[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 133 (Wednesday, September 17, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5655-S5656]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO THE U.S. AIR FORCE AND MAJOR K.C. COURTLAND
Mr. BLUNT. Madam President, it is a good day for Major Courtland to
be here because another thing I want to talk about today is the Air
Force itself and to pay tribute to those in the Air Force. This is the
anniversary of the 67 years of service and sacrifice for our Nation--
clearly the greatest air power in the history of the world, the first
place we turn when we want to make an immediate difference in a chaotic
situation in the world.
We are talking this week, again, about how the Air Force can make a
difference, whether it is those based at Whiteman Air Force Base in
Missouri or those based all over the world. The Air Force continues, in
so many ways, to project our strength and our commitment to a more
peaceful world by using the power that we do have in a way that ensures
that in some cases the playing field is more fair because we keep
people on the ground rather than let despotic governments get their
weapons in the air. In some places we are able to intervene, as we did
recently in conjunction with the Peshmerga, to allow the recapture of
the dam in Iraq that is essential, and even beyond that, could have
itself been used as a great weapon if that dam would have been allowed
to be breached and then the flood that would have occurred because of
that.
The Air Force was created in 1947 under President Harry Truman's
leadership. Prior to that it was called the U.S. Army Air Corps. I am
proud to stand today at one of the desks that Senator Truman used on
the Senate floor--a desk later used by other Missourians, by Senator
Eagleton, by Senator Danforth, by Senator Bond--but a desk used by
President Truman as he served in what he said were the best years of
his working life--his time as a Senator.
But he faced lots of hard challenges as President. One was how we
moved forward in a new and different world after World War II and how
we used our technology in different ways. One of those was to recognize
that the U.S. Army Air Corps had risen to a place that it really
deserved to be recognized for what it was--the Air Force. The first
Secretary of the Air Force, another Missourian, was Senator Stuart
Symington, who then would later serve in this body as a Senator.
Certainly, we have benefited in our office from having Kelly
Courtland, Maj. K.C. Courtland, who has been helping us this year in my
responsibilities on both the Armed Services Committee and the Defense
Appropriations Subcommittee. This is actually her anniversary as well
as a member of the Air Force. She now completes 24 years of Air Force
service on exactly the same day that the Air Force was established 67
years ago. Twenty-four years ago Major Courtland enlisted in the Air
Force. For the last year she has helped us fulfill the responsibilities
in our office that we have and the No. 1 responsibility of the Federal
Government--the one thing almost no one would argue we could do for
ourselves; that is the responsibility of defending the country.
We are hoping we see Major Courtland stationed in Missouri one of
these days. She is from Ludington, MI. She will be running her 85th
marathon this weekend--the Air Force Marathon. She values her military
training. She served from enlisted to now her role as a major and has
been unbelievably helpful to us at this time.
As we think about Major Courtland and all of the others who serve, we
want to be very mindful of their service, their willingness to step
forward to defend our freedom, to be willing to defend our freedom at a
time when, once again, we are talking about this week those who would
threaten our freedom and what we will do about that and how we are
looking to be sure that the strategy we have and the resolve we have is
a resolve that allows us to convince our enemies that a peaceful
world--a world where people can pursue their own values, where they are
able to pursue their own right of conscience, where they are able to
look within themselves and determine their own religious convictions
rather than have someone tell them what those convictions are and
demand that everybody follow exactly the same path in the way they view
religion and the way they consequently would be required, because of
that one view, to view society and how people should live together--
hopefully those who defend us will get the kind of support and the kind
of thoughtful consideration and
[[Page S5656]]
determination they need from the people in the Senate and the House,
from people in the Defense Department and the administration, from
people in the White House, from the Office of the President himself on
down who are going to be making decisions that will put others
in harm's way as we try to prevent greater numbers of Americans,
frankly, from being in harm's way.
I clearly count myself among those who believe this is a real danger
to us--the location of this ISIS threat, the understanding from the
Secretary of Defense that somewhere between 1 and 200 Americans are
there fighting alongside this genocidal group, and many times that from
Europe fighting alongside this group--people with passports that allow
them to come to the United States, to not worry about coming over the
border and just worrying about buying a plane ticket and coming in that
way.
Of course there are those who say--and I agree: If we know who they
are, we should take their passports away. That is easy if you know who
they are to invalidate the passport. It is pretty hard if you do not
know who they are to invalidate that passport. In fact, it just cannot
be done. There are not only Americans coming back, but others from visa
waiver countries who just simply have a passport from their country and
they buy a plane ticket. Suddenly those who have become steeped in this
wrong-headed view of the world--who have become conditioned to the idea
that a life, if it does not agree with you, does not matter--they would
be able to come into this country and into European countries in ways
that we have not seen before and still have access--as terrorist groups
have had before to many other countries--to poison the minds of people
who are looking for an answer. I can assure you that this is not the
right answer.
So I wish my colleagues well as we make these important decisions. We
are going to be looking at whatever we decide to do in the next couple
of days and over the next 75 days or so. We will have a chance to
revisit that decision as we look at how force is being applied and how
our hopes are being met. We will see if what the President thinks will
happen as a response to what we are doing here is actually what appears
to be happening later this year.
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