overseas, now is not the time to arm an unorganized, unfamiliar,
and unpredictable group of rebels. Now is not the time to rush headlong
into another Middle Eastern civil war. The winds of war are blowing yet
again, and we should be ever vigilant before we venture into another
storm.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
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