[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 163 (Tuesday, September 21, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6564-S6565]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
Unanimous Consent Request--S. 2770
Mr. COTTON. Madam President, after Joe Biden's disastrous retreat
from Afghanistan, the country has fallen to a medieval band of
degenerate savages known as the Taliban.
Despite its depraved behavior, you won't hear anyone in our
government call the Taliban what it is: a terrorist organization.
Instead, Secretary of State Blinken has said, for example, that the
Taliban ``does not meet the test of inclusivity.'' It is as if the
Biden administration is more concerned that the Taliban is led by men
than that it is led by terrorists.
This administration has refused to declare that the Taliban is a
foreign terrorist organization, perhaps because the President
outsourced the security of American citizens to the Taliban last month
and stood by as it took over a country of nearly 40 million people.
Once again, the Biden administration is putting image, public
relations, before everything else. It refuses to acknowledge that the
Afghan retreat was anything but an ``extraordinary success,'' as Joe
Biden has called it. And now it is refusing to call terrorists
``terrorists.''
But the truth is obvious. If the Taliban isn't a foreign terrorist
organization, what is? The State Department's terrorism list includes
groups like Shining Path, the Marxist-Leninist-Maoist guerillas in
Peru, and Aum Shinrikyo, the Japanese doomsday cult.
If the State Department can go to the trouble of designating those
groups as terrorist organizations, surely they can do the same for a
band of jihadists whose hands are dripping with American blood.
Indeed, the Taliban matches to a tee the definition for foreign
terrorist organization under U.S. law. That law sets out three
criteria: First, it must be a foreign organization. I would assume the
Biden administration would
[[Page S6565]]
concede even that point about the Taliban. Second, it must engage in
terrorist activity. Has the Taliban engaged in terrorist activity?
Countless victims of Taliban suicide bombings, targeted assassinations,
IEDs, and acid attacks would surely answer yes to that question, if
they survived those heinous crimes.
Consider the following as well: At least 14 of the Taliban's 33 so-
called cabinet ministers are on the United Nations' sanctions list for
terrorism. No fewer than five were once held with terrorists at
Guantanamo Bay.
One of the most powerful factions of the Taliban is the murderous
Haqqani Network--a twisted clan that the United States has already
designated a terrorist organization under the Obama administration.
The Taliban has put the leader of the Haqqani Network in charge of
the country's secret police and, yes, its immigration system, which is
currently determining which persons can leave the country.
Sirajuddin Haqqani is one of America's most-wanted terrorists for
attacking the U.S. Embassy in Kabul and hotels full of civilians, among
other crimes.
It is also worth noting that the son of the Taliban's leader and so-
called emir blew himself up in a suicide attack against the Afghan
Government in 2017. Evidently, he thought the Taliban was a terrorist
organization, even if some around Washington shrink from that label.
Finally, the third criterion for a foreign terrorist organization is
that its terrorism must threaten the security of Americans or our
national security.
With an estimated 100 Americans and thousands of green card holders
currently trapped in Taliban-occupied Afghanistan, I would say the
answer to that question is also obvious. It would still be obvious even
if we didn't face an active hostage situation since the Taliban still
provides safe haven to al-Qaida, who murdered thousands of Americans on
September 11, 2001.
Despite the Taliban's empty promises that it would never again help
al-Qaida, a recent United Nations report found that ``the Taliban and
al-Qaida remain closely aligned and show no indication of breaking
ties.'' Al-Qaida continues to pledge allegiance to the Taliban, and its
regional affiliate even operates under the Taliban banner in Kandahar.
Now, that is a national security threat to America, if there ever was
one.
So, to summarize, the Taliban is run by terrorists, it associates
with terrorists, and it engages in terrorism. The Biden
administration's refusal to call a spade a spade is a grave insult to
the memory of the Taliban's victims and the tens of thousands of
Americans who fought against it. It is worth remembering how many
American lives the Taliban took, how many American warriors they
maimed, and how many families they have shattered. That is terrorism.
So I will be asking unanimous consent for my bill, which would
require Secretary Blinken to call the Taliban what they are--not a
potential partner for Joe Biden, not a threat to inclusivity, but a
terrorist organization.
Therefore, Madam President, as if in legislative session, I ask
unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the immediate
consideration of S. 2770, which is at the desk; I further ask that the
bill be considered read a third time and passed and that the motion to
reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. MURPHY. Madam President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Connecticut.
Mr. MURPHY. Madam President, reserving the right to object, how
quickly my colleagues forget that it was President Trump who entered
into negotiations with the Taliban. It was President Trump who entered
into an agreement with the Taliban that committed the United States to
withdraw our forces. It was President Trump who sold out women and
girls in that country by refusing to put their interests first at that
negotiating table. It was President Trump who elevated the Taliban in
the international community by putting them face-to-face with our
negotiators.
It is important to note, as to the specific request that is being
made by the Senator from Arkansas, that right now, the Taliban is
already designated as a designated global terrorist entity under
Executive Order 13224. So they are already designated as a terrorist
entity.
There are specific problems with this designation. First, I don't
think it is a great idea for us to be designating FTOs by statute.
There is a reason why we generally allow the administration to do this.
But maybe more importantly, what comes with an FTO is the withdrawal of
humanitarian organizations from the country at hand. We know that
because we saw it in Yemen. When President Trump designated the Houthis
as an FTO for about a week, humanitarian organizations started pulling
up their stakes. Right now, there are 18 million Afghans who are in
need of lifesaving humanitarian assistance. This is not the moment to
take a step that will cause Afghans to starve.
The second reason not to do this this way is because, whether we like
it or not, we are in communication through intermediaries with the
Taliban to get our people out, to get our partners out. There are
flights leaving on a regular basis. And to designate them as an FTO, in
addition to the existing designation that the Taliban has as a
specially designated global terrorist entity, is to risk our ability to
continue to bring our people out.
We should be joined together as a Senate, despite the views we have
on whether we should have stayed or left Afghanistan, in our support
for the Afghan people by making sure that we do not take steps to cut
off humanitarian assistance to people in need and our belief that we
should be supporting this administration in their effort to continue to
get our partners out.
This designation done this way will risk both of those initiatives,
and for that reason, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
The Senator from Arkansas.
Mr. COTTON. Madam President, I share my colleague's grave concerns
about the humanitarian disaster in Afghanistan. I share his concerns
about the fate of Americans and green card holders and their families
and Afghans who fought alongside our troops who were also left behind
in Afghanistan. Both of these crises--the humanitarian crisis and the
crisis of Americans left behind Taliban enemy lines--are the
responsibility of Joe Biden for his hapless, disorganized, chaotic
execution of the withdrawal from that country.
I yield the floor.