[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 135 (Thursday, September 8, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H5166]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
KILLING THE INNOCENTS IN SYRIA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Illinois (Mr. Kinzinger) for 5 minutes.
Mr. KINZINGER of Illinois. Mr. Speaker, I want to tell you a story.
There was a little boy named Ali Daqneesh, age 10, and his little
brother is Omran. That is the boy you see in the photo here that was
shared across the Internet, worldwide, 2 weeks ago.
Ali was a really good big brother. He loved to play outside, and he
was still at that age when kids really get to dream big and imagine
their future. I can only imagine the life that Ali looked forward to.
Maybe he wanted to be a police officer; maybe he wanted to be a teacher
or a doctor. I really can't say for certain because, tragically, his
life was cut short by an airstrike.
Ali's death is an all-too-common fate for many of Syria's men, women,
and children. These are the people who have lost their chance at life
from the brutality of Bashar al-Assad and Vladimir Putin.
Of the over 500,000 dead Syrians, more than 50,000 are Syrian
children who have been killed since the evil dictator Bashar al-Assad
turned against his own people in 2011. Yet, even as the world continues
to be outraged over these atrocities and pictures of dazed and bloody
Syrian children like Ali's brother Omran, Assad and Russia and their
Iranian backers are still barrel-bombing and launching chemical weapons
against civilian targets.
On a daily basis, we hear that Syrian and Russian fighter planes have
launched attacks on medical facilities and hospitals across the
country. When these facilities are bombed, it is the children who
suffer. In fact, the regime's belief is don't target, necessarily,
military assets because, when you target innocent civilians, you
inflict more collective pain on the population of Syria; and in Assad's
estimation, that brings the war closer to an end.
At the end of July, a maternity hospital in Idlib was bombed. A
recent story in The New Yorker highlighted the horror that comes with
these bombings. In Aleppo, newborns in incubators suffocated to death
because a Syrian or Russian airstrike cut off power to a hospital. Who
is doing this? And why?
Bashar al-Assad continued the legacy of brutality against his people
from his father--his father, who had one goal, and that was to keep
power. Power is a crazy motivator for some people. The people of Syria,
in 2011, decided they wanted some freedom, as is humanity's right, and
they stood up and protested peacefully against Assad.
What did Assad do? Did he respond by saying: Well, let's talk and
maybe find a way to have an outlet for your interests or your concerns?
No. Assad rolled the tanks. Assad said he would kill his opposition.
And what ensued after that was the incubation of a group we know today
as ISIS, the opening of a civil war in Syria that is now spreading all
over the Middle East, a massive refugee crisis around the world.
I hear some people in political conversations today express
admiration for Vladimir Putin. They express admiration for Vladimir
Putin's strength, as if oppressing and killing people is something to
be proud of. That doesn't show strength. That shows weakness.
Mr. Speaker, Vladimir Putin and Russia are tearing Europe apart.
Vladimir Putin and Russia are delivering bombs on medical facilities
and on children in Syria. They are no ally of ours. Sometimes the enemy
of our enemy is still our enemy.
Mr. Speaker, I hear people sometimes say that dictatorships work in
the Middle East. Sometimes they say that this introduction of freedom
has somehow been terrible for people who just aren't ready for it. I
agree. The introduction of freedom to a society that is not used to it
can sometimes be very messy, and sometimes in the course of looking
back over 20 years of history we see the success. That happened in our
own founding. We went through the Civil War. We went through a bloody
Revolution. We went through a time where we kept an entire race in
chains. But, Mr. Speaker, when people say that dictatorships work, no,
they don't.
This kid, I always wonder what is going through his mind. Probably
not much because he was stunned at the bomb that landed on his house
and killed his brother.
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