[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H1805-H1806]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOMELAND SECURITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Quigley) for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Madam Speaker, in today's world, the threats we face are
constantly changing. Our ability to keep America safe relies on our
capacity to adapt quickly to these new and evolving threats.
In the years following 9/11, the U.S. made significant changes to our
intelligence and law enforcement capabilities that have stopped over 60
terror plots against the U.S. and saved countless American lives.
But 9/11 was 15 years ago. The threats we face today are vastly
different than the threats we faced then. It is time we reprioritize
resources to confront this new reality.
The recent terror attacks in Brussels and Paris confirm that one of
our largest security vulnerabilities is soft targets, relatively
unprotected venues where large groups of people gather. Soft targets
include places we all frequent, like airports, transit systems,
stadiums, restaurants, and shopping malls. They are easy to attack and
difficult to protect.
The recent attacks also showed that threats are becoming harder to
detect. The ability to collect intelligence on terrorist intentions and
terror plots is more challenging because of new encryption technology
and the reliance on lone-wolf attacks.
Because specific and credible threats are increasingly more difficult
to uncover, we need to redouble our efforts and reprioritize our
funding to reduce our vulnerabilities. Yet, alarmingly, current funding
for the Federal programs designed to keep America safe fails to meet
the new and growing threats we face.
The primary responsibility of the Federal Government under the
Constitution is to ``provide for the common defense,'' but, in recent
years, Congress has made significant cuts to the Homeland Security
programs that were designed to protect things like soft targets. Since
the majority took over the House in 2010, Homeland Security grants to
help States and localities protect against and respond to terror
attacks have been cut in half.
Urban Areas Security Initiative grants, which large cities like my
hometown of Chicago use to invest in the training and equipment
necessary to respond to their unique security threats, have been cut by
over $200 million. Transit security funding, used by the Chicago
Transit Authority to invest in camera systems that protect against
terror attacks and have lowered crime by 50 percent, has been reduced
by over 60 percent. And Buffer Zone Protection grants, which once
helped cities defend critical infrastructure like stadiums, are no
longer funded.
To the detriment of our security, many of my House colleagues have
championed the harmful, across-the-board spending cuts of sequestration
that restrict our intelligence and law enforcement capabilities and, in
2014, forced a hiring freeze at the FBI. They champion these cuts even
as the Secretary of Defense calls sequestration the ``biggest strategic
danger'' to our national security, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
argues it poses a greater threat to national security than Russia,
China, North Korea, Iran, and ISIS.
Last year, the House majority took the budget irresponsibility even
further by threatening to shut down the Department of Homeland Security
over a partisan fight over immigration. All the while, Congress
continues to prioritize billions in funding to respond to threats posed
by a cold war that ended decades ago.
For example, we are spending $350 billion over the next decade on our
outdated nuclear weapons policy. By simply eliminating our
strategically obsolete stockpile of ICBMs, we could free up $2.6
billion a year, money that could be spent on intelligence,
cybersecurity, and homeland security.
While the goal of our intelligence and law enforcement communities to
deter, detect, and prevent terror attacks remains the same, how we
accomplish and fund that goal must continue to evolve to meet the new
challenges we face.
Protecting against new and evolving threats will not necessarily
require additional spending, but it will require smarter spending. When
it comes to national security, we must continue to
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ask ourselves what really keeps America safe in today's world.
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