[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 146 (Monday, September 11, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4341-S4342]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                          Military Promotions

  Mr. TUBERVILLE. Mr. President, today, as our Nation marks the 22nd 
anniversary of the September 11 attacks, we mourn the loss of some 
3,000 Americans who were murdered by terrorists. It was one of the 
darkest days in our history.
  Just last week, we marked another sad anniversary. It was the second 
anniversary of President Biden's surrender in Afghanistan. On 9/11/
2021, the Taliban controlled more territory in Afghanistan than they 
did on 9/11/2001. That is an absolute disgrace. The responsibility goes 
straight to our Commander in Chief.
  At the time, President Biden called it ``an extraordinary success.'' 
Nobody else thought so. The American people overwhelmingly reject this 
idea. Our allies certainly reject this idea. It was not a success. It 
was the worst embarrassment of our Nation in decades.
  Two years since the fall of Afghanistan, there has been absolutely no 
accountability within the Biden administration. No one has been fired. 
Nobody paid the price. Thousands and thousands of our allies in 
Afghanistan have lost their lives.
  We surrendered billions of dollars in military equipment to the 
Taliban. As a result, the Taliban is now the best armed terrorist group 
in the history of the world. And, again, nobody has been fired. In 
fact, the only one in our military who got fired was a colonel who 
sounded the alarm as a whistleblower--what a disgrace.
  It even gets worse. Just weeks after the fall of Afghanistan, 
President Biden issued his vaccine mandate. The Supreme Court struck it 
down for private companies. It took an act of Congress to stop it for 
our military more than a year later.
  So just weeks after our worst military defeat in decades, President 
Biden purged the ranks of some 8,000 patriots. There was never any 
scientific basis for this mandate--none. No one disputed the fact that 
these were healthy servicemembers who were ready and willing to defend 
the United States of America. They were pushed out for ideological 
reasons. This was a real threat to readiness, and it inflicted real 
hardship on military families.
  Democrats have been talking a lot about readiness lately and military 
families, but there was silence when Joe Biden fired 8,000 American 
patriots and left their families without income. Thousands and 
thousands more servicemembers were vaccinated despite serious 
reservations of conscience. This was a slap in the face to our heroes 
in uniform.
  The Senate had the chance to fix this in July, but our Democratic 
colleagues blocked it. Senator Cruz offered an amendment to this year's 
defense bill

[[Page S4342]]

that would have reinstated all of these heroes--all 8,000 of them--but 
my Democratic colleagues refused and rejected it. Now, these same 
Democrats are lecturing us about readiness and about their support for 
military families. I hear about it every day.
  Meanwhile, the Democrats' efforts to inject leftwing politics into 
our military have only continued. I have spoken at length about their 
illegal use of the Pentagon budget for abortion for the last 7 months.
  Since my hold went into effect, it has allowed me more time to look 
into the background of some of the Pentagon's nominees. These are 
nominees that my colleagues on the left are saying should not receive a 
vote. Democrats are saying we should just approve them without ever 
voting. Senator Reed said it was ``disrespectful'' not to approve them 
by unanimous consent. I do not agree with that. Many of these nominees 
are worthy of confirmation. I will agree and I will vote for them. But 
some are not. The Senate ought to do our job under the Constitution and 
advise and consent to these nominations. Some we should confirm. Some 
we should reject.
  A large number of these nominees have publicly expressed support for 
so-called diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. I am 
concerned--very concerned--that DEI distracts our military from its 
mission. The American military is not a social justice program. It is 
not a jobs program. The military is not an equal opportunity employer. 
It never has been and shouldn't be. The American military is the 
world's greatest killing machine. The military has one mission and one 
mission only: to win wars. Other considerations, no matter how 
reasonable or admirable they might be, have to be set aside. As General 
MacArthur famously said, ``there is no substitute for victory.''
  Everything we have in this country depends on our military--
everything. Our entire way of life is made possible by the fact that we 
have the best fighting force that has ever been assembled. Our enemies 
would love to take away our role as world leader. If we lose a strong 
military, then we will lose everything.
  Therefore, it is my view that the Senate ought to vote on these 
nominations, especially those at the very top.
  It is my view that, this month, the U.S. Senate ought to vote on the 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The current Chairman, General 
Milley, received a floor vote in 2018. The nominee, General Brown, 
received a floor vote for his current position as Chief of Staff of the 
Air Force. There is nothing wrong with a floor vote on these 
nominations. Contrary to what Senator Reed said, there is nothing 
disrespectful about a confirmation vote. If we do not vote on General 
Brown's nomination, then that is entirely the fault of the Democratic 
majority that runs this floor.
  The Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff has a budget of more than 
$1 billion--that is a ``b''--$1 billion and a staff of thousands. This 
job is too important not to receive consideration by the Senate or to 
simply be confirmed without a vote. Democrats can either stop 
complaining about having acting officials or they can confirm these 
nominees. You can't have it both ways.

  If my colleagues on the left were actually worried about readiness 
and about military families, then we would be voting on these nominees 
today. If Democrats were really concerned about readiness for 
militarily families, then they would have reinstated the 8,000 heroes 
discharged under the vaccine mandate--8,000 people who lost their jobs 
and who had to go find something else to do to support their families. 
But my Democratic colleagues refuse to do that.
  Despite what the Pentagon just said falsely last week, it would take 
just 2 hours to confirm one of these nominees--2 hours. The Democrats' 
excuses that votes take time is not good enough. The Senate has had 
more than 80 days off this year, not counting weekends. We just had a 
5-week recess. We took Labor Day off. This is one of the least 
productive Senates in memory.
  I had a 40-year career before I came here. I didn't need this job, 
but I wanted to help my country. I came here to the Senate to vote and 
to uphold the Constitution. That is what this group and floor is about. 
I came here to make laws, not to outsource my job to the executive 
branch.
  I grew up in a military family. There is nothing in this world that I 
honor more than the U.S. military, except the Constitution, which they 
have sworn to defend and to follow.
  We need to get politics out of the military. It has no place in the 
place that keeps this country and our allies safe.
  The widespread perception that our military has gone woke under Joe 
Biden is driving away recruits. They are not signing up. Unfortunately, 
that perception is becoming more and more justified. Unlike my hold, 
recruiting is a real crisis, as we speak.
  We need the best of the best in our military and, generally speaking, 
that is exactly who we have. We have the best of the best in our 
military. We do not need politically or ideologically motivated people 
in our military. We do not need political activists in the Pentagon. We 
need a military that is focused on its mission of fighting and winning 
wars, nothing else. That is their job. We depend on that.
  I still believe that our military is the best fighting force this 
world has ever seen. I still believe that our military has been the 
greatest force for peace for the last 75 years. All the false attacks 
on me, including on the Senate floor, do nothing to change those facts. 
All the false attacks on me do nothing except to strengthen my resolve.
  For my entire life, I have held the U.S. military as sacred--and the 
blood of the fallen heroes. If we allow our military to become 
political, then we will have done a disservice to every one of the 
people who have fought and died. If my Democratic colleagues and the 
Biden administration continue to inject politics into our military, 
then our children and our grandchildren will have to live in a much 
more dangerous world.
  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. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cardin). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  The Senator from Iowa.