[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 24 (Thursday, February 12, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S949]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CARTER NOMINATION
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I rise to express my support for the
President's nominee, Dr. Ashton Carter, to serve as our Nation's 25th
Secretary of Defense.
Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel
Let me first say a few words of thanks to Chuck Hagel, our former
colleague in the Senate, who has served as Secretary of Defense. He is
a friend, he has had a long career in public service, and he is a
veteran of Vietnam. The people of Nebraska rewarded him by asking him
to represent them in the United States Senate.
As our Nation's first person of enlisted rank to serve as Secretary
of Defense, he had a unique, ground-level view on matters of war and
peace, and a strong commitment to our troops. I thank Chuck Hagel for
his service and his family for their sacrifices over the last 2 years.
Dr. Carter has an impressive and distinguished record of service as
well in government, as an adviser and as a scholar. He has what it
takes to be a great Secretary of Defense.
His credentials as one of our Nation's top security policy experts
are well established. He earned a bachelor's degree in physics and
medieval history from Yale and his doctorate in theoretical physics
from Oxford. He has served as faculty chair at Harvard and is the
author of 11 books.
As singularly impressive as this is, Dr. Carter is also very much a
doer. He has served no fewer than 11 Secretaries of Defense, including
Leon Panetta and Chuck Hagel. He has four times been awarded the
Department's Distinguished Service Medal, as well as the Defense
Intelligence Medal.
As an assistant secretary during the Clinton administration, he was
instrumental in removing nuclear stockpiles from the former Soviet
states of Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Belarus.
As Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and
Logistics, he was renowned for breaking through bureaucratic logjams to
get our troops what they needed, when they needed it. We talked about
this at some length when we met in my office a few weeks ago. How can
we continue, I asked him, to reform DOD so that it will be able to rise
to the occasion of today's challenges?
As part of the discussion, I was pleased to hear his appreciation for
the organic industrial base of the Department of Defense, especially
one near and dear to my heart, the Rock Island Arsenal in Illinois.
He recalled his experience in Afghanistan as he tried to bring our
troops the body armor and armored humvees they needed. He also recalled
working alongside the great dedicated employees at the Rock Island
Arsenal as they delivered the necessary lifesaving equipment to our
troops and rolled it off their assembly lines in record time.
I am confident Dr. Carter can steer the Department of Defense through
difficult times and provide the President with the best policy advice
to deal with our Nation's challenges. He has my full support.
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