[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 7 (Tuesday, January 12, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H284-H285]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CUBA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Florida (Ms. Ros-Lehtinen) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ROS-LEHTINEN. Mr. Speaker, as we get further away from December
17, 2014, the date that President Obama announced his change in U.S.
policy toward Cuba, it has become apparent that there could be no
abusive or provocative act committed by the tyrannical Castro regime
that the Obama administration is not willing to overlook or willing to
excuse.
Even after the Cuban regime was caught red-handed shipping surface-
to-air missiles, two MiG aircraft, and tons of Cuban-made weapons and
munitions to North Korea in violation of several U.N. Security Council
resolutions, it could not stop President Obama's desire to placate the
Castros.
This and the most recent revelation that the United States Government
found out in June of 2014 that Cuba managed to come into possession of
a
[[Page H285]]
U.S. Hellfire missile and continues, to this day, to turn over that
sensitive military technology are not isolated events. Both incidents
underscore exactly how egregiously the administration has erred and the
extraordinary lengths to which the President will go in order to hide
these transgressions from Congress and from the American people.
{time} 1015
You see, Mr. Speaker, after the President made his December 17, 2014,
announcement, it has been revealed that not only did the administration
keep Congress uninformed of the negotiations, but the negotiations had
been taking place for over a year and a half.
If we follow the timeline, that means that these secret negotiations
were taking place after the administration was already made aware that
the Castros were in possession of a U.S. Hellfire missile and after
Havana sent the illicit shipment of arms to Pyongyang.
Even after the administration offered concession after concession to
the Castros--the loosening of restrictions on travel, the opening of
Embassies--the list goes on and on--the President refused to make the
returning of sensitive missile technology a precondition to the
negotiations or to the implementation of this misguided policy.
Let's stop and think about this for a second, Mr. Speaker.
The President has given the Castro regime almost everything it could
have asked for. What did we ask for in return? Did we demand free and
fair elections? Of course not. Did we demand the end of the persecution
of dissidents and the release of political prisoners? You have got to
be kidding. Of course not. Did we demand the regime stop the long list
of human rights abuses? No.
In fact, just this past Sunday, over 200 people were arrested in Cuba
because they were calling for religious tolerance. But never mind that.
Let's look at the cool, classic Chevys that are all through the streets
of Havana. That is what we are supposed to be talking about.
The President didn't even demand that the Communist regime, with
known and close military ties to Russia, China, and North Korea, turn
over to the U.S. the Hellfire missile it had been in possession of
since June of 2014.
I don't need to remind my colleagues of how incredibly dangerous it
is for the Castros to be in possession of this sensitive military
technology or how incredibly damaging it could be to our own national
security interests when, not if, the regime turns that technology over
to one of our adversaries.
Last year both the Russian Minister of Defense and China's top
military official visited Havana to discuss ways to strengthen their
military cooperation efforts with Cuba, and a senior Castro regime
official traveled to North Korea for military talks.
Mr. Speaker, not only has the President's Cuban policy been a
disaster for the people of Cuba, it has been a disaster for our own
safety and security. There should be--there must be--a full and
thorough investigation into this Hellfire missile incident. If this
administration won't do what is necessary to hold the Cuban regime
accountable, then we in Congress must use every available tool in order
to do so.
We cannot allow the administration's endless train of concessions to
the tyrannical Cuban regime to continue while it turns its back on
those who are suffering under the regime's oppression. This is not what
America stands for, and we should not allow President Obama's misguided
foreign policy objectives to ever change that.
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