[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 48 (Monday, March 23, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1704-S1705]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ISRAEL
Mr. GRAHAM. Mr. President, I raise an issue before the body. I don't
know how accurate the press reports are, but apparently the Chief of
Staff of President Obama, Mr. McDonough, today spoke in town to a group
called J Street, which is an organization supportive of the United
States-Israel relationship, apparently. Here is what he allegedly said.
He basically said that an occupation that has lasted more than 50 years
must end.
So the Chief of Staff of the President of the United States, speaking
in Washington today, called the Israeli presence in the West Bank an
occupation. The Chief of Staff of the President of the United States is
looking at a world completely different than the one I am viewing.
I ask Mr. McDonough and President Obama: Don't you realize the last
time Israel withdrew in the Mideast--a Palestinian-controlled
territory--was the withdrawal from Gaza and that when Israel
voluntarily left Gaza, Hamas took over Gaza?
They are a terrorist organization and they fired up to 10,000 rockets
from Gaza into Israel. Today, Israel has a presence in the West Bank.
Today, Israel is surrounded by radical Islamists, unlike at any time I
can remember.
The language used by the Chief of Staff of the President of the
United States is exactly what Hamas uses. So now our administration is
taking up the language of a terrorist organization to describe our
friends in Israel.
Here is a question to the American people: Would you withdraw from
the West Bank, given the situation that exists today on the ground
between the Israelis and the rest of the region? Would you at this
moment in Israel's history completely withdraw from the West Bank,
given the experience in Gaza?
Does anybody on the left think that is a good idea? Does anybody in
Israeli politics agree with the characterization of the Chief of Staff
of President Obama? Does Mr. Herzog or anyone else in opposition to
Prime Minister Netanyahu agree with this characterization? Is your
country occupying the West Bank or are you there to make sure the West
Bank doesn't turn into Gaza?
I talked with the Prime Minister Saturday and I congratulated him on
a decisive victory and I look forward to working with him. He told me
very clearly that he believes a two-state solution is not possible as
long as the Palestinian Authority embraces Hamas, which controls the
Gaza strip and is a terrorist organization by any reasonable
definition.
With whom do you make peace, Mr. President? What kind of deal can you
make when almost half the Palestinian people are in the hands of a
terrorist organization who vow to destroy you every day? What kind of
deal is that?
So do I want a two-state solution? Yes, I would like a two-state
solution, where the Palestinians recognize the right of Israel to exist
and they have the ability to chart their own destiny. They are not
anywhere near there. The Palestinian community is broken into two
parts. The Hamas terrorist organization controls the essential part of
the Palestinian community. They will not recognize Israel's right to
exist. They are using the territory they hold as a launching pad for
attacks against Israel routinely. These are the people who launch
rockets from schoolyards and apartment buildings trying to blame Israel
for being the bad guy when they respond.
All I can say is when I thought it couldn't get worse, it has. When I
thought we couldn't reach a new low in terms of this White House's view
of the Mideast, we found a way to reach a new low. Today, the Chief of
Staff of the President of the United States used language to describe
Israel that has been reserved for terrorist organizations up until now.
So, Mr. McDonough, President Obama, you are completely delusional
about the world as it is. You are negotiating with an Iranian regime,
and in the President's New Year's greeting he called on the Iranian
people to speak out in support of a nuclear deal. Mr. President, don't
you understand that in Iran you can't speak out; that if you do speak
out and petition your government you can get shot or put in jail? You
don't understand that? You are talking to people as if they have a
voice. You are talking about the regime as if they are some kind of
rational actor.
In that same New Year's greeting, the President complimented the
regime, headed up by the Ayatollahs, as
[[Page S1705]]
being cooperative in terms of their nuclear negotiations with the P5+1.
What the President didn't mention is that this very regime that is
spreading terror, unlike at any time in recent memory, is involved in
the toppling of four Arab capitals. They are wreaking havoc on the
neighborhood. As we are negotiating on their nuclear deal, they are
still the largest state sponsor of terrorism. They called for death to
America 2 days ago.
So I say to the Obama administration: Wake up and change your
policies before you set the whole world on fire. Please watch your
language because our best ally in the region, the State of Israel, does
not deserve the label of ``occupier,'' given the facts on the ground,
and they do not deserve to hear from the Chief of Staff of the
President of the United States language that is usually reserved for a
terrorist organization.
So when I thought it couldn't get any worse, it has. Let me put the
Obama administration on notice. You may not like the fact that Prime
Minister Netanyahu won, but he did, and here is what you need to
understand. If you are recalculating the administration's support for
Israel in terms of how you handle resolutions in the United Nations,
you need to understand that Congress will recalculate how we relate to
the United Nations if you stand on the sidelines and let the U.N. take
over the peace process.
There will be a bipartisan, violent backlash in this body if the
Obama administration does not veto a U.N. resolution defining the peace
process in the Security Council, avoiding direct negotiations between
the parties. I am here to say that one of the casualties of a haphazard
foreign policy could be the relationship between the United Nations and
the Congress. I promise there is bipartisan support in this body for
two things: to stand firmly with Israel and not to allow the U.N.
Security Council to take over the peace process in defining the terms
of a deal.
Secondly, if there is a deal with the Iranians over their nuclear
program, if this administration takes that deal to the U.N. Security
Council, bypassing Congress and not coming to us first, there will
become a great backlash regarding that move.
So I say to the Obama administration: Israel is not the problem. The
Israeli people have not killed one American soldier. The Israeli people
are in a dispute about their survival with the Palestinian people. The
Israeli people gave land to the Palestinians, and in return they got
10,000 rockets, and you want them to do it again. Can't you understand
why Israel may not want to withdraw from the West Bank given the
history of Gaza? If you can't, you are completely blind to the world as
it is, and your hatred and your disgust and your disdain for the Prime
Minister has clouded your judgment.
So to our friends in Israel I say: There can only be one Commander in
Chief, and that is the way it should be. But there are 535 of us in the
House and the Senate and we do have your back. We will not sit on the
sidelines and watch this rhetoric enacted in a manner that would put
you at risk beyond what you already are in terms of risk.
This is a low point for me; that an administration, the Chief of
Staff of an American President, would use this language, but it fits
into an overall pattern that I think is very destructive. So I say to
President Obama and Mr. McDonough: Your foreign policy is not working.
If you don't get that, then God help us all because what you are doing
in the Mideast is not working. You are making everything worse, and now
you have added fuel to the fire.
I hope there will be some self-correction at the White House; that we
will not take this rhetoric any further than we have today; that there
will be a reevaluation of whether it is appropriate to call the Israeli
people occupiers, given the facts on the ground. Only time will tell.
I do understand this, without any hesitation. There are many of us in
this body who will not put up with this. We will push back. Israel has
not killed one U.S. soldier. Israel hasn't toppled any of their
neighbors. Israel doesn't chant ``Death to America.'' You may not like
the outcome of the Israeli election, but it was up to the Israeli
people to decide, and they have decided.
All of us got into this body the same way--people at home voted for
us. Under our Constitution, we have an equal voice to that of the
President in terms of checks and balances. Even though he is the leader
of America's foreign policy and the Commander in Chief, we do have the
right to speak on such matters. So here is my voice, and I think I
speak for many on both sides of the aisle when I say to the Israeli
people: Do what you have to do to defend the Jewish State. To the
President of the United States and Mr. McDonough: The language you used
today is very unhelpful and, quite frankly, disconnected from reality.
I will end with this. Would any Member of this body, if they were in
Israeli leadership, withdraw from the West Bank, given what is going on
in the region? Would any Member of this body be as restrained in
responding to a rocket attack coming from a neighbor as Israel has been
restrained? What would we do if some terrorist organization next door
to us launched a rocket trying to kill our children? Would we be as
restrained as our Israeli friends? I doubt it.
I am asking this body to walk a mile in the shoes of the Israeli
people and understand why this statement is so offensive and has
usually been reserved by the leader of the free world to describe
terrorist organizations.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mrs. ERNST. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(The remarks of Mrs. Ernst pertaining to the introduction of S. 841
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
Mrs. ERNST. Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
____________________