[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 88 (Monday, June 6, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3397-S3408]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2017
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the motion to
proceed to S. 2943 is agreed to.
The clerk will report the bill.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
A bill (S. 2943) to authorize appropriations for fiscal
year 2017 for military activities of the Department of
Defense, for military construction, and for defense
activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe military
personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other
purposes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona.
Amendment No. 4206
Mr. McCAIN. Madam President, I call up amendment No. 4206.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Arizona [Mr. McCain], for Mrs. Fischer,
proposes an amendment numbered 4206.
The amendment is as follows:
(Purpose: To modify the requirement that the Secretary of Defense
implement measures to maintain the critical wartime medical readiness
skills and core competencies of health care providers within the Armed
Forces)
On page 423, strike lines 16 and 17 and insert the
following:
(a) In General.--Except as provided in subsection (c), not
later than 90 days after submitting the report required by
subsection (d), or one year after the date of the enactment
of this Act, whichever occurs first, the Secretary of Defense
On page 425, strike lines 10 through 18 and insert the
following:
(5) The Secretary shall ensure that any covered beneficiary
who may be affected by modifications, reductions, or
eliminations implemented under this section will be able to
receive through the purchased care component of the TRICARE
program any medical services that will not be available to
such covered beneficiary at a military treatment facility as
a result of such modifications, reductions, or eliminations.
[[Page S3398]]
(c) Exception.--The Secretary is not required to implement
measures under subsection (a) with respect to overseas
military health care facilities in a country if the Secretary
determines that medical services in addition to the medical
services described in subsection (b)(2) are necessary to
ensure that covered beneficiaries located in that country
have access to a similar level of care available to covered
beneficiaries located in the United States.
(d) Report on Modifications.--
(1) In general.--Not later than 180 days after the date of
the enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and
the House of Representatives a report on the modifications to
medical services, military treatment facilities, and
personnel in the military health system to be implemented
pursuant to subsection (a).
(2) Elements.--The report required by paragraph (1) shall
include, at a minimum, the following:
(A) A description of the medical services and associated
personnel capacities necessary for the military medical force
readiness of the Department of Defense.
(B) A comprehensive plan to modify the personnel and
infrastructure of the military health system to exclusively
provide medical services necessary for the military medical
force readiness of the Department of Defense, including the
following:
(i) A description of the planned changes or reductions in
medical services provided by the military health system.
(ii) A description of the planned changes or reductions in
staffing of military personnel, civilian personnel, and
contractor personnel within the military health system.
(iii) A description of the personnel management authorities
through which changes or reductions described in clauses (i)
and (ii) will be made.
(iv) A description of the planned changes to the
infrastructure of the military health system.
(v) An estimated timeline for completion of the changes or
reductions described in clauses (i), (ii), and (iv) and other
key milestones for implementation of such changes or
reductions.
(e) Comptroller General Report.--
On page 428, between lines 15 and 16, insert the following:
(3) The terms ``covered beneficiary'' and ``TRICARE
program'' have the meanings given those terms in section 1072
of title 10, United States Code.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
Mr. REED. Madam President, I rise to discuss the fiscal year 2017
national defense authorization bill, which was passed out of the Armed
Services Committee on May 19 by a vote of 23 to 3.
I want to begin by thanking Chairman McCain, not only for his kind
and thoughtful words but for ably leading the committee through many
thought-provoking hearings and a successful markup with bipartisan
support of the bill. I believe the committee has worked diligently in
the past month, not only to evaluate the President's budget request for
fiscal year 2017 but also to take a hard look at the Department of
Defense and to consider what reforms are necessary. Most, if not all,
of that effort is a direct result of the leadership of Chairman McCain
and his commitment to ensuring that we were thoroughly immersed in the
details, that we had access to expert testimony, and that we heard both
sides of the argument and led to the markup, which was productive and
has resulted in the legislation that is before us today.
I think we both agree that we can make improvements, and we both will
strive to do that over the course of the next several weeks and in our
deliberation with the House, but we are beginning with very thoughtful
and very constructive legislation that we brought to the floor. I thank
the chairman for that.
There are many provisions in this bill that will help the Department
today and in the future. It is a lengthy bill that contains sweeping
reforms, as the chairman described in some detail, and I support many
aspects of this bill. In fact, I was privileged to work with the
chairman and our staffs in developing some of these aspects. Because of
the scope and because of the range of these improvements and reforms, I
believe--and I think this is shared by others--that we need a continued
dialogue with the Department of Defense and other experts to ensure
that we not only take the first steps but that the subsequent
consequences, both intended and unintended, are well known and
contribute to our overall national security. We truly must ensure that
our decisions which are ultimately incorporated in this legislation
improve the Department's operations and do not create unnecessary and
detrimental consequences.
Let me highlight some of the aspects of the bill that will help our
military in ongoing overseas operations.
We are engaged in a difficult struggle with ISIL and radical
extremists, and critical to our efforts to fight against ISIL are our
local partners. That is why this bill includes $1.3 billion to support
the Iraq and Syria train-and-equip programs and $180 million to support
the efforts of Jordan and Lebanon to secure their borders.
The bill also includes $3.4 billion for the Afghanistan Security
Forces Fund to preserve the gains of the last 15 years. These are
critical investments that enhance our interests and keep pressure on
our enemy.
The bill provides the funds necessary to enable our operations across
Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, and other locations where ISIL, Al Qaeda,
and its remnants are located. This funding will continue to enable the
Department to hunt the leaders of these organizations and illuminate
their network of supporters. Ensuring that there is continuous pressure
on violent extremists is critical, and it is with that focus that the
chairman and I worked to include these important elements in the
legislation.
The bill funds U.S. Special Operations Command, or SOCOM, at the
requested level of $10.76 billion, including an increase of $26.7
million to help address technology gaps identified by SOCOM on its
fleet of MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aerial vehicles, which are important to
our ability to effectively carry out counterterrorism strikes while
avoiding collateral damage. The bill also extends critical authorities
used by special operations forces and enhances the role of the
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity
Conflict in providing oversight and advocacy for SOCOM within the
Department.
The fight against terrorism is not our fight alone, and it requires
the support of old and new partners across the globe. This bill will
enable the Department of Defense to support and enable our foreign
partners and also, critically, will continue to provide support to our
intelligence community to protect the homeland.
Of major significance, this year's bill would undertake the most
comprehensive reform of the Defense Department's security cooperation
enterprise in decades. Since 9/11, Congress, partly at the request of
the Department and partly through our own doing, has created dozens of
new authorities to enable our Armed Forces to engage with the national
security forces of friendly foreign countries. This patchwork has been
difficult to navigate and oversee. To address this problem, this bill
would consolidate and streamline security cooperation authorities. This
will greatly enhance the Defense Department's ability to address the
wide-ranging and evolving nature of global threats.
Additionally, the NDAA consolidates roughly $2 billion in security
cooperation funding into a new fund, the Security Cooperation
Enhancement Fund. This new fund will enhance public transparency,
increase flexibility, and improve congressional oversight.
While the Department of Defense is responsible for only two of the
administration's nine lines of effort against ISIL--and this bill funds
those two lines of effort--DOD also plays an essential enabling role
for many other parts of our government, particularly in the areas of
intelligence collection and analysis. This bill ensures the Department
is able to continue this critical support so we can maintain an
integrated effort against our enemy. The Department of Defense is not
the only Federal agency that is responsible for our Nation's security.
All agencies have a role and should receive the resources they need.
The bill before us also includes $3.4 billion for the European
Reassurance Initiative, which will deliver critical investments to
increase U.S. military presence in Europe, improve existing
infrastructure, and enhance allied and partner military capabilities to
respond to external aggression and bolster regional stability. It also
authorizes up to $500 million for the Ukraine Security Assistance
Initiative to continue the ongoing efforts to support the Ukrainian
security forces in the defense of their country.
One major concern the committee heard repeatedly, and the chairman
[[Page S3399]]
made reference to on numerous occasions, is about the state of
readiness with our troops and their equipment. I am very pleased that
this bill contains almost $2 billion in additional readiness funding to
satisfy some of the Service Chiefs' unfunded requirements, with the
goal of restoring military readiness as soon as possible. Additionally,
all of these increases are paid for with corresponding and targeted
funding reductions.
One other aspect of our national security is our nuclear deterrent.
In many cases, it forms the bedrock of our defense posture. This is an
essential mission which must not be neglected and our committee
continues to support it on a bipartisan basis.
The bill continues to fund the President's request to modernize our
triad of nuclear-capable air, sea, and ground delivery platforms. This
is the first year of full engineering, manufacturing, and development
funding for the B-21, which will replace the B-52s that were built in
the 1960s. While the B-21 will be costly, I believe this bill places
rigorous oversight on the program to ensure that we understand the
technology risk as it moves forward.
Turning to the area of undersea deterrence, if we are to maintain a
sea-based deterrent, the current fleet of 14 Ohio-class submarines must
be replaced starting in 2027 due to the potential for hull fatigue. By
then, the first Ohio submarine will be 46 years old--the oldest
submarine to have sailed in our Navy in its history.
The third aspect of our triad, our land-based ICBMs, will not need to
be replaced until the 2030s. We have authorized the initial development
of a replacement for this responsive leg of the triad, which acts as a
counterbalance to Russian ICBMs.
Let me focus for a moment on the submarine program, which is frankly
an important part of our national security and an important industry
for my home State where this construction begins. This bill supports
the Virginia-class attack submarine production at a level of two per
year. The Navy's requirement for attack submarines is a force of 48
boats. Since attack submarine force levels will fall below 48, even
with the purchase of two Virginia-class submarines per year, we cannot
allow the production rates to drop at all.
The bill also supports the Virginia Payload Module upgrade to the
Virginia-class submarines, with production starting in fiscal year
2019. The Virginia Payload Module program is important to begin
replacing Tomahawk missile magazine capacity that will decline sharply
as we retire the Navy's four guided missile submarines in the next
decade.
Our support of the Virginia-class attack submarine program has led to
stability that helped drive down costs and improve productivity. This
bill continues that support and also supports the plans for achieving
similar effectiveness on the Ohio replacement program. Establishing and
achieving cost reduction goals in these Virginia-class and Ohio
replacement programs will yield significant stability to our Nation's
submarine base, which will ensure the Navy has a modern, capable
submarine fleet for many years to come.
The chairman also indicated in his remarks that the bill accomplishes
much on behalf of our servicemembers and the Department of Defense. It
authorizes a 1.6 percent pay raise for all servicemembers and
reauthorizes a number of expiring bonus and special pay authorities to
encourage enlistment, re-enlistment, and continued service by active
duty and reserve component military personnel. The bill permanently
extends the Special Survivor Indemnity Allowance scheduled to expire
next year, clarifies the applicability of certain employment rights for
military technicians, establishes an independent National Commission on
Military, National, and Public Service to review the Selective Service
process, and makes numerous enhancements to military whistleblower
protections.
Notably, this bill also contains a robust package of health care
reforms. The current military health care system, designed decades ago,
has served us well. Since 2001, battlefield survival rates have been
higher than at any time in our Nation's history. Clearly, battlefield
medicine is a pocket of excellence in the military health system that
must be maintained. However, it is also clear that the military health
care system has increasingly emphasized delivering peacetime
healthcare, and beneficiaries have voiced their concerns about access
to care.
While I know that many in the military community are wary of changes
to the healthcare system, I believe the reforms included in this bill
are designed to improve and maintain operational medical force
readiness while at the same time affording better value to TRICARE
beneficiaries by providing higher quality medical care, with better
access to that care, and a better experience of care.
I am also pleased to note that the mark includes the 105
recommendations of the Military Justice Review Group. The review group
was made up of judges and lawyers, all military justice experts, who
spent 18 months reviewing and providing recommended changes to update
the entire Uniform Code of Military Justice. These provisions provide a
much-needed updating of the military justice system, and I want to
commend the members of the review group for their work and also the
counsels on the committee, Gary Leeling and Steve Barney, for all their
efforts in this area.
Again, a major effort, as has been highlighted by the chairman, is to
continue the Senate tradition for improving the way DOD buys
everything, from major systems like the F-35 and submarines to office
support services, to spare parts, and even to the buying of new
technologies and next-generation research products.
I am pleased we have taken positive steps to strengthen our
contracting and program management workforces and support Secretary
Carter's efforts to reach out to innovative Silicon Valley companies
and other high-tech small businesses. I am glad we are building on the
considerable and successful efforts Under Secretary Frank Kendall has
taken to control costs and improve delivery times of our major weapons
systems through his active management and leadership, which have
resulted in a very successful series of better buying power procurement
reforms.
Consistent with those efforts, we have taken steps to improve our
ability to estimate costs of new weapons systems, especially the cost
to maintain them in the field or at sea, sometimes for decades, and to
de-layer the bureaucracy and untangle the redtape that the Pentagon
acquisition process has sometimes been very much weighted down by.
We can use better data and better analysis to make better decisions
on what we acquire and how we maintain it. I want to note that I
believe there are a few provisions where continued dialogue with the
Pentagon can improve our bill and make sure we achieve our shared goal:
delivering the best and most modern systems to our forces, while
protecting taxpayer money in the most responsible manner possible.
I hope we can work together to reexamine and refine a few provisions
of the bill to that end. For example, I am concerned that we overly
limit the flexibility of DOD to use all available contract types to
best balance the needs of government and industry. I am pleased the
bill before us is very supportive of the scientists, engineers, and
other technical innovators in organizations like DARPA, in the
Department of Defense, and in DOD laboratories across the Nation.
We fully fund the President's request for science and technology
research programs, including the university research programs that are
the foundation of almost all military and commercial technology. We
also fully fund the important work of DARPA and the Strategic
Capabilities Office, both of which are working to develop the next-
generation systems that will dominate the battlefields of the future,
on the ground, on the sea, under the sea, in space, and in cyber space.
We also take important steps to ensure that DOD can better compete
with the private sector for a limited and shrinking pool of world-class
technical talent. I am pleased to see we have given the DOD labs and
DARPA important tools to hire the best scientists and engineers through
faster hiring processes and some special pay authorities.
[[Page S3400]]
We have also taken steps to cut the redtape that often ties up these
organizations and keeps them from achieving their full innovative
potential, as well as to allow the labs to more easily build and
maintain modern research equipment and laboratory facilities. One of
the major challenges facing DOD is the difficulty in moving such a
large and diverse organization to adopt new and more efficient business
practices.
I am pleased the bill provides a number of authorities and pilot
programs that will allow the Department to explore new business
practices, informed by best commercial practices, which hopefully will
drive down costs and reduce the bureaucratic burdens on the military.
For example, we push for the Department to make more use of the
burgeoning field of big data and data analytics so it can collect and
use information and data in a much more sophisticated way, to improve
DOD management, human resources, and acquisition practices.
Big data techniques are changing the way the commercial sector
markets products, manufactures, and manages supply chains and
logistics. It is even changing the way people manage sports teams. We
would like to see similar techniques and technological advances used in
ways that will improve the efficiency of the Pentagon and its
processes.
We take a major step in this bill to redesignate the position of the
Under Secretary for Acquisition Technology and Logistics as the Under
Secretary for Research and Engineering. I understand and support the
chairman's intent to make sure that innovation, research, and
technology are at the forefront of Pentagon thinking. We all know we
are now in a world where the Pentagon can no longer corner the market
on the best people or the best new technologies.
Our foreign competitors are closing the gap on our battlefield
technological superiority, and global commercial companies are far
outspending the government on the development of new systems and
technology in areas like cyber security, biotechnology, aerospace, and
others that are critical to the future of our national security.
I hope the reorganization and realignment steps we take in this bill
support DOD's effort to stay at the leading edge of technological
advances. I worry that we may not understand all of the implications of
the major changes we are proposing, and I hope we can continue to have
a robust and open dialogue, including with the Pentagon's leadership,
so we can take these steps in a thoughtful, considered way.
Once again, we have taken very bold and very thoughtful steps, but I
think we can enhance these steps with a bigger, productive dialogue.
This bill takes several other steps to reform both the organizational
structures of the civilian and military leadership and also the
Pentagon's overall approach to its operations. One of the most
significant provisions of the bill is the creation of cross-functional
teams. The Office of the Secretary of Defense is organized exclusively
along functional lines, such as acquisition, personnel, logistics,
finance, and intelligence, but the real work of the Department is
mission performance, which requires integrating across all of these
functional stovepipes to achieve specific objectives. This integration
task has always been a serious challenge, conducted through layers of
management spanning more and more functional boundaries, ending with
the Secretary and Deputy Secretary of Defense.
The Armed Services Committee, in the years before drafting the
Goldwater-Nichols act, grappled with the broad problem of mission
integration across DOD. The committee found solutions for achieving
``jointness'' in the combat operations of the Department, but the
committee was unable, at that time, to find practical mechanisms to
achieve mission integration in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
The problem of integrating across silos of function expertise is not
unique to DOD or the government as a whole. Industry has long struggled
with the same problem. Not surprisingly, industry has pioneered
effective ways to integrate across their enterprises, dramatically
improving outcomes in shorter timeframes, and ultimately streamlining
and flattening organizational structures. This bill is the first major
step in applying these concepts systematically in government. It will
not be easy. There will be resistance to such changes, but I believe we
are taking steps in the right direction, and I encourage the leadership
of the Department of Defense to work with Congress to make this reform
successful.
Another important provision is a reform of the Joint Requirements
Oversight Council, JROC, which shepherds the joint acquisition process.
This bill elevates the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs from merely
``first among equals'' on the Council to the principal adviser to the
Chairman on military requirements. The committee hopes this change will
solve one of the most important and consistent criticisms of the JROC;
namely, that it is a quid-pro-quo process dominated by parochial
service interests.
There are other reform provisions--changes to the role of Chairman of
the Joint Staffs and Combatant Commands, a reduction in the number of
general and flag officers, and a change to the type of strategy
doctrines produced by the Department. Again, these reforms are a good
start, but these are major changes that may have unforeseen
consequences. I think they would benefit, again, from further
discussion with the Defense Department's military and civilian
leadership and outside experts. I encourage and look forward to that
dialogue.
Let me highlight one provision of the bill that I am somewhat
concerned with. It limits the Defense Department's ability to implement
an important Executive order that protects the health, safety, and
labor rights of veterans, disabled persons, and other persons of the
defense industry workforce. The Executive order is an important tool to
ensure that DOD is working with responsible contractors that are more
likely to deliver goods and services critical to national security on
time and on budget when they are following these procedures.
This order is being implemented in a way that protects the rights of
all employees, while also protecting due process rights for the
companies concerned, and ensuring that there is no discrimination
against them based on incomplete evidence of wrongdoing or
unsubstantiated allegations. I hope we can work to continue a policy,
as enunciated by the Executive order, that I think we can all support,
ensuring DOD is working with responsible contractors to protect our
workforce and support national security missions.
Finally, I would like to say a few words about the funding levels for
defense. The bill reported out of committee includes $523.9 billion in
discretionary spending for defense base budget requirements and $58.9
billion for Overseas Contingency Operations. It also includes $19.3
billion for Department of Energy-related activities, resulting in a
top-line funding level of $602 billion for discretionary national
defense spending.
While these funding levels adhere to the spending limits mandated by
the Bipartisan Budget Act, BBA, of 2015, concerns have been raised that
the Department requires additional resources. As all Members are aware,
when the Senate considered the BBA last fall, it established the
discretionary funding levels of defense spending for fiscal year 2017.
That agreement passed this chamber with support from Senators from
both political parties. Furthermore, the BBA split the increase in
discretionary spending evenly between the security and nonsecurity
categories. As we consider the fiscal year 2017 NDAA, there is likely
to be--in fact, the chairman has made it very clear--an effort to
increase military spending above the level established by the BBA.
It is important to remember that since the Budget Control Act was
enacted in 2011, we have made repeated incremental changes to the
discretionary budget caps for both defense and nondefense accounts. We
have done so in order to provide some budget certainty to the
Department of Defense and also to domestic agencies. As debate on this
bill continues, the chairman has indicated he will propose an amendment
to increase spending for defense only.
Again, this seems to run counter to the central tenets of all the
previous budget negotiation agreements. If defense funds are increased,
funding for
[[Page S3401]]
domestic agencies must also be increased, I believe. In addition, this
is a point that I think all of us acknowledge, our national security is
broader than simply the accounts in the Department of Defense. It is
the FBI, it is the Department of Homeland Security, and it is many
other agencies that contribute to our national security.
Let me conclude, once again, by thanking the chairman and my
colleagues on the committee who contributed significantly and
thoughtfully through this whole process, and I particularly thank the
staff who worked laboriously and at great personal cost to ensure that
we have a bill we can bring to our colleagues on the floor and stand
and continue a very thoughtful, vigorous, and important dialogue about
the national security of the United States. Let me thank them.
I know there are many amendments that have been filed. I look forward
to working with the chairman and all of my colleagues to get this
legislation completed and sent forward.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
If no one yields time, the time will be equally charged to both
sides.
The Senator from Delaware.
50th Anniversary of Robert F. Kennedy's ``Ripples of Hope'' Speech
Mr. COONS. Madam President, on this exact date half a century ago,
then-Senator Robert F. Kennedy delivered a powerful speech in Cape
Town, South Africa, a nation that was then struggling through the cruel
injustices of apartheid. It was the conclusion of a remarkable trip to
South Africa in which Bobby Kennedy visited the Nobel Peace Prize-
winning Chief Lutuli, visited Soweto, visited the University of Wits in
Johannesburg, and spoke with students at the University of Cape Town.
Last week I had the opportunity to help lead a congressional
delegation to commemorate Bobby Kennedy's historic journey and his
famous ``Ripples of Hope'' speech he delivered during his visit. The
trip offered all of us an opportunity to reflect on the parallels
between America's civil rights movement and South Africa's liberation
struggle and to renew the conversation of reconciliation as both
countries face legacies that remain both difficult and unresolved.
More importantly, as South Africa and the United States face serious
challenges to the very institutions that underpin and preserve our
democracies, this trip served as a reminder that while our
constitutional orders may be supported by courageous and principled
leaders through critical moments in our history, nations don't endure
because of a few charismatic and historic individuals, they endure
because of institutions.
I was honored to be joined on this trip by a bipartisan group of
colleagues from the House of Representatives, including, most
importantly, Congressman John Lewis of Georgia, who is a hero of
America's own civil rights movement, Democratic Whip Steny Hoyer of
Maryland, and five others. There was also a ``Ripples of Hope''
delegation that traveled alongside us that included RFK's children,
Kerry Kennedy and Rory Kennedy. Kerry is now president of the RFK Human
Rights Foundation. There were more than a dozen members of the Kennedy
family, of several generations, as well as the leaders and some members
of the Faith in Politics Institute. It is Faith in Politics that
annually organizes--under the leadership of Congressman John Lewis--the
civil rights pilgrimage of Members of Congress, Republicans and
Democrats, House and Senate, who retrace the steps of the famous Selma
march, which he helped lead, as well as the pivotal events of both
Montgomery and Birmingham at the height of the American civil rights
movement. These three organizations--the Faith in Politics Institute,
the RFK Foundation, and the congressional delegation--met up in South
Africa.
At the time of Bobby Kennedy's visit 50 years ago, South Africa was
deep in the throes of apartheid, with a liberation movement that had
been decapitated in the Liliesleaf raid of 1963 and pushed far
underground. At that point, Black South Africans lived in fear, and
their leaders were either imprisoned or in exile. The National Party
and the South African security forces controlled nearly every state
institution. As author Evan Thomas has described it, ``Nowhere was
injustice more stark or the prospect for change bleaker than South
Africa in 1966.'' RFK would later write about what he what called ``the
dilemma of South Africa: a land of enormous promise and potential,
aspiration and achievement--yet a land also of repression and sadness,
darkness and cruelty'' as of 1966. To put it plainly and simply,
apartheid was a brutal form of racial subjugation.
In the midst of an environment in which White supremacy was codified
by law and most anti-apartheid leaders and stalwarts were imprisoned or
on the run, Bobby Kennedy was invited to give the University of Cape
Town's Day of Affirmation address. Kennedy began his speech at Jameson
Hall, describing ``a land in which the native inhabitants were at first
subdued, but relations with whom remain a problem to this day; a land
which defined itself on a hostile frontier; . . . a land which once
[was] the importer of slaves, and now must struggle to wipe out the
last traces of that former bondage.'' RFK then paused before
concluding: ``I refer, of course, to the United States of America.''
As you listen to the audio recording of his speech, you can then hear
a ripple of recognition and applause that Kennedy--who many thought was
introducing his speech about South Africa--was instead recognizing
remarkable parallels between our two nations. As Kennedy spoke to a
large crowd who had waited in the cold for hours, he made it clear with
his opening that he came not to preach to the people of South Africa
from our supposed position of superiority due to the length of our
democratic experiment but to share and to learn from our common
legacies and challenges.
Then and now, the differences between the United States and South
Africa are profound and real. Yet Americans and South Africans do share
more than we might widely recognize. We have similar stories to tell,
and we have many lessons that we can and should learn from each other.
Today, more than 20 years after the end of apartheid, South Africa's
post-apartheid nonracial democracy is struggling to deliver on the
promise of its ambitious founding principles and to transform its
economy to generate opportunity for all its citizens. Meanwhile, here
in the United States, we are mired in dysfunctional politics, and many
Americans justifiably feel that we have failed to make even modest
progress on the economic and social challenges we face.
Our countries also share a deeply embedded history of racial
discrimination and division from which we have not yet healed--a shared
struggle exemplified by the fact that 50 years ago during Kennedy's
trip to South Africa, American civil rights activist James Meredith was
shot by a White gunman while marching for voting rights in Mississippi.
We share complex histories of struggles balancing the role of
violence and nonviolence in seeking justice and equality under the law.
Today we share flawed criminal justice systems that
disproportionately punish our citizens of color, and we share sadly
imperfect education systems that don't do enough to support them.
Today we also continue to share a struggle to find the most
appropriate way to welcome and incorporate literally millions of
undocumented immigrants and to prevent the tensions associated with
xenophobia--something we have seen in the United States and we also
heard about in South Africa last week.
Yet, despite our common shortcomings, we share remarkable
constitutions and inspiring foundational documents--South Africa's
Freedom Charter and our own Declaration of Independence--whose soaring
principles say powerful and inspiring things but whose lived
experiences have so far fallen short.
We share a powerful commitment to democracy framed by these strong
original documents, respect for the rule of law, and capable and
independent judiciaries--institutions created and sustained by the work
of many over hundreds of years.
We share a striking foundational moment: Our President George
Washington and their President Nelson Mandela--both, as founding
Presidents,
[[Page S3402]]
stepped down from their offices willingly and set powerful precedents
of respect for constitutions and term limits.
We share the fact that we are deeply religious nations across all
racial backgrounds and all income levels. Both South Africa and the
United States have deep and long traditions of faith and religion which
have powerfully influenced our public lives. These, of course, are
traditions which were at times in the past twisted into justifications
for prejudice and racial discrimination but which also served as
guiding lights for the nonviolent efforts to achieve justice and
reconciliation.
If you think about it, these shared faith traditions have inspired
some of our most powerful leaders. Congressman John Lewis, who was with
us on this trip, was beaten, bloodied, and arrested 40 times in the
streets of the South, fighting for equality in the South under the law.
He led the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. As the leader of
the march on Selma in 1966, he encountered State troopers armed with
guns, tear gas, and clubs wrapped in barbed wire as he crossed the
Edmund Pettus Bridge and simply said, before the onslaught that later
became known as Bloody Sunday, ``Let us pray.''
We all remember that Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., was one of
the most important leaders of our civil rights movement, the Baptist
preacher and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference
who, when imprisoned in a Birmingham jail, wrote that ``human progress
never rolls in on wheels of inevitability; it comes through the
tireless efforts of men willing to be coworkers with God.''
Similarly, in South Africa some of their most important leaders were
clergymen. One of the most moving moments for me in our trip was the
chance to revisit a fellowship I have shared with Archbishop Desmond
Tutu, for whom I worked briefly 30 years ago. Tutu, the Anglican bishop
who led the South African Council of Churches and fought for decades
against apartheid, was lifted up and recognized with the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1984 and many years later received the Presidential Medal of
Freedom here in the United States. He ultimately chaired the post-
apartheid Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which engaged in the
very hard work of convening whole committees of both those who
committed the atrocities of apartheid and their victims in a
disciplined, constitutionally created, nationwide effort at
reconciliation. It was Archbishop Desmond Tutu who wrote, ``Hate has no
place in the house of God.''
In both the United States and South Africa, the language used to
challenge unjust structures and actions of the government in civil
society at the time were rooted in Biblically based questions of
justice and righteousness. It made possible national conversations
about forgiveness and reconciliation.
Some of the most striking and powerful witnesses offered quietly on
the sides of our journey were from two Americans who were participants
in the faith and politics civil rights pilgrimage this year in
Charleston, SC. They were survivors of the horrible events at the
Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, a tragedy in which relatives and
friends were savagely murdered during a Bible reflection prayer
session. It was a tragedy from which two survivors, Felicia and Polly,
traveled with us to South Africa last week, with the Kennedy
delegation. It was many of those who survived that tragic event in
Charleston, SC, who just a few days later, in confronting the gunman,
were able and willing, out of the depths of their faith, to say
publicly:
We have no room for hate. We have to forgive.
I will remind you that one thing that is most impressive about
Congressman John Lewis from his own experience in our civil rights
movement is his ability to reconcile and forgive. Decades after a
member of the Ku Klux Klan beat John Lewis and many other Freedom
Riders in the summer of 1961, the now U.S. Congressman John Lewis
welcomed a Klansman who had actually beaten him decades before to his
office here in Washington and said, as he has repeated many times on
our civil rights pilgrimage, ``I accept your apology. I forgive you.''
One of the most striking aspects of Nelson Mandela's leadership as
the first President of a truly free, nonracial South Africa was his
capacity for forgiveness. Twenty years after he was released from
prison--an imprisonment that lasted 27 years and robbed him of his
opportunity to be a free man, to see his own children grow up, to be a
contributing part of his society; an apartheid imprisonment that took
away virtually his entire adult life--20 years after his release from
prison, Mandela invited one of his former jailers to dinner at his own
home, a man with whom he had become friends, saying that their
friendship ``reinforced my belief in the essential humanity of even
those who had kept me behind bars.'' Think about the depths of that
forgiveness. As our own President Obama has put it, referring to
Mandela by his familiar name, ``It took a man like Madiba to free not
just the prisoner, but the jailer as well.''
It is individuals such as John Lewis and Nelson Mandela who set the
example of healing, forgiveness, and reconciliation that may ultimately
allow us to move forward from our foundational sins of slavery and
discrimination. And it is the powerful witness of those from South
Carolina, from the Emanuel AME Church, who have challenged us anew, in
an era of Black Lives Matter concerns and protests, to redouble our
efforts to achieve real repentance by those who weigh violence against
our racial minorities in the United States and those whose still need
reconciliation and forgiveness.
Last week our congressional delegation had a chance to break bread
with Archbishop Desmond Tutu. We heard him discuss the vital importance
of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which allowed the people of
South Africa to attempt to work together to move past the bitterness
and hatred of apartheid. There is much work undone in South Africa
today, as I referenced, but the transformational impact of the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission is beyond doubt in that it made it
possible for both the perpetrators and the victims of apartheid to see
each other face to face and to engage in many acts of contrition and
reconciliation.
We had a chance on our trip to South Africa to visit Liliesleaf Farm
just outside of Johannesburg, which was the site where the leaders of
the underground anti-apartheid movement--led by Nelson Mandela, Walter
Sisulu, and Andrew Mlangeni, the African National Congress--where all
of those leaders were at one time picked up by the South African
security police. This was in July of 1963. We had a chance to meet with
and hear from many of the stalwarts of that stage of the struggle--from
Walter Sisulu's son Max to Mlangni himself, now in his late eighties--
about their struggles following the raid and the Rivonia treason
trials, after which there were life sentences imposed on many of those
captured at Liliesleaf.
We also visited Nelson Mandela's home in Soweto and his jail cell on
Robben Island, where he served out 18 years of his very long sentence.
We had a remarkable and moving tour of Robben Island, provided for us
by Ahmed Kothrada, who goes by the casual name of ``Kathy,'' and who
talked with us about his experience on Robben Island and about how they
maintained discipline, how they were able to continue to work together
to shore up each other's spirits as they coped with year after year of
brutal conditions and hard prison labor.
One of the most striking things for me was to hear from this man, Mr.
Kothrada, the absence of bitterness, the absence of vitriol after his
life, too, was marred by decades of imprisonment by the apartheid
regime.
It wasn't just members of our delegation who had an opportunity to
learn from these conversations. There were also many South Africans who
had the opportunity to hear from Congressman John Lewis, as he spoke
passionately in several different settings, both in Johannesburg and in
Cape Town, about his experience in our civil rights movement. It was
uplifting to see him mobbed afterwards by young South Africans
everywhere he went who wanted to meet with him, hear from him, take
pictures with him, and reflect once again on the common and
constructive legacies of our two nations.
As we look back at 50 years, we see from the struggles of people like
John Lewis and Nelson Mandela that while progress is possible, RFK's
observation that ``humanity sometimes progresses very slowly indeed''
remains true, and humanity has much more work to do.
[[Page S3403]]
Today, in South Africa, over half the Black population lives in
poverty compared to less than 1 percent of the White population.
Average annual household income is over $25,000 for White South
Africans, yet barely $4,000 for Blacks. South Africa's unemployment
rate is 7 percent for Whites and over 30 percent for Blacks, and it is
much higher in the townships and for younger South Africans. Even when
Black students make it to South Africa's universities, like the
University of Cape Town, they are much less likely to graduate.
I have many more statistics that I could cite, but by important
measures, inequality between Whites and Blacks has actually increased
since the end of apartheid in South Africa since 1994.
These disparities are not unique to South Africa. A Pew Research
Center study found that in 2013 in the United States, White households
had a median net worth 13 times greater than that of our African-
American households--the largest discrepancy in decades in our country.
Our Department of Education recently found that compared to White
students, Black students in America are far less likely to have access
to preschool, advanced high school courses, are much more likely to be
suspended, and are much less likely to complete college.
These divides sadly extend to our legal system as well. On average,
Black men in America receive sentences 20-percent longer than White men
who commit identical crimes. The population of my home State of
Delaware is 22 percent Black, yet two-thirds of our prison population
is African American.
Behind all these challenging and difficult statistics lies the very
real challenge of how to be true to our foundational values and yet
find a path forward that creates both growth and empowerment and
opportunity and progress for the peoples of both of our countries. By
any measure, we have more work to do. Echoing the words of Congressman
Lewis, ``we have come a great distance . . . but we have a great
distance farther to go.''
In that June 6 address 50 years ago, Bobby Kennedy described the
plane that brought him to South Africa from which ``we could see no
national boundaries, no vast gulfs or high walls dividing people from
people.'' Today, globalization has proven that the boundaries between
us and them--whether by race or religion, party or nationality--are
indeed what RFK called them--illusions of differences.
Still, we need to find the courage and the strength to tackle these
problems, to not fall victim to the forces of apathy and complacency.
We must find solutions that work for each country in its own context.
Exactly 50 years ago today, Bobby Kennedy told South Africans: ``Few
will have the greatness to bend history but each of us can work to
change a small portion of the events, and then the total of all these
acts will be written in the history of this generation.'' That, in some
ways, was the enduring power of his best known quote from that speech,
about how each man, each individual--man or woman--who stands up for an
ideal acts to improve the lot of others or strikes out against
injustice and sends forth a tiny ripple of hope. All those ripples in
combination can form a wall of water that knocks down even the greatest
of impediments to progress and justice, such as the walls of apartheid.
It was these very ripples that sent forth hope to all South Africans
in 1966, when Bobby Kennedy spoke. It was these ripples that sustained
Mandela's struggle over decades and that prompted the son of an African
immigrant to America to take his first steps towards a career in public
service, a decision that ultimately brought him to our Presidency
today. It was the same commitment to equality and justice that led me,
30 years ago, to travel to South Africa and work for the Council of
Churches there, under the tutelage of both Reverend Paul Verryn and
Archbishop Desmond Tutu. It was this same experience which was
reflected in Bishop Tutu's ``Ubuntu,'' the distinctly South African
idea that, as President Obama put it, we are all bound together in ways
invisible to the eye but there is a oneness to humanity.
I met a remarkable range of men and women, young and old, leaders of
this generation and the last in South Africa in this past week, and I
was reminded in all of our conversations--on Robben Island, at
Liliesleaf, with young entrepreneurs in Soweto, with business leaders
trying to grow the economy and create opportunity, with those from
every background in South Africa--that all of these men and women have
fought that fight, sending forth ripples of hope that brought the
mighty walls of apartheid crashing down and built a more equal nation
in its place 20 years ago. That has to continue to be part of this
progress today and going forward.
Bobby Kennedy's visit 50 years ago played a critical role in changing
the tone and tempo of the anti-apartheid struggle at the time. Margaret
Marshall, a student activist then in South Africa, recalled this from
the time of his visit in 1966:
The world seemed to ignore us . . . but Bobby Kennedy was
different. He reminded us . . . that we were not alone.
That we were part of a great and noble tradition, the
reaffirmation of nobility and value in every human person.
We all had felt alienated. It felt to me that what I was
doing was small and meaningless. He put us back into the
great sweep of history.
Last week, speaking at that same university at which her father
provided this vital infusion of optimism a half century ago, Kerry
Kennedy told us these ripples of hope didn't have to come from
governments or militaries or corporations. They can come from anyone,
anywhere--from seemingly average people, just as was the case with
Margaret Marshall five decades ago. Today, they come from us, from the
citizens we represent across this Nation and the people struggling
across South Africa to find together a better and brighter future.
In the months and years to come, the United States and South Africa
can and should look to each other for lessons and inspirations as we
continue to work to heal the damage of racial injustice, to reverse the
trends of economic inequality, and to protect our experiments in
democracy.
As South Africa prepares for upcoming municipal elections in August,
and as we prepare for our own national elections in November, both
nations are entering periods in our electoral history where our
institutions of democracy and governance are being challenged. Today,
South Africa is showing just how important to the sustainment of
democracy it is to have not just charismatic, worldly, historical, or
forgiving heads of state or individuals leading churches but also a
very strong public protector, an independent judiciary, a vibrant
media, and an engaged electorate.
In America and South Africa, I believe our institutions will protect
and preserve our democracies. These institutions must, of course, be
inspired and led by courageous and principled individuals, like Senator
Kennedy, like Congressman Lewis, like President Mandela. But nations
don't endure because of individuals. Nations must endure because of
strong institutions.
Two months after he returned to the United States, Kennedy reflected
on his speech of 50 years ago today, and said:
I acknowledged the United States, like other countries,
still had far to go to keep the promises of our Constitution.
What was important . . . was that we were trying.
In 1991, when President Mandela came here to speak, he told an
American audience: ``I am not a saint, unless you think of a saint as a
sinner who keeps on trying.'' The people of the United States must keep
trying to be true to our foundational values and documents, and the
people of South Africa must as well. We must all keep on trying, as
President Obama said, because ``action and ideas are not enough. No
matter how right, they must be chiseled into law and institutions''
that will endure.
We have a lot of trying left to do. From last week, I have concluded
that we have much to learn from each other and much to teach the rest
of the world. So let's rededicate ourselves, 50 years after Bobby
Kennedy's speech gave hope to South Africa and the world, to facing
these challenges together.
I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. COONS. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
[[Page S3404]]
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
72nd Anniversary of D-day
Mr. TILLIS. Madam President, I am here today to talk about a very
important event in American history. Seventy-two years ago today, six
American and four British and Canadian divisions began the assault on
Adolf Hitler's Fortress Europe, on what German Field Marshal Rommel
famously referred to as ``the longest day.''
As the paratroopers moved to their planes and infantrymen embarked on
their ships, Dwight Eisenhower reminded them of their cause when he
said:
You are about to embark upon the Great Crusade, toward
which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the
world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty-loving
people everywhere march with you. In company with our brave
Allies and brothers-in-arms on other Fronts, you will bring
about the destruction of the German war machine, the
elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppressed peoples of
Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.
North Carolina was at Normandy on that day. At 1:51 a.m., Fort
Bragg's 82nd Airborne Division, under the command of MG Matthew
Ridgeway and BG James Gavin, began the fight. The paratroopers of the
``All-American Division'' were scattered by bad weather and German
anti-aircraft fire, missing many of their designated drop zones. Within
hours, though, through sheer guts and determination, the All-American
Division had captured towns and crossroads and ensured that the Panzer
counterattack did not reach Normandy beaches, allowing the Allied
infantry to push into the heart of German-occupied France.
The 82nd Airborne finished the war as the most decorated combat unit
in the history of the United States, a distinction that still holds
today. The cross-channel invasion fixed Omaha and Utah Beaches for the
American assault. ``Bloody Omaha'' was the most difficult of the
landing beaches, due to its rough terrain and bluffs fortified by
Rommel's infantry division.
Omaha was hit by the U.S. First and 29th Infantry Divisions. The
29th, known as ``The Blue and Gray Division,'' was a National Guard
unit composed of men from North Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland. In
the first wave, A Company, 1st Battalion, 116th Infantry, from the
Virginia National Guard in Bedford, VA, was annihilated as it landed.
The catastrophic losses suffered by the small Virginia community led
it to being selected for the site of the National D-day Memorial.
Losses were so heavy that GEN Omar Bradley seriously considered pulling
American forces from Omaha Beach. However, follow-on units from the
North Carolina National Guard reached that beach, as immortalized in
the opening scenes of the movie ``Saving Private Ryan.''
By nightfall, the division headquarters and 10,000 reinforcements
landed and began fighting inland. On Omaha Beach, ``uncommon valor was
[quite] common'' that day.
By the evening of June 6, over 1,000 men from the 29th had become
casualties on Omaha Beach. Added to losses at other beaches and drop
zones made the total casualties for Operation Overlord 6,500 Americans
and 3,000 British and Canadian soldiers.
During World War II, the 29th Infantry Division had such a high
casualty rate it was said that its commanding general actually
commanded three divisions: one on the field of battle, one in the
hospital, and one in the cemetery. The 29th Infantry Division lost
3,720 killed in action, 15,403 wounded in action, 462 missing in
action, 526 prisoners of war, and another 8,665 noncombat casualties,
for a total of 28,776 casualties during 242 days of combat.
Today, thousands of North Carolinian guardsmen continue the brave
tradition of this proud unit.
The people of North Carolina remember the soldiers of D-day and their
comrades from other battlefields of the war. On the Cape Fear River
sits the USS North Carolina, the most decorated battleship of World War
II. It is not a museum. It is a reminder. It is our memorial. The names
of over 10,000 North Carolinians who paid the ultimate price are set on
the walls of that great ship. In Franklin Roosevelt's words, ``They
fought not for the lust of conquest. They fought to end conquest. They
fought to liberate.''
As we observe D-day, I hope we all recognize the ultimate sacrifice
so many men and women have paid in uniform, and on the week that we
consider the national defense authorization, I hope all of my
colleagues will recognize the incredible importance and the debt we owe
them to do our job here so that they can continue to defend us abroad.
We have to do everything we can to get them safe and prepared and ready
to do that mission.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. PORTMAN. Madam President, I didn't know my colleague from North
Carolina was going to come to the floor to talk about D-day. That is
what I am going to talk about too. I would like to follow on his
comments, first, to congratulate him for a terrific job of explaining
the importance of this day, not just to our country but to the world,
the day America truly began the liberation of Europe, and also for his
description of the North Carolina brave soldiers who lost their lives
that day.
It was 72 years ago this morning when the invasion began. It was a
day in which there was a lot of concern and anxiety. People knew this
was going to be a major conflict.
Some 40 years later, Ronald Reagan spoke at Pointe du Hoc. He made
the point that every church in America was filled that morning. By
about 4 that morning, people were praying all over the country, knowing
this was going to be a very difficult battle. It was the largest
amphibious assault in the history of the world. There were 150,000
Allied troops involved, and as my friend from North Carolina indicated,
we lost over 10,000 troops that day, most of whom were Americans. There
were 10,000 aircraft involved as well and 6,000 ships.
It was thought that day that Franklin Delano Roosevelt would give a
speech, as he had done many times before, called a ``fireside chat,''
from the White House, talking about the invasion and helping the
American people to understand the importance of that day, but he
decided to do something else instead. He decided, instead of giving a
speech, to recite a prayer. That prayer has become known as the ``D-day
Prayer.'' It is a very powerful statement.
About 2 years ago on this day, the 70th anniversary, we passed
legislation in the Senate to actually ensure that prayer would be part
of the World War II Memorial. We are now going through the process to
have that included in the World War II Memorial so all Americans today,
and the children and grandchildren of those World War II veterans and
heroes, as they come to Washington, are able to see this prayer
Franklin Delano Roosevelt said that day. I would like to read these
words that were spoken 72 years ago by President Roosevelt, if I might.
He said:
My fellow Americans: Last night, when I spoke with you
about the fall of Rome, I knew at that moment that troops of
the United States and our allies were crossing the Channel in
another and greater operation. It has come to pass with
success thus far.
And so, in this poignant hour, I ask you to join with me in
prayer:
Almighty God: Our sons, pride of our Nation, this day have
set upon a mighty endeavor, a struggle to preserve our
Republic, our religion, and our civilization, and to set free
a suffering humanity.
Lead them straight and true, give strength to their arms,
stoutness to their hearts, steadfastness to their faith.
They will need Thy blessings. Their road will be long and
hard. For the enemy is strong. He may hurl back our forces.
Success may not come with rushing speed, but we shall return
again and again; and we know that by Thy grace, and by the
righteousness of our cause, our sons will triumph.
They will be sore tried, by night and by day, without
rest--until the victory is won. The darkness will be rent by
noise and flame. Men's souls will be shaken with the
violences of war.
For these men are lately drawn from the ways of peace. They
fight not for the lust of conquest. They fight to end
conquest. They fight to liberate. They fight to let justice
arise, and tolerance and good will among all Thy people. They
yearn but for the end of battle, for their return to the
haven of home.
Some will never return. Embrace these, Father, and receive
them, Thy heroic servants, into Thy kingdom.
And for us at home--fathers, mothers, children, wives,
sisters, and brothers of brave men overseas--whose thoughts
and prayers are ever with them--help us, Almighty God, to
rededicate ourselves in renewed faith in Thee in this hour of
great sacrifice.
Many people have urged that I call the Nation into a single
day of special prayer. But
[[Page S3405]]
because the road is long and the desire is great, I ask that
our people devote themselves in a continuance of prayer. As
we rise to each new day, and again when each day is spent,
let words of prayer be on our lips, invoking Thy help to our
efforts.
Give us strength, too--strength in our daily tasks, to
redouble the contributions we make in the physical and the
material support of our armed forces.
And let our hearts be stout, to wait out the long travail,
to bear sorrows that may come, to impart our courage unto our
sons wheresoever they may be.
And, O Lord, give us Faith. Give us Faith in Thee; Faith in
our sons; Faith in each other; Faith in our crusade. Let not
the keenness of our spirit ever be dulled. Let not the
impacts of temporary events, of temporal matters of but
fleeting moment let not these deter us in our unconquerable
purpose.
With Thy blessing, we shall prevail over the unholy forces
of our enemy. Help us to conquer the apostles of greed and
racial arrogancies. Lead us to the saving of our country, and
with our sister Nations into a world unity that will spell a
sure peace--a peace invulnerable to the schemings of unworthy
men. And a peace that will let all of men live in freedom,
reaping the just rewards of their honest toil.
Thy will be done, Almighty God.
Amen.
This is the prayer that he spoke on D-day. What a powerful moment.
On this day, 72 years later, we remember the bravery and the
sacrifice of D-day. We remember the fact that this was the beginning of
the liberation of Europe, and, indeed, as President Roosevelt
predicted, we would ultimately prevail, despite great losses.
Let us also today, as we are talking on the floor--this evening,
tomorrow, and through the week--about our defense forces, remember the
importance of this prayer, as it talks about the need for us to ensure
we do have a strong military and that we support those in the military
forces as we take up the Defense authorization legislation.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MORAN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Vote on Amendment No. 4206
Mr. MORAN. Mr. President, I yield back the time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Rubio). All time has expired.
The question occurs on agreeing to amendment No. 4206.
Mr. MORAN. I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. The following Senators are necessarily absent: the
Senator from Indiana (Mr. Coats), the Senator from Arizona (Mr. Flake),
the Senator from North Dakota (Mr. Hoeven), the Senator from Wisconsin
(Mr. Johnson), the Senator from Illinois (Mr. Kirk), the Senator from
Alaska (Ms. Murkowski).
Further, if present and voting, the Senator from North Dakota (Mr.
Hoeven) would have voted ``yea'' and the Senator from Wisconsin (Mr.
Johnson) would have voted ``yea.''
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr. Booker),
the Senator from North Dakota (Ms. Heitkamp), and the Senator from
Vermont (Mr. Sanders) are necessarily absent.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Lankford). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 91, nays 0, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 89 Leg.]
YEAS--91
Alexander
Ayotte
Baldwin
Barrasso
Bennet
Blumenthal
Blunt
Boozman
Boxer
Brown
Burr
Cantwell
Capito
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Cassidy
Cochran
Collins
Coons
Corker
Cornyn
Cotton
Crapo
Cruz
Daines
Donnelly
Durbin
Enzi
Ernst
Feinstein
Fischer
Franken
Gardner
Gillibrand
Graham
Grassley
Hatch
Heinrich
Heller
Hirono
Inhofe
Isakson
Kaine
King
Klobuchar
Lankford
Leahy
Lee
Manchin
Markey
McCain
McCaskill
McConnell
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Moran
Murphy
Murray
Nelson
Paul
Perdue
Peters
Portman
Reed
Reid
Risch
Roberts
Rounds
Rubio
Sasse
Schatz
Schumer
Scott
Sessions
Shaheen
Shelby
Stabenow
Sullivan
Tester
Thune
Tillis
Toomey
Udall
Vitter
Warner
Warren
Whitehouse
Wicker
Wyden
NOT VOTING--9
Booker
Coats
Flake
Heitkamp
Hoeven
Johnson
Kirk
Murkowski
Sanders
The amendment (No. 4206) was agreed to.
(At the request of Mr. Reid, the following statement was ordered to
be printed in the Record.)
vote explanation
Mr. BOOKER. Mr. President, today the Senate voted on amendment
No. 4206 to S. 2943, the National Defense Authorization Act, NDAA, for
fiscal year 2017. This amendment would ensure that beneficiaries
affected by changes to military health care designed to maintain
critical wartime medical readiness skills and core competencies will be
able to access through TRICARE medical services no longer available at
military treatment facilities. I support this amendment because it
ensures military families and retirees receive the care they deserve
while allowing the military to focus on its wartime medical skills and
training, and I would have voted in favor of it if I were present for
the vote.
Currently, the Military Health System has the dual role of medically
supporting wartime deployments while caring for Active Duty members,
retirees, and their families in peacetime. However, the core
competencies and skills required for wartime and peacetime medical care
can, at times, diverge. Great efficiencies can be found through public-
private partnerships that can allow military medical professionals to
focus on their wartime skills, while allowing the civilian health
system to provide more care to military families and retirees. In our
fiscally constrained environment, we must ensure that we use our
defense dollars for maximum effect.
Amendment No. 4206 specifies how beneficiaries will receive care
because of changes to the Military Health System. The amendment also
requires the Secretary of Defense to submit a report to Congress on the
modifications to medical services, treatment facilities, and personnel
in the Military Health System. This ensures appropriate oversight of
the Department of Defense's reforms in this area. I will continue to
work to ensure that the individuals that protect us every day receive
the care and support that we owe them.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona
Amendment No. 4229
(Purpose: To address unfunded priorities of the Armed
Forces)
Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, I call up my amendment No. 4229.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
The Senator from Arizona [Mr. McCain] proposes an amendment
numbered 4229.
Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading
of the amendment be dispensed with.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(The amendment is printed in the Record of May 25, 2016, under ``Text
of Amendments.'')
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Pennsylvania.
Mr. TOOMEY. Mr. President, I rise today to speak about the National
Defense Authorization Act, which we will be processing this week, I
hope. Particularly, I want to talk about Section 578. Section 578 is a
provision designed to protect the children of our servicemembers and
specifically to protect them while they are at school from convicted
pedophiles and other dangerous felons.
This is an issue I have been working on for 2\1/2\ years. My
involvement resulted from hearing about a horrific story that is about
a little boy name Jeremy Bell. The story begins at a school in Delaware
County in Southeastern Pennsylvania. A schoolteacher there had molested
several boys--had raped one. When the school officials and the local
law enforcement figured out that something very, very wrong was going
on, they unfortunately concluded that they just did not have
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enough evidence. They did not have a strong case that they could bring
against this teacher.
The school wanted to get rid of him, and tragically they were OK with
letting him become someone else's problem. They wrote a letter of
recommendation with the understanding that he would leave. This monster
took the letter of recommendation, went across the State line to West
Virginia, was hired as a teacher, and several years later he had become
a principal. Of course, these people don't change their ways, and he
didn't. He continued to molest and attack little boys. It ended when he
raped and killed a 12-year-old boy named Jeremy Bell in West Virginia.
That time, justice caught up with this teacher. He is now serving a
life sentence in jail for that murder, but of course it is too late for
Jeremy Bell. Tragically, Jeremy Bell is not alone.
Since Joe Manchin and I first began this effort in this Chamber 2\1/
2\ years ago, at least 1,150 school employees have been arrested across
the country for sexual misconduct with the kids whom they are supposed
to be looking after, they are supposed to be caring for, and they are
supposed to be teaching--1,150. That is more than one a day. Of course,
those are the ones where the officials knew enough to feel confident
that they could make an arrest and actually press charges. How many
more cases are actually happening? I would stress that these aren't
just numbers. Every one of these 1,150 arrests represents a horrific
tragedy and, in many cases, more than one.
Consider a few examples from my State of Pennsylvania.
Just this past January, the parents of children at Trinity High
School in Washington County learned something absolutely horrific. They
learned that a special education teacher there was charged with raping
a little girl over a 15-year period. It started when she was just 3
years old, and they didn't discover this until she was 18. He had raped
another little girl who was only 6 years old.
Or consider the Phoenixville Area Middle School in Chester County. In
November 2013, the school's principal was sentenced to 2 years in
prison for having child pornography. A month later, a special education
and math teacher at the school was arrested for possessing child
pornography, some involving very, very young children.
It is hard to even talk about these things. It is very uncomfortable
to hear about this, to talk about this, but we can't shy away from
this. If we think it is uncomfortable to think about it, talk about it,
and hear about it, what about the experience for the child and the
child's family? Every day it seems there is a new story.
In Pittsburgh, Plum High School, two teachers have pled guilty to
having sex with younger students. A third one is awaiting trial on
related charges. The DA is investigating allegations that the school
superintendent and principal might have ignored reports of abuse along
the way.
Another teacher has been charged with witness intimidation. He made
one of the victims, a girl who is a victim, stand up in front of the
class, and he mocked her because she brought the issue to the attention
of the authorities.
This is outrageous. This has to stop. I have vowed that I am going to
do everything I can to try to provide greater security to our kids in
our schools.
This past December we took a big step in the right direction, in my
view. Congress passed legislation, and President Obama signed it into
law. It was legislation in the broader education bill we passed that
had my legislation which now explicitly prohibits, forbids, knowingly
recommending one of these monsters for hire. So exactly the
circumstances that gave rise to the murder of Jeremy Bell--where a
school knows they have a pedophile, they discover it, and they still
send along a letter of recommendation so that he can become someone
else's problem--are now illegal, as well they should be. It is not as
rare as you might think. In fact, the practice is so common that it is
well understood in the circles of child advocates and the people who
prosecute these crimes and who defend children when they have been
victimized by these crimes. It is so common that it even has its own
name. It is called ``passing the trash.'' But, unfortunately, when we
got that piece of our legislation passed, we were not successful in
persuading all of our colleagues that we also had to have another
element to this. To really keep our kids safe, we need to make sure
that we have a rigorous background check and that people aren't able to
skirt--and we know that does happen.
I promised I would be back on the Senate floor to try to address this
weakness, this loophole--the fact that we don't have consistently
rigorous background checks--to make sure that we are not hiring these
creeps in the first place.
I am very pleased to announce today that I think we are very close to
taking another step forward in this legislation, thanks to Chairman
McCain, who just left the floor. But the senior Senator from Arizona,
the chairman of the Armed Services Committee, incorporated into this
legislation, the national defense authorization bill, the bill that I
introduced to protect our servicemembers' children. That is what it is
called; it is called the Protecting Our Servicemembers' Children from
Sexual and Violent Predators Act. It simply states that a school
district that accepts Impact money--that is the funding we approve in
Congress; it runs through the Defense Department, and it goes to the
school districts that are educating the children of our servicemembers
when they are on a base. What our legislation says is that such a
school district has to have a safe environment for kids. That is all.
They have to have a policy requiring criminal background checks for all
the school workers, any adults, who have unsupervised contact with
children. If a person applies for a job with such a school and it turns
out they have been convicted--not alleged, but convicted of a serious
crime, including murder, rape, or any violent or sexual crime against
children--then such a person may not be employed at a school in a
capacity where they would have unsupervised access to children. As I
said, this applies only to those school districts that receive Federal
Impact Aid; that is, those school districts that receive money to help
compensate them for the fact that they are educating our military
families' children. It is about 17 percent of America's school
districts that receive this Federal Impact Aid. It is roughly 8.5
million kids.
The legislation also applies to the DOD-operated schools. The Defense
Department operates its own schools to educate the children of our
military personnel. To the credit of the Defense Department, it is
already their own internal policy to require these appropriate
background checks that are rigorous enough to make sure that we stop a
violent predator from being hired in this capacity.
Because it is just internal policy, it could change, and enforcement
could lapse. What our legislation does is codify it because this is the
right thing to do. Let's codify it. Since it is the right thing to do
and we are doing it at our DOD schools, let's also do it at the other
schools that are educating our military families' kids.
I don't think this should even be controversial. Pennsylvanians whom
I talk to don't think this is controversial. Of course, they think we
should insist that our schools are at least as safe an environment as
we can make them. While the men and women are providing enormous
service to all of us--the sacrifice they make by wearing the uniform,
committing to serving in our Armed Forces--don't we owe it to them to
provide the level of protection that we can provide to their kids? I
think we do.
In addition, it shouldn't be controversial because, substantively,
this isn't anything new.
Last year every Member of Congress but one--the vote was 523 to 1,
the House and the Senate--passed almost identical background check
legislation with respect to daycare workers who worked for a daycare
that got funding through the childcare and development block grant
bill. In other words, we have already agreed. With 1 dissenting vote--
out of 100 Senators and 435 House Members, there was 1 dissenting vote.
Every other Senator and House Member on both sides of the aisle agreed
that this level of background check security ought to be provided for
very young kids. Why wouldn't we do it for slightly older kids--the
kids who are in primary and secondary schools--as well?
[[Page S3407]]
Despite that, there is opposition. Just last week, the senior Senator
from Illinois came to the floor to criticize my legislation. He stated:
``This provision fails to provide adequate due process and civil rights
protections for innocent individuals.'' I want to address this because
I couldn't disagree more.
First, it is important to note that our legislation--the legislation
that forbids the hiring of these pedophiles, people who have committed
these terrible crimes against kids--applies only if the applicant has
been convicted of a crime. If you have been alleged or rumored--that is
not what the legislation contemplates; it is only someone who has been
convicted.
The last time I checked, our criminal justice system was loaded with
due process rights. In order to get a conviction, we have very
elaborate processes that someone can avail themselves of, and of course
they always do. So nobody has been convicted without having had the
opportunity for all of us to pay for their lawyer to defend them, for
instance, if they need to; to have a jury trial if they want to do
that; all the civil rights guarantees throughout the Constitution. It
is all there. Due process--they have already had enormous due process
or they wouldn't have been convicted.
But our legislation goes a step beyond that. What we do is we say
that the applicant is entitled to a copy of the background check, so
they get full disclosure of whatever was discovered, and the school
district must have an appeals process if it turns out the applicant is
denied, because we acknowledge that it is conceivable that there could
be a mistake. It could be like the wrong John Smith who is applying for
a job at a school. There could be an error of some sort. In the first
place, you have to have been convicted, and in the second place, you
get to appeal. What more due process is necessary than that?
Well, I can tell you because we have had this debate before, and some
on the other side have suggested that they want something that I don't
even think qualifies as due process. It is a totally different
category, but they call it due process. What they want is a carve-out.
They want a minitrial. They want to give the convicted pedophile the
opportunity to make the case for why an exception should be made in his
case. It is unbelievable to me. How do I know this? Because last year
39 special interest groups sent a letter to the Senate asserting that
it is unfair to deny even a convicted child molester a teaching job.
They wrote this. I am going to quote from the letter briefly. It says:
We believe that individuals who have been convicted of
crimes and have completed their sentences should not be
unnecessarily subjected to additional punishments because of
these convictions.
Let's think about what they are saying. What they are explicitly
saying is that a person could admit to and be convicted of raping a
child, serve a sentence, walk out of prison, go down the road to the
local elementary school, apply for a job as a teacher, and they should
be hired. It is unbelievable.
I am not suggesting that the pedophile should never be eligible to do
any work at all, never have any job. That is not what I am saying. But
how about we keep them away from young kids? Is that really
unreasonable? That is all we are asking for. That is what we are
saying.
We have other colleagues who object to this notion, this legislative
approach, on the grounds that it offends their sense of federalism.
They think we should leave it to the States to decide whether and to
what extent the States and school districts will protect kids from
predators. I strongly disagree with that for many reasons. We might
well have an extended debate about that, but let me just give two brief
ones.
First, I think we have an oversight responsibility. I think the
Pennsylvanians who send me to the Senate and know I am casting votes on
how we are going to spend their tax dollars expect that I am providing
some kind of oversight--such that, for instance, their tax dollars
aren't used to hire a pedophile in a school. That would not be a
controversial notion with my constituents.
The second thing is that the folks who are hung up on the federalism
issue insist that every State is free to do what it wants to do. They
have to be able to pass whatever laws--or not--as they see fit.
What about the military family who can't determine which State? They
don't get to pick the State in which they are based--not always. They
are in a State. It is not their native State. They are assigned to that
base in a particular State, and they have to live with whatever the
laws are there.
Don't we agree that every child in America deserves to have
protection from these predators?
I do.
Our legislation doesn't go that far. I wish it did. We tried, and I
am not going to give up. But can't we at least provide that security
for the children of our military families? That is what our legislation
does do.
Again, I want to thank Chairman McCain. He has been a consistent
advocate for providing this level of protection to children. He was a
cosponsor of my legislation that prohibited passing the trash. His
support was essential in getting it passed last year, and I am really
proud of and grateful to him for working with me to incorporate the
language of my legislation into our NDAA legislation.
I strongly urge my colleagues that it is past time to act on this. As
I said, Senator Manchin and I have been pushing this for 2\1/2\ years,
and in that time another 1,150 school employees have been arrested for
sexual misconduct with the kids they are supposed to be taking care of.
Clearly, we are not doing enough. And we really need to ask
ourselves: How much bigger does that number have to get? How many more
children have to have their childhoods ruined? How many families need
to be torn apart before we are willing to pass this measure? I would
argue that we have seen more than enough, the children of America have
seen more than enough, and the children of the men and women who wear
the uniform of this country and who make the sacrifices to protect and
defend all of us absolutely deserve this protection.
So I hope we will pass this Defense authorization bill with this
language intact, and I once again express my appreciation to the
chairman for putting it into the base text.
I yield the floor.
Mr. President, 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. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Remembering Muhammad Ali
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, over the weekend the world learned the
sad news of the passing of Muhammad Ali. Ali was one of the preeminent
athletes of the 20th century. His story was an American story. It is
one that touched people in every corner of the world. It is one that
began in my hometown of Louisville. Louisville is where he grew up.
Louisville is where he fought his first professional fight. Louisville
is where the Muhammad Ali Center stands today. It is a memorial to his
legacy and to his life story. It is where mourners now lay flowers in
his memory.
As people around the world honor ``The Greatest,'' the spotlight
shines bright upon his hometown. I wish to again add my condolences as
well. I wish to again recognize a legend from Louisville who was more
than just a boxer, he was an icon known for grace on his feet and power
in his fists inside the ring and a great exuberance for life outside
it.
Mr. President, after needless and inexplicable delay by colleagues
across the aisle, we have begun consideration of the National Defense
Authorization Act today and will work to pass it this week.
The NDAA authorizes funds aimed at meeting the combat-readiness needs
of our armed services, maintaining our national security posture, and
supporting defense health care and benefits for servicemembers and
their families. It is an important measure we consider each year. It is
especially critical today given the myriad of threats facing our
country.
The next Commander in Chief, regardless of party, will take office
facing a number of security challenges--
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everything from instability in Libya, Syria, and Yemen, to a
belligerent North Korea, to a newly aggressive Russia. It is imperative
to do what we can now to better position our country to confront
challenges currently facing us and to better prepare for those yet to
come.
Ensuring military readiness and keeping Americans safe should be a
top priority for all of us, so I would encourage my colleagues to put
aside partisan politics and work together to bring this NDAA across the
finish line this week. We may pass the bill on Friday, we may pass it
sooner, but we will pass it this week. So let's all work hard to do so.
____________________