[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 139 (Wednesday, September 14, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5692-S5693]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FOREIGN POLICY
Mrs. ERNST. Mr. President, this past weekend we bowed our heads in
remembrance of the nearly 3,000 lives we lost on September 11, 2001.
The largest attack on U.S. soil since Pearl Harbor changed our lives
drastically, but it did not impact America as our enemy had hoped. We
did not falter. We bonded together. We fought back. From places such as
Sub-Saharan Africa, Afghanistan, and the Philippines, U.S. troops
operating under Operation Enduring Freedom showed those responsible for
9/11 the true power of the United States of America. The plan to fight
against Al Qaeda and its hosts was as clear as its name: ``Global War
on Terrorism.''
Through strong American leadership, support from our allies, and
working alongside local forces, the United States embedded itself in
places where extremism had spread to deny terrorism a safe haven. From
combat operations in Afghanistan to advising missions in the Caribbean,
there has long been a global and comprehensive plan for our response to
9/11. Since then, the global fight on terrorism has continued to become
narrower under our current administration, despite the continued threat
of Al Qaeda and the clear expansion of ISIS. Without clear leadership,
we are failing to stop the spread of terrorism.
Ignoring over a decade of lessons forged on the battlefield, this
administration has not only failed to put together a comprehensive plan
to fight Islamic extremism in the Middle East, but they have also
dismantled the global effort and allowed groups to come back stronger
in other regions of the world. This is especially true in Southeast
Asia, a nearly forgotten safe haven for terrorists determined to cause
harm. Southeast Asia was used for the initial planning of the horrific
attack carried out by Al Qaeda that we all bowed heads for in
remembrance this past weekend.
In 1994, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed used the Philippines as a safe haven
to target the United States. Today, ISIS appears to be doing the very
same thing. The warning signs in Southeast Asia are all too familiar to
the ones we witnessed over a decade ago with Al Qaeda in that region.
They used its Southeast Asia cells to organize and finance its global
network. This included planning and financing for 9/11 and the safe
harbor of Al Qaeda operative Ramzi Yousef, who was convicted for
organizing the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.
Because of this, following the September 11 attacks, U.S. Special
Forces were deployed to the southern Philippines in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom. With an annual cost of less than one new F-
35, the Joint Special Operations Task Force in the Philippines
partnered with local forces and trained, advised, and assisted our
allies in the fight against Al Qaeda-linked groups.
Up until the mission was officially ended under this administration,
operations and efforts to assist Philippine forces in dismantling
terror networks were hailed as a success. The threat of terrorism from
extremist groups in the Philippines, such as Abu Sayyaf, were largely
reduced. But the success from U.S. support in the region has been
short-lived. Just as we have been witnessing throughout the globe,
previously weak or splintered terrorist networks in Southeast Asia are
banding together beneath the flag of ISIS. Yet the administration's
plans to defeat ISIS have not changed and a comprehensive global
strategy still fails to be defined.
We can not allow Southeast Asia to once again become a safe haven to
target America. While it is easy to dismiss the terrorist groups in the
region as mere criminal gangs and disorganized rebels, the Philippines
lost 44 of its special police in a single battle against groups now
linked to ISIS in Southeast Asia last year. In April, 18 Philippine
soldiers were killed in a fight quickly claimed by ISIS. Then, in June,
ISIS released a call for other fighters to join them after beheading a
Canadian hostage. The video proudly displaying the black flag of ISIS
states: ``If you can't get to Syria, join the mujahedeen in the
Philippines.'' It is truly alarming.
Our efforts to counter ISIS in Asia can assist our broader goals of
countering a rising China and dealing with an unstable North Korea.
Just before President Obama traveled on his final trip to Asia this
month, I sent a letter urging him to discuss efforts for a new U.S.
counterterrorism strategy in the region. Specifically, I asked
President Obama to consider leveraging the five new bases recently
announced for U.S. personnel in the Philippines to counter the rise of
ISIS and to utilize our freedom of navigation patrols in the South
China Sea to provide support capabilities. Like many of our efforts
under Operation Enduring Freedom, this should be a fight with the
support of our allies.
The use of U.S. Special Forces helping train the Filipino forces has
a successful track record in the region, but it needs to be real
support and real training--a commitment with American leadership--or
else it will never have the full support of our allies in Southeast
Asia. They have witnessed our failure to appropriately support allies
in the Middle East, like the Kurdish Peshmerga. We must correct this
building perception of poor American leadership and weak support on the
[[Page S5693]]
battlefield. We cannot allow ISIS to use Southeast Asia as Al Qaeda did
to plan their next attack on U.S. soil.
Shortly after I sent my letter to President Obama urging him to
develop a strategy in Southeast Asia, ISIS claimed another attack, one
that took the lives of 10 Filipino civilians. We cannot continue to
downplay or ignore this part of the world when it comes to the threat
of terrorism.
I stand here today to renew my call for this administration to
develop a comprehensive strategy to destroy the enemies abroad who wish
to do America harm and those who provide them with a safe haven. As the
safe havens Al Qaeda used 15 years ago to target our homeland turned
into a staging ground for ISIS, the need to support our allies and
address this issue is far too clear.
I thank the Presiding Officer.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico.
____________________