[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 95 (Monday, June 15, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S4122]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROVIDING ASSISTANCE TO IRAQI KURDISH PESHMERGA FORCES
Mrs. ERNST. Mr. President, as we continue to fight against ISIS and
their radical allies, I rise to urge my colleagues to support the
Ernst-Boxer amendment, which provides authority for direct assistance
to a critical partner in that fight: the Iraqi Kurds.
Defeating ISIS is critical to maintaining an inclusive and unified
Iraq, and the Iraqi Kurds are the key to that goal and helping to
improve the humanitarian crisis in the region through their support and
protection of over 1.6 million displaced persons from Iraq and Syria.
This bipartisan amendment, also cosponsored by Senators Graham,
Tillis, Rubio, and Gardner, provides temporary authority for the
President, in consultation with the Iraqi Government--and I say, again,
in consultation with the Iraqi Government--to provide weapons directly
to Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga forces in the fight against ISIS should the
administration choose to do so.
Currently, by law, the United States must provide support to the
Iraqi Kurds through the Iraqi central government in Baghdad, which has
often not been timely or adequate in the past. These delays have had a
negative impact on the Kurds' ability to defend Iraqi territory and
provide security for those who have sought refuge in Iraqi Kurdistan.
The President's recent decision to expedite arms to the Kurds as a way
to improve the counter-ISIS effort, I believe, speaks for itself.
Additionally, last year, Secretary of State John Kerry said to the
House Foreign Affairs Committee:
You said the administration is responsible for sending all
these weapons through Baghdad. No, we're not. You are. We're
adhering to U.S. law passed by Congress.
Secretary Kerry continued:
We have to send it to the [Iraqi] government because that's
U.S. law. If you want to change it, fix it, we invite you.
Well, this amendment does just that, and it does so in a bipartisan,
bicameral fashion. It builds upon a similar bill in the House led by
Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce and Ranking Member Engel.
This bill and my amendment are quite different than the House NDAA
language.
My amendment provides a 3-year authorization to reduce delays and
inefficiencies in arming Peshmerga forces to fight ISIS while ensuring
the Iraqi Government is an integral part of the process. The amendment
continues to promote a unified Iraq and enhances the ability to fight
our common enemy--an enemy that ultimately seeks to bring their terror
to our shores.
Furthermore, the amendment preserves the President's ability to
notify the Iraqi Government before weapons, equipment, defense services
or related training is provided to Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga forces. It
ensures this emergency authorization does not construct a precedent of
providing direct support to organizations other than a country or an
international organization. Most important to remember, it does not
require the President to act. It provides him the authorization to do
so if he feels the situation warrants it.
Beginning in the first gulf war, the Iraqi Kurds and their Peshmerga
security forces have played a vital role in supporting U.S. interests
and fostering a free Iraq, despite limited means of doing so. Last
week, they not only held their ground but made some gains against ISIS
in the Kirkuk Province. There are far too few positive news stories out
of Iraq recently, but when there are some, it is often the Kurds who
are making that progress.
ISIS is deadly and determined, and Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga forces--
our critical partner in the fight against ISIS--need U.S. weapons as
quickly as possible. We simply cannot afford future delays at this
critical moment in the battle. I urge my colleagues to join us in
supporting this much needed bipartisan legislation to arm the Iraqi
Kurds in the fight against ISIS.
With that, Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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.
Mr. NELSON. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Ernst). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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