[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 88 (Monday, June 6, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3393-S3394]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MEMORIAL DAY, NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION BILL, AND FOREIGN POLICY
Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, on a happier note, during this last
week, we had the occasion to celebrate Memorial Day, a day of
remembrance. I know many of us had a chance to spend time with true
American heroes--the veterans, the Active-Duty military members and
their families--to remember the fallen on Memorial Day.
I had a particularly delightful occasion this Memorial Day to spend
time with about 115 high school graduates from across Texas as part of
a sendoff ceremony as they prepare to head to our Nation's military
academies. We have been doing this every year for 10 years. As I always
tell people: If you are a little down, if you are in a bad mood or
feeling a little depressed, all you need to do is be around these
wonderful young men and women who are really mature beyond their years
and who aspire not only to attend our Nation's service academies but to
be the next generation of military leaders. They truly are the best and
the brightest.
It was also great to provide an occasion for these young people and
their families to be there and hear from inspirational leaders such as
COL Bruce Crandall, a Medal of Honor winner from the Vietnam war.
So in remembering this last week the service of so many people in
defense of our Nation and these young people who I just mentioned on
Memorial Day and our academy sendoff, it is appropriate that we return
to the Senate this week to finish the national defense authorization
bill, legislation that will provide our military men and women with the
resources they need in order to protect and defend our country.
This is an absolutely critical piece of legislation and one that
Congress has passed each year for some 50 years-plus. If anyone doubts
that, all they need to do is ask Chairman McCain because he will remind
us every chance he gets that this is must-pass-every-year legislation
and something that has become a tradition--a good tradition--for the
Senate.
This bill was passed out of the Armed Services Committee with
overwhelming bipartisan support. Not a single Democrat voted against
the legislation, and before Memorial Day, the Senate voted unanimously
to move this legislation forward--98 yes and 0 no votes.
Despite this being a clear bipartisan priority, we have been stuck
and mired down for no real reason, frankly, because of objections from
the other side of the aisle. The minority leader has chosen to use
every tactic and every tool available to him to slow this down.
Frankly, this is not acceptable. The Defense authorization bill
provides critical resources to our military. It will give our men and
women in uniform a modest pay raise and support critical training and
equipment modernization efforts. And it ensures that future generations
of military leaders have the support they need.
I don't know what happened at Fort Hood when these nine soldiers
drowned, but I hope it doesn't have anything to do with their lack of
adequate training under these circumstances. What we need to do as part
of our duty in the Senate is to get our work done and to pass the
Defense authorization bill so there is not even a suspicion or hint of
lack of adequate training or preparation by our military members that
leads to tragedy.
At a time when we face instability at every turn and our military is
confronting evolving and constant threats, political posturing is not
appropriate. In fact, it is dangerous. Unfortunately, this is a product
of misguided foreign policy choices made by this administration over
the last 8 years. It has put our country and our military at greater
risk. Our enemies have become emboldened and our allies' confidence has
been shaken.
Instead of recognizing the growing threats our military men and women
face every day, the President tries to diminish them, calling ISIS the
``JV team.'' This is a terrorist group that continues its reign of
violence across Iraq and Syria and continues to grow in strength across
North Africa.
Words matter. When President Obama and former Secretary of State,
Secretary Clinton, refused to attribute terrorism to radical Islam, it
sent a message. And when the Obama administration and its allies ignore
the reality of the enemy we are facing, our men and women in uniform
are at greater risk of not having the full resources they need in order
to defend U.S. interests at home and abroad.
A few weeks ago, I had the chance to visit with U.S. soldiers in the
Middle East and to get a good glimpse of the reality on the ground that
the administration seems to be lacking. I heard firsthand about the
threats they face every day from ISIS-affiliated groups. That danger is
growing, not receding.
There is no doubt in my mind that this growing ISIS presence
correlates with gaps in our foreign policy under the Obama
administration. This is particularly clear in Libya, where the Obama
administration's failure in 2011 left a gaping hole of power--another
failed state in the Middle East, which, as we have seen before, becomes
a power vacuum that attracts foreign fighters and other people who want
to use that to leap into Europe and commit acts of terror, either there
or in the United States.
After Secretary Clinton pushed to remove Muammar Qadhafi, she
prematurely heralded this intervention as her signature achievement as
Secretary of State. This is something President Obama now admits was a
mistake. She calls it her signature achievement as Secretary of State.
Yet the vacuum created by the United States' retreating in the region
has only led to more chaos, and the ISIS fighters and recruiters have
quickly filled the space, as I said a moment ago. The Financial Times
even called it ``a mess no one should think will be resolved by the
current UN-backed peace process.'' This chaos doesn't just give
terrorism a foothold; it provides a strategic launch point for
terrorist attacks, directly across the Mediterranean from Europe.
In 2011, when the Obama administration, lacking any coherent, long-
term strategy, decided to lead from behind in Libya, I strongly opposed
that decision. While I can't say the same for others I have served with
in the Senate, I have been proud to vote against premature troop
withdrawals from volatile regions, as in Iraq, following the surge,
which the chairman of the Armed Services Committee and so many others
said was our one last chance in Iraq. To see us now fighting even as
trainers and advisers in places such as Fallujah and Ramadi and other
places where we have lost young lives to liberate--to see those now
squandered by a premature exit from Iraq due to the administration's
failure to get a security Status of Forces Agreement is just
heartbreaking.
We know so many did oppose the surge, including then-candidate Obama,
but the fact is, it paid off. Now we see all too clearly the
consequences of precipitous withdrawal--the squandering of hard-earned
progress achieved by the surge.
Of course, Secretary Clinton defended President Obama's decision to
remove U.S. troops before the region could be stabilized. In fact, when
asked about the potential threat of civil war in Iraq by exiting too
early, Secretary Clinton simply said, ``Well, let's find out.'' Well,
we found out, after all. Foreign policy isn't something we just find
out about or make up as we go along. It requires thoughtful planning
and purposeful, intentional action.
Of course, Syria is another case study of what can happen when the
White House refuses to act decisively
[[Page S3394]]
and proactively against our adversaries. Unfortunately, when red lines
are crossed with no consequences and when groups like ISIS aren't
treated as the serious threat they are, terrorism can make its way onto
U.S. soil. Just consider the attacks in San Bernardino or the multiple
attacks on our allies in Europe.
Unfortunately, as groups such as ISIS are getting stronger, our
friends around the world are increasingly getting concerned that the
United States doesn't have their backs. The White House prioritized its
courtship with Iran, the No. 1 state sponsor of global terrorism, while
choosing to ignore our friends and allies in the region. Turning its
back on Israel to give Iran billions of dollars in sanctions relief was
a hallmark of President Obama's tenure in the Oval Office, and
Secretary Clinton said that she was proud to play a part in crafting
that terrible nuclear deal. This simply is not good foreign policy. Why
should we choose to reward those who have harmed us or threatened us
while ignoring our oldest and strongest relationships? The result is
what we would pretty much expect: an Iran that is ascendant in the
Middle East and growing in belligerence with a nuclear program largely
intact.
Our actions do speak louder than words, and right now our friends in
the Middle East and around the world are losing faith in their
relationship with the United States. This is simply a product of failed
foreign policy under the Obama-Clinton leadership. I think it is
telling that when former President Jimmy Carter, a Democrat, was asked
about President Obama's policies on the world stage, he said, ``I can't
think of many nations in the world where we have a better relationship
now than we did when he took over.'' This is President Carter on
President Obama's foreign relations. He went on to go through a list of
countries as examples of where, in his words, ``the United States'
influence and prestige and respect in the world is probably lower now
than it was six or seven years ago.'' On that point, I agree with
President Carter. The foreign policy of this administration is nothing
to be proud of.
Our job now in the Senate is to reassure our allies that the military
might of the United States has not fallen by the wayside. One way we
can do that is by ensuring our military has the resources and funding
necessary to remain a strong emblem of American strength for the rest
of the watching world. After delays and obstruction from our friends on
the other side of the aisle, I hope we can finally complete our work
this week on the Defense authorization bill under the able leadership
of Chairman McCain.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona.
Mr. McCAIN. Madam President, I thank the Senator from Texas for his
very compelling statement.
Just one example of what the Senator from Texas has referred to is
the whole issue of Qadhafi. I would remind my colleague from Texas that
we got rid of Qadhafi without losing a single American and then walked
away. We walked away from it, and now we see ISIS establishing a strong
beachhead--a direct failure of leadership of the Obama administration
and the then-Secretary of State.
There were many of us, including the Senator from Texas, who said:
Look, we have to do a lot of things now that you have gotten rid of
Qadhafi. This country has never known democracy; it has no
institutions. For example, we could have taken care of their wounded.
We could have helped them secure their borders. Instead, what did we
do? We killed Qadhafi--or his own people killed him. But we set up a
scenario that happened and just walked away--just as we walked away
from Iraq, just as we are sort of walking away from Afghanistan while
the Taliban is starting to show success throughout the country. This
administration is very good at walking away. Unfortunately, the
consequences are attacks on the United States of America and Europe.
So I thank the Senator from Texas for his very important statement.
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