[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 4 (Wednesday, January 8, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H27-H28]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EPIC FAILURE OF FOREIGN POLICY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Kinzinger) for 5 minutes.
Mr. KINZINGER of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, it was a beautiful September
day in 2001 as I was driving to work and I hear that a plane hits the
World Trade Center. I was a newly minted private pilot at the time, and
I remember thinking, How could a plane fly into a big building? And
then I heard that another plane hit the other tower. Eventually, I
heard one hit a field in Pennsylvania and the Pentagon not too far from
here.
I realized that America was a country under attack. It was under
attack by an ideology that believes that anybody that thinks
differently than their brand of theology is not just wrong, but that
they are worthy of death. In fact, it takes that belief and actually
implements it by killing innocent men, women, and children, including
folks of their own religious ideology.
Mr. Speaker, as a result of that, America became a generation that
went to war to defeat this ideology. I am a veteran of the wars. I
spent quite a bit of time in Iraq.
Mr. Speaker, I heard the other day that al Qaeda, America's number
one enemy, raised the black flag over Fallujah, an area that the United
States Marines, who fought harder than they have any battle since
Vietnam, fought to achieve and take over and bring peace to.
Mr. Speaker, al Qaeda raised the black flag over Fallujah. This is an
epic failure of American foreign policy and an epic resurgence of
America's chief enemy.
In 2011, President Obama had an opportunity to make a decision about
whether America would continue to show its support for a free Iraq,
whether America would continue to be the intercessor between difficult
back-and-forths and continue to bring people together in Iraq as we did
during the surge, which the President opposed and now we are finding
out may actually have been for political reasons. Shocker.
We are finding out, Mr. Speaker, that al Qaeda now has a town very
close to Baghdad. This is a failure of American foreign policy.
If you look into Syria, Mr. Speaker, you see a brutal dictator that
kills people and has no compunction about killing innocent women and
children just to maintain power. In essence, he has become a strong
partner to the United States in order to take chemical weapons out of
his arsenal.
Yet as another part of Syria, you see not the moderate forces of
opposition
[[Page H28]]
to Mr. Assad, but you now see al Qaeda-related forces overpowering
moderate opposition to Assad. You see that because of America's foreign
policy, which said we supported the Free Syrian Army but, in reality,
has not supported the Free Syrian Army.
If you look in Egypt, you see the Egyptian people stand up and say,
We don't want to have one dictator replaced by another. We don't want
the Muslim Brotherhood to run our country and change our constitution.
But we have no idea where the President is at on this. We have taken
a very important ally in the Middle East and basically told them we are
not interested in their future.
Look at the instability in Lebanon and the questions with the people
of Afghanistan about what is going to happen post-2014, as America
committed to defeating al Qaeda and defeating the Taliban. I could go
on and on. Look at the deal we have with Iran, basically giving Iran
the option of continuing to enrich uranium.
Mr. Speaker, 5 years ago, I could not have written a sadder story
about where American foreign policy could be. What I see now in the
United States is that our allies no longer trust us and our enemies no
longer fear us.
Mr. Speaker, the United States needs to use limited air power in Iraq
to push al Qaeda back out of Iraq. We need strong intelligence assets
to work with the government of al-Maliki to ensure al Qaeda has no
foothold in Iraq again.
It is not too late to reverse the tragic foreign policy consequences
and what we have seen in the Middle East. But, Mr. Speaker, this has to
be done today. This has to be done now.
Americans have sacrificed blood for a free Iraq and a free
Afghanistan, and we cannot let that sacrifice be in vain.
____________________