[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 148 (2002), Part 8]
[Senate]
[Pages 11503-11536]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




        NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2003

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will now 
resume consideration of S. 2514, which the clerk will report.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       A bill (S. 2514) to authorize appropriations for fiscal 
     year 2003 for military activities of the Department of 
     Defense, for military construction, and for defense 
     activities of the Department of Energy, to prescribe 
     personnel strengths for such fiscal year for the Armed 
     Forces, and for other purposes.


                           Amendment No. 4007

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Virginia.
  Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I will await the distinguished chairman, 
but it is my anticipation that we will move to the issue pending; that 
is, missile defense. I will send to the desk at this time an amendment 
on my behalf and that of the Senator from Georgia, Mr. Miller.
  I will not ask it to be the pending business, as a courtesy to my 
chairman, until he arrives. I anticipate upon his arrival that we will 
work out a procedure by which a second degree will be added. As a 
courtesy, I will wait until he arrives.
  Mr. REID. If the Senator will yield, it is my understanding he will 
send his amendment to the desk but not call it up.
  Mr. WARNER. That is correct. I will call it up, but I would prefer, 
as a courtesy, to allow Mr. Levin to examine it and then hopefully we 
can agree upon a procedure whereby he would then file a second degree, 
and then we can have hopefully the Senate address the two issues.
  Mr. REID. I think if we want this to be the pending business, what we 
should do is have the amendment called up. I ask unanimous consent, 
because we have talked about this for some time, that Senator Levin or 
someone on his behalf would have the right to second degree the 
amendment.
  Mr. WARNER. I am perfectly willing to agree to that at this point and 
ask that it be the pending business, if that is the guidance you wish.
  Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent then, in keeping with the statement 
of the Senator from Virginia, that Senator Levin or his designee would 
be allowed to offer a second-degree amendment and no one would have a 
right to offer one prior to him.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I ask that my amendment be the pending 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is the Senator objecting?
  Mr. WARNER. No.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. WARNER. Given that the chairman will arrive in a few minutes, I 
am happy to yield the floor to my colleague for such purposes.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Virginia [Mr. Warner], for himself, Mr. 
     Miller, Mr. Lott, Mr. Stevens, Mr. Cochran, Mr. Allard, Mr. 
     Kyl, Mr. Smith of New Hampshire, Mr. Inhofe, Mr. Thurmond, 
     Mr. Sessions, Mr. Roberts, Mr. Hutchinson, Mr. Bunning, Mr. 
     Helms, Mr. McCain, Mr. Nickles, and Mr. Hagel, proposes an 
     amendment numbered 4007.

  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To provide an additional amount for ballistic missile defense 
or combating terrorism in accordance with national security priorities 
                           of the President)

       On page 217, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following:

     SEC. 1010. ADDITIONAL AMOUNT FOR BALLISTIC MISSILE DEFENSE OR 
                   COMBATING TERRORISM IN ACCORDANCE WITH NATIONAL 
                   SECURITY PRIORITIES OF THE PRESIDENT.

       (a) Authorization of Appropriations.--In addition to other 
     amounts authorized to be appropriated by other provisions of 
     this division, there is hereby authorized to be appropriated 
     for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2003, 
     $814,300,000 for whichever of the following purposes the 
     President determines that the additional amount is necessary 
     in the national security interests of the United States:
       (1) Research, development, test, and evaluation for 
     ballistic missile defense programs of the Department of 
     Defense.
       (2) Activities of the Department of Defense for combating 
     terrorism at home and abroad.
       (b) Offset.--The total amount authorized to be appropriated 
     under the other provisions of this division is hereby reduced 
     by $814,300,000 to reflect the amounts that the Secretary 
     determines unnecessary by reason of a revision of assumptions 
     regarding inflation that are applied as a result of the 
     midsession review of the budget conducted by the Office of 
     Management and Budget during the spring and early summer of 
     2002.
       (c) Priority for Allocating Funds.--In the expenditure of 
     additional funds made available by a lower rate of inflation, 
     the top priority shall be the use of such additional funds 
     for Department of Defense activities for combating terrorism 
     and protecting the American people at home and abroad.


                           Amendment No. 4009

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, if I could have the attention of Senator 
Warner for one moment, it is my understanding the amendment which I 
will send to the desk very shortly has been approved on both sides. It 
is cosponsored by Senators Biden, Lugar,

[[Page 11504]]

Landrieu, Hagel, Bingaman, Murkowski, Carnahan, Lincoln, and Mikulski.
  I send the amendment to the desk and ask for its immediate 
consideration. I assume I have to ask that the pending amendment be 
laid aside.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator is correct.
  Is there objection to laying aside the pending amendment?
  Mr. REID. Objection.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
  Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I will ask my good friend if he will allow 
the two managers to have a chance to consult on this. It is my 
understanding that the amendment is cleared on both sides.
  Mr. DOMENICI. I wouldn't have come here unless it had.
  Mr. WARNER. I am certain of that. Our attention was diverted by other 
matters to get started this morning. If you will just forebear for a 
brief period, we will see if we can't accommodate the Senator.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I would like to speak for a few moments 
on the subject they will clear shortly, the amendment to which I 
referred and listed the cosponsors, to whom I am extremely gratified 
for their support. Senator Biden is my principal cosponsor. We hope 
that this bill will move along and be known as the Domenici-Biden 
nonproliferation amendment.
  This amendment supports the nonproliferation program proposed in a 
bipartisan Senate bill, the Nuclear Nonproliferation Act of 2002. 
Today, Senators Biden, Lugar, Landrieu, Hagel, Bingaman, Murkowski, 
Carnahan, Lincoln, and Mikulski are cosponsoring this amendment.
  The end of the Soviet Union in 1991 started a chain of events, which 
in the long term can lead to vastly improved global stability. Concerns 
about global confrontations were greatly reduced after that event.
  But with that event, the Soviet system of guards, guns, and a highly 
regimented society that had effectively controlled their weapons of 
mass destruction, along with the materials and expertise to create 
them, was significantly weakened. Even today, with Russia's economy 
well on the road to recovery, there's still plenty of room for concerns 
about the security of these Russian assets.
  The tragic events of September 11 brought the United States into the 
world of international terrorism, a world from which we had been very 
sheltered. Even with the successes of the subsequent war on terrorism, 
there's still ample reason for concern that the forces of al-Qaida and 
other international terrorists are seeking other avenues to disrupt 
peaceful societies around he world.
  In some sense, the events of September 11 set a new gruesome standard 
against which terrorists may measure their future successes. There 
should be no question that these groups would use weapons of mass 
destruction if they could acquire them and deliver them here or to 
countless other international locations.
  One of our strongest allies in the current war on terrorism has been 
the Russian Federation. Assistance from the Russians and other States 
of the former Soviet Union has been vital in many aspects of the 
conflict in Afghanistan.
  President Putin and President Bush have forged a strong working 
relationship, and the summit meeting was another measure of interest in 
increased cooperation. As this amendment seeks to strengthen our 
nonproliferation programs, it provides many options for actions to be 
conducted through joint partnerships between the Russian Federation and 
the United States that build on this increased cooperative spirit.
  The Nunn-Lugar program of 1991 and the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici 
legislation of 1996 provided vital support for cooperative programs to 
reduce the risks that weapons of mass destruction might become 
available to terrorists. They established a framework for cooperative 
progress that has served our Nation and the world very well. But 
despite their successes, accomplished in the face of some enormous 
challenges, there remain actions that should be taken to further reduce 
these threats.
  This amendment would expand the current nonproliferation programs of 
the Department of Energy, most of which trace their origins to those 
original Nunn-Lugar and Nunn-Lugar-Domenici bills. Before I discuss 
this amendment, I would like to review some of our progress to date.
  For example, the Nuclear Materials Protection, Control and Accounting 
program has improved the security of at least one-third of the missile 
materials in the former Soviet Union. Comprehensive upgrades have been 
largely completed on the Russian Navy's stocks of weapons usable 
materials, with work completed at 10 of their 11 storage sites.
  Border security is being improved through the Second Line of Defense 
program. I recall when I participated in the initial ribbon-cutting of 
this system at Moscow's main airport in 1998. Now this equipment is at 
over 20 sites in Russia and the Ukraine.
  Programs to counter ``brain drain'' have moved ahead. The Initiatives 
for Proliferation Prevention of IPP program has shown excellent 
progress in recent years in the daunting task of creating commercial 
opportunities for weapons scientists throughout the former Soviet 
Union. To date, over $50 million of venture capital has been attracted 
on several major projects and more than 10,000 technical personnel have 
been engaged since the program began.
  Under IPP, about 100 American businesses are working in Russia, and 
they've contributed over $100 million of their own funds in support of 
efforts in which our Government has invested about $70 million. About 
400 projects are currently in progress with 100 of those in the closed 
nuclear cities. American businesses are sharing costs on 132 of those 
projects.
  The Nuclear Cities Initiative has one of the most challenging tasks 
of all the programs--to work cooperatively with the Russians to down-
size their vast nuclear weapons complex. The closed nuclear cities that 
make up this complex have immense technical capabilities, but they have 
to be, at least in the past, one of the most business-unfriendly places 
in the world.
  In 1998, I visited Sarov, the Russian version of Los Alamos. It was a 
fascinating place where the hospitality of my hosts was most 
impressive. I still remember visiting their weapons museum and standing 
beside a 60-megaton bomb that was once destined for our shores. Despite 
their history, they displayed significant interest in shifting their 
weapons focus to commercial interests.
  Today, there's been real progress in Sarov. For example, there is a 
signed agreement with the Russians to terminate all weapons 
construction work at Sarov by 2003. Many commercial ventures are now 
underway including an Open Computing Center, which provides employment 
opportunities for former weapons scientists through software 
development and computer modeling.
  The HEU deal has largely remained on track, although it's required 
some help from Congress to keep from derailing. That program has the 
goal of rendering 500 tons of weapons grade highly enriched uranium un-
usable for weapons by converting it into ordinary reactor fuel. To 
date, 146 tons have been converted, enough for about 6,000 warheads.
  Despite the successes of the Nunn-Lugar and Nunn-Lugar-Domenici 
legislation, there remain many actions that should be taken to further 
reduce these threats. This new amendment expands and strengthens many 
of the programs established earlier, to further reduce threats to 
global peace.
  It addresses one of the most important realizations from September 
11--that the forces of terrorism span the globe. It's now clear that 
our nuclear nonproliferation programs should extend far beyond the 
states of the former Soviet Union.
  This amendment expands the scope of several programs to world-wide 
coverage. It focuses on threats of a nuclear or radiological type, 
which largely fall

[[Page 11505]]

within the expertise of the National Nuclear Security Administration.
  Just today, the National Research Council released their major report 
on ``The Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism.'' They 
present a number of critical recommendations to address threats of 
nuclear and radiological terrorism. I'm very pleased that the 
legislative basis for most of their suggestions is in this amendment.
  This amendment expands programs to include the safety and security of 
nuclear facilities and radioactive materials around the world, wherever 
countries are willing to enter into cooperative arrangements for threat 
reduction. It recognizes that devices that disperse radioactive 
materials, so-called ``dirty bombs,'' can represent a real threat to 
modern societies. This is one of the key recommendations of the 
National Research Council.
  Dirty bombs could be used as weapons of mass terror, property 
contamination, and economic disaster. We need better detection systems 
for the presence of dirty bombs that are appropriate to the wide range 
of delivery systems for such a weapon, from trucks to boats to 
containers. And we need to be far better prepared to deal with the 
consequences of such an attack.
  The new legislation includes provisions to accelerate and expand 
existing programs for disposition of fissile materials. These 
materials, of course, represent not only a concern with dirty bombs, 
but also the even larger threat of use in crude nuclear weapons.
  It includes a program to accelerate the conversion of highly enriched 
uranium into forms un-usable for weapons. It addresses one of the major 
concerns associated with this material that, many years ago, both the 
United States and the Soviet Union provided HEU to many countries as 
fuel for research reactors. That fuel represents a proliferation risk 
today. This accelerated conversion is another of the prime 
recommendations of the National Research Council.
  It authorizes new programs for global management of nuclear 
materials, in cooperation with other nations and with the International 
Atomic Energy Agency. It recognizes that modern societies use 
radioactive materials as essential tools in many ways, and offers 
assistance in providing new controls on the most dangerous of these 
materials.
  It suggests that many of the program elements involve international 
cooperation with the Russian Federation and with other nations. In 
fact, it recognizes that the global nature of the current threats 
requires such cooperation, and provides authorizations for the 
Secretary of Energy to assist the Secretary of State in offering 
significant help to other nations. We cannot accomplish these programs 
without such cooperation.
  This amendment includes provisions extending the First Responder 
training programs, originally created under Nunn-Lugar-Domenici. These 
programs have already made real contributions. In fact, the training 
provided under this program in New York City helped mitigate the 
catastrophe there on September 11. That program was authorized for only 
5 years in the original legislation, this bill extends that 
authorization for another 10 years.
  The amendment requires annual reports demonstrating that all our 
nonproliferation programs are well coordinated and integrated. The 
original call for this coordination was in the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici 
legislation.
  The report must disclose the extent of coordination and integration 
between federally funded and private activities. That is very 
important, because of the excellent work being done by private 
organizations, like the Nuclear Threat Initiative, that are providing 
critical assistance toward similar nonproliferation goals.
  With this amendment, our programs to counter threats of nuclear and 
radiological terrorism will be significantly strengthened and risks to 
the United States and our international partners greatly reduced.
  The amendment authorizes $15M for a new R&D and demonstration program 
to address nuclear or radiological (``dirty bombs'') terrorism. 
Includes new responsibilities in First Responders program. Includes a 
partnership with Russia and extends assistance to any country in 
dealing with either stray radioactive sources or with a dirty bomb 
incident. (Section 3156);
  Extends the expired authorization for training of First Responders. 
(Section 3155);
  Authorizes $40 million to accelerate the ``blend-down'' of Highly 
Enriched Uranium. Authorizes new approaches, in addition to the HEU 
Deal, to increase the rate at which HEU is modified to render it 
incapable of weapons use. Extends an option to all nations with HEU to 
receive compensation in return for providing their stocks of HEU now. 
(Section 3158);
  Authorizes $5 million to extend MPC&A to the international community 
and develops options, working jointly with Russia, to accelerate 
conversion of reactors fueled with HEU. (Section 3157);
  Encourages the Secretary to finalize an agreement with Russia for 
plutonium disposition that meets specific criteria. (Section 3159A);
  Authorizes $20 million for the Department to work with the 
international community to develop options for a global program for 
international safeguards, nuclear safety and proliferation-resistant 
nuclear technologies. Amount includes $5 million for the Department to 
increase nuclear safety work related to sabotage protection for nuclear 
power plants and other nuclear facilities overseas and $10 million, led 
by DOE/NE, for advanced, proliferation resistant fuel cycles. (Section 
3159B);
  Authorizes $15 million to expand programs supporting the IAEA in 
strengthening international nuclear safeguards. (Section 3159B);
  Authorizes $5 million for assisting nations develop stronger export 
controls. (Section 3159C);
  Requires development of a comprehensive ten year plan to develop a 
sustainable approach to MPC&A in the Russian Federation. (Section 
3159D);
  Requires annual report on coordination and integration of all U.S. 
nonproliferation activities describing programs, synergies, 
coordination including with private efforts, opportunities for new 
joint cooperative programs with foreign countries, and funding requests 
integrated across all federal agencies. Extends reporting requirement 
in FY2002 Defense Authorization Act to an annual report. (Section 
3159E); and
  Streamlines contracting by other agencies with DOE labs for anti-
terrorism work. Agencies may elect to follow the new procedures or may 
use standard Work For Others model. (Section 3159F).
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Virginia.
  Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, we simply need a little time on this side 
to give it consideration. The chairman and I have just commenced a 
discussion on how we will proceed on the bill today. I would hope in 
due course we can indicate to the Senator that it will be accepted on 
both sides.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I have already sent the bill to the 
desk. It obviously will not be referred to committee unless and until 
it is cleared by the managers pursuant to the conversation we have had.
  I would ask that we follow the course I have just indicated.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, does the Senator have a copy of the 
amendment handy?
  Mr. DOMENICI. Surely. I will provide it to the Senator.
  Mr. LEVIN. We are pretty sure this is the one we already have.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Yes, it is.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, 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. LEVIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, we support the amendment on this side. We 
have cleared it. We are willing to see it adopted by voice vote.

[[Page 11506]]


  Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, we now have clearance on our side. I thank 
the chairman. We are ready to move forward on the amendment.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendment be laid aside and the Domenici-Biden amendment be the pending 
business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The pending amendment is laid aside.
  The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New Mexico [Mr. Domenici], for himself and 
     Mr. Biden, Mr. Lugar, Ms. Landrieu, Mr. Hagel, Mrs. Carnahan, 
     Mr. Murkowski, Mr. Bingaman, Mrs. Lincoln, and Ms. Mikulski, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4009.

  (The amendment is printed in today's Record under ``Text of 
Amendments.'')
  Mr. BIDEN. Mr. President, I am pleased to join today my good friend 
and colleague, Senator Domenici, in introducing a vital amendment to 
the Department of Defense authorization bill to reduce the odds that 
terrorists or rogue states will acquire the necessary ingredients 
overseas for nuclear and radiological terrorism. This amendment takes 
important steps to expand the legal mandate for specific U.S. nuclear 
nonproliferation programs and lays down a marker on the necessary 
funding levels.
  We have every expectation that, before this bill emerges from 
conference, the additional money will indeed be made available through 
both the supplemental fiscal year 2002 appropriations and regular 
fiscal year 2003 appropriations. Senator Domenici is to be both 
commended and supported for drafting this amendment, and the underlying 
bill, S. 2545, from which it is derived.
  This amendment will lead to greater levels of effort and, I believe, 
greater levels of achievement in U.S. nuclear nonproliferation 
programs.
  For example, it authorizes $40 million to accelerate and expand 
current international programs to blend down highly enriched uranium 
(HEU) needed to make nuclear bombs, making it less likely that 
terrorists or rogue states will get their hands on lethal nuclear 
materials.
  It authorizes $35 million to develop options for a global program for 
international safeguards and proliferation-resistant technologies to 
ensure that civilian nuclear reactors in other nations are not 
illicitly producing significant quantities of weapons-grade material or 
are vulnerable to terrorist assault.
  This amendment also allocates $30 million in funding for a new 
research, development, and demonstration program to help respond to 
nuclear or radiological terrorism. For example, the program would fund 
expanded research into monitors and gauges capable of detecting nuclear 
and/or radiological materials, for use at border crossings and ports of 
entry. It will help identify and account for radioactive sources 
located abroad. And all of these efforts will be carried out in 
cooperation with Russia and the rest of the international community.
  On May 8 Jose Padilla, an American citizen working with al-Qaida, was 
arrested on the charge of planning to attack the United States with a 
Radiological Dispersion Device, more commonly called a ``dirty bomb.''
  Padilla is only the first person associated with a major terrorist 
group to have been caught plotting an attack using a radiological 
weapon. It would be folly to think that he will be either the last or 
the most competent and successful.
  The fact that radiological terror is real and a threat to the nation 
will come as no great surprise to the Senate. On March 6 the Foreign 
Relations Committee held a public hearing on the twin threats of 
nuclear and radiological terrorism. On March 5 we held a classified 
briefing on the same subject, followed a month later by an even more 
detailed classified session for all Senators.
  We assembled the finest scientists from government, the nuclear 
weapons laboratories, public interest groups and academia to speak of 
the dangers of dirty bombs. Without exception they told us that there 
was a real possibility that terrorists could obtain radioactive 
material and blow it up with a conventional bomb, spreading the 
material for miles.
  But they also agreed on the likely consequences of a radiation attack 
on an American city.
  Despite Attorney General John Ashcroft's statement from Moscow on 
June 10 that a dirty bomb can ``cause mass death and injury,'' the 
facts are very different. The Foreign Relations Committee learned that 
even the worst credible radiological attack will not be catastrophic. 
Few, if any, Americans will die from the radiation or even experience 
the symptoms of radiation poisoning. Most, if not all, of the 
casualties will come from the conventional explosive used to spread the 
radioactive material.
  The bottom line on casualties is: A dirty bomb won't kill very many 
people.
  But a dirty bomb could still be an economic crime of the first 
magnitude. We do not know how to decontaminate large buildings and 
large areas to the degree that the Environmental Protection Agency 
mandates.
  The levels EPA uses in the case of accidents within a laboratory are 
extraordinary: clean-up must be so complete that out of 1,000 people 
living on-site 24 hours a day for about 40 years, only 1 additional 
person would die of cancer.
  We must begin to examine the radiation protection rules in the light 
of homeland security in the event of an attack instead of just applying 
the strict environmental guidelines appropriate to peacetime.
  Our witnesses estimated that if a small device, containing only a few 
curies of cobalt-60 or cesium-137, had been detonated in lower 
Manhattan on September 10, 2001, and if existing EPA rules were applied 
to the clean-up, more buildings would have had to be evacuated, razed, 
and trucked away to low-level radioactive waste dumps than were lost or 
damaged by the al-Qaida attack of September 11. That is more damage, 
more financial loss, than was caused when the Twin Towers came down, 
but with this difference: almost nobody would be killed. At most a few 
dozen people might get sick.
  We must do more to prepare for an attack, and also to prevent one. 
Fortunately, we can, in fact, make such an attack much harder to pull 
off and much easier to recover from.
  Proper preparation for an attack will make a world of difference; we 
need to begin putting response plans into place and testing them 
rigorously, both in the field and in table-top exercises.
  First responders need the tools to act. You cannot see or smell 
radiation; it can only be detected with special instruments.
  Small radiation detectors are the size of a pocket pager; larger ones 
could easily be built into a squad car.
  A network of detectors in fixed locations could be erected, a few per 
square mile, in cities such as Washington or Wilmington at a cost of a 
few million dollars per city.
  Such sensors might provide early warning of smuggled material on the 
roads and information on affected areas if somebody brings radiological 
terror to our cities.
  Avoiding panic among the American people will be an important goal of 
responders, and that will require education. Claims of probable mass 
casualties from a radiological attack do an injustice to the American 
people. If repeated over and over again this doom-saying will be a 
self-fulfilling prophecy spreading panic if an attack actually does 
happen.
  Should we be attacked by radiological terrorists, there are very 
simple things those who have been exposed can do to reduce their 
chances of being a casualty to nearly zero.
  The first is to remain calm.
  The next is to stay near the point of exposure long enough for 
nuclear response crews to check for radioactive contamination.
  And the last, the easiest, is to put your clothes in a plastic bag 
and then take a good shower and shampoo. Radioactive dust washed off 
the body is radioactive dust no longer available to do harm to you.

[[Page 11507]]

  We need to look to the radioactive material itself. Radioactive 
sources must be kept in responsible hands; but that is difficult 
because they are used throughout industry, for example, to take x-ray 
pictures of oil pipelines, and even to tell if a can of soda is 
properly filled.
  Radioactive sources are indispensable to modern medicine, where they 
are used to treat cancer or to perform crucial diagnostic tests. We 
should not eliminate these sources from our society.
  We can, however, provide greater protection for such sources.
  Before September 11, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission focused its 
efforts on safety. It assumed that licensed users were responsible 
users. Since September 11, the Commission has begun to reevaluate its 
rules with the added assumption that some folks might seek licenses in 
order to gain access to the material as part of a plot to attack this 
country or its allies.
  We need tighter rules, and we also need a bigger Federal effort to 
track down and secure missing radioactive sources. The fact is that 
sometimes sources just go astray; they are ``orphaned,'' in the jargon 
of that business. There are very few places where companies can safely 
dispose of sources they no longer need.
  The Department of Energy ``Off-Site Source Recovery Program'' is 
supposed to take charge of excess sources. But the administration has 
cut this vital program from $5.7 million in fiscal year 2001 to a 
paltry $2.2 million requested for fiscal year 2003. Congress should fix 
that.
  Overseas, the greatest threat is likely to come from the poorly 
guarded radioactive materials from the former Soviet Union.
  Late in 2001, two containers containing enormous amounts of 
radioactive strontium-90 were found by hunters in the woods of the 
Republic of Georgia. The sources were so hot that they melted the snow 
for yards around, leading the three woodsmen to cart them off to warm 
their tent. By the next morning all were sick with radiation poisoning, 
including severe burns where they had touched the containers.
  Those two radioactive sources were left over from a Soviet program to 
build compact, powerful, and very portable electrical generators for 
use in remote areas. Nobody knows where all of the Soviet-produced 
generators wound up, but wherever they are, they are very dangerous.
  Other countries, including Brazil and Mexico, have seen old sources 
stolen, broken into, melted down to make reinforcing bars and patio 
furniture, with resulting injuries and deaths to some of their 
citizens.
  The United States must work through the International Atomic Energy 
Agency to ensure the physical protection and accountability of 
significant radioactive sources throughout the globe. This will require 
additional U.S. voluntary contributions to the IAEA and may also 
require additional non-proliferation assistance to the states of the 
former Soviet Union. After all, that is where the majority of the 
unaccounted for hot sources are thought to have been made.
  I commend the administration for yesterday's announcement of a new 
joint United States-Russian program to spend $20 million this year to 
secure and safeguard radiological materials in the former Soviet Union. 
The program would focus on the radioactive power generators I mentioned 
earlier, as well as a dozen poorly guarded storage areas for 
radiological materials. Of course, the former Soviet Union is not the 
sole overseas repository of radioactive sources attractive to 
terrorists. But this program may serve as a model for future efforts.
  So there is plenty for us to do to lessen the risk and the impact of 
radiological terrorism. The United States has begun to contribute to 
the IAEA's Program Against Nuclear Terrorism. Today's amendment is a 
good step in increasing U.S. assistance in this area.
  But I worry far more about something even worse than radiological 
terrorism. I worry about terrorists building or stealing a real atomic 
bomb. Our committee learned in chilling detail, in classified session, 
just how easy it is to make a bomb, given only a comparatively small 
amount of highly enriched uranium-235. In those sessions Senators were 
able to see and handle a full-scale mockup, complete in almost every 
detail, but using inert material instead of uranium.
  I won't reveal the design; I don't want to give away any information 
that could be used against us. But building that device is easy. It 
could be done in a machine shop with ordinary lathes and drills and 
mills without any need for computer-controlled and export-controlled 
dual-use equipment.
  And it would fit in the trunk of a compact car or the back end of a 
pickup.
  Those who attended the briefing also saw a small tactical nuclear 
weapon, again a full-scale mockup of a real one once in the U.S. 
inventory. With one of those you don't need a fancy brief-case bomb; 
you can lift it with one hand.
  I am not worried about American nuclear weapons going missing, but I 
am very worried about the tens of thousands built by the Soviet Union. 
Their tactical nuclear weapons are no bigger than ours, and unless 
Russia's security for those weapons is a lot better than for its 
chemical weapons, our colleagues in the Russian Duma should be as 
worried as I am.
  Terrorists with an improvised nuclear device or a stolen weapon could 
kill tens or hundreds of thousands of people, not a mere handful. A 
crude nuclear weapon set off at Metro Center would likely kill people 
near the Capitol complex. A Hiroshima-sized bomb detonated near the 
White House would leave the Capitol in ruins.
  And, talk about a dirty bomb, a small nuclear blast at ground level 
would spew out hundreds or thousands of times more radioactive material 
than the biggest dirty bomb imaginable. That much fallout would kill 
Americans.
  We must invest in new technologies to detect bomb-grade uranium and 
plutonium. That is not an easy task. Neither material is particularly 
radioactive, at least not compared to cesium-137, cobalt-60, strontium-
90 and iridium-192, the isotopes of choice for a dirty bomb. Frankly, 
we do not know how to detect most bomb-grade fissile material today; 
certainly not if the weapon is shielded a bit, concealed in a cargo 
container being whisked through our ports or stashed in the hold of a 
freight aircraft.
  None of us knows how long we have to prepare for nuclear terrorism, 
but we know for sure that the terrorists are shaping their own plans. 
We, this body, must act sooner rather than later: to provide our 
responders the tools they need; to secure radioactive and fissile 
material, both here and abroad, to the greatest extent possible; and to 
secure our borders against smugglers who would literally flatten our 
cities.
  The Baker-Cutler report card on Department of Energy non-
proliferation programs with Russia proposed spending about $30 billion 
over 8 to 10 years to secure Russia's excess plutonium and bomb-grade 
uranium, improve security controls on its nuclear materials, and 
downsize its nuclear complex without leaving its weapons scientists 
prey to offers from rogue states or terrorists.
  Senator Baker and Mr. Cutler called this ``the most urgent unmet 
national security threat to the United States today.'' In my view, they 
were absolutely right. Indeed, we must build on their recommendations: 
by adding support for programs to secure radioactive sources; and by 
securing any weapons-grade material in nuclear reactors around the 
world.
  This amendment Senator Domenici, I, and our fellow co-sponsors are 
introducing today takes some sensible steps toward these goals. For 
example, the new research, development, and demonstration program I 
mentioned earlier will help fund efforts to assist other nations in 
developing means for the safe disposal of radioactive materials and a 
proper regulatory framework for licensing control of radioactive 
sources.
  But we all must recognize that this amendment is only a first step to 
address a threat of this urgency and magnitude.

[[Page 11508]]

  Today we spend $7 or $8 billion a year to guard against the unlikely 
event of Iran, Iraq, or North Korea putting a nuclear weapon on an 
intercontinental ballistic missile with a return address, and firing it 
at us despite the assurance of overwhelming retaliation. We need to 
show the same sense of urgency in combating the more immediate risk of 
a more anonymous nuclear weapon without that missile.
  In the wake of the World Trade Center attacks, committees of the 
House and Senate are rightly asking whether more could have been done 
to detect and prevent that attack and how we can do a better job in the 
future.
  What sort of investigation will we have? How will we rebuild our 
people's trust in government? And what will we tell our children and 
grandchildren, if we fail to do everything we can to prevent terrorists 
from doing a hundred times more harm?
  Mrs. CARNAHAN. Mr. President, I am pleased to support amendment No. 
4009 to the Defense Authorization Act introduced by my colleague from 
New Mexico.
  This legislation is a significant step forward in the protection of 
our Nation from weapons of mass destruction.
  Since the end of the cold war, the United States has taken 
considerable steps to reduce the spread of these weapons.
  Senators Domenici and Lugar, along with former Senator Nunn, have 
been true visionaries in this field.
  Because of their efforts, we face less of a threat from the Soviet 
Union's nuclear legacy than we would have otherwise.
  The Department of Defense's Cooperative Threat Reduction Program and 
the related programs at the Department of Energy are truly ``defense by 
other means.''
  While these far-sighted programs have been very successful, they were 
not designed to address some of the terrorist threats we now face.
  To address these shortcomings, I introduced the Global Nuclear 
Security Act. This legislation attacks the problem in three ways.
  First, it calls on the Departments of Energy, State, and Defense, to 
develop a plan to encourage countries to adhere to the highest security 
standards for all nuclear material.
  Second, it requires the DOE to develop a systematic approach to 
secure radiological materials outside the United States that could be 
used to create a so-called ``dirty bomb.''
  Third, it directs the DOE, in consultation with the Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission and the International Atomic Energy Agency, to 
develop plans for reducing the threat of terrorist attacks on nuclear 
power plants outside the United States.
  I was pleased to work with Senators Landrieu, Roberts, Levin, and 
Warner to incorporate this legislation into the Defense Authorization 
bill.
  Now, I am pleased to join Senator Domenici, and many other colleagues 
in supporting legislation that will build on the accomplishments of our 
threat reduction programs and the Global Nuclear Security Act.
  This amendment would broaden and extend several existing threat 
reduction programs.
  Among its many provisions, it calls for the National Nuclear Security 
Administration to increase research efforts to identify technologies 
directed at protecting us from weapons of mass destruction.
  It echoes my call for the NNSA to produce a plan, and to move quickly 
on that plan, for expanding the nuclear material protection and control 
program outside of the former Soviet Union, and focusing on protection 
and control of material that could be used to create ``dirty bombs.''
  This amendment also seeks to accelerate the disposal of highly 
enriched uranium and plutonium found around the world through a variety 
of methods.
  Senator Domenici's amendment greatly complements the Global Nuclear 
Security Act.
  And the combination of these two pieces of legislation makes this 
Defense Authorization bill stronger. Not only are we authorizing the 
Administration to develop strategies for curbing the spread of 
dangerous materials, but we are mandating swift action to implement 
these plans.
  I urge my colleagues to vote in favor of this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate on the amendment?
  The question is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from New 
Mexico.
  The amendment (No. 4009) was agreed to.
  Mr. DOMENICI. Mr. President, I thank the chairman and ranking member. 
I believe the cross section of Senators cosponsoring the amendment 
indicates the broad support for it.
  There is nothing more important than the United States doing its 
utmost in this era of nonproliferation, where we do everything we can 
to make sure that terrorists now, and in the future, have the most 
difficult time getting their hands on weapons of mass destruction.
  There is even a significant American effort in this amendment with 
reference to ``dirty'' bombs. The Senators and staff who have reviewed 
it think it gives America and the world a better chance of finding out 
where the components are before things happen, and sets up guidelines 
and criteria so that many different discernment points are available 
but not just in the United States.
  So after a lot of work on this amendment by many, I thank the Senate 
for adopting it. I yield the floor.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I commend and congratulate Senator 
Domenici. He has been very active in the fight against proliferation. 
This gives the DOE important additional capability and authority to 
help us win the war against proliferation. This is a very important 
contribution to the nonproliferation effort. I was proud to cosponsor 
this amendment. Again, I commend the Senator from New Mexico.
  Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I join the chairman in that commendation.
  Regarding the Domenici amendment, I move to reconsider the vote at 
this time.
  Mr. LEAHY. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, 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. DORGAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DORGAN. Mr. President, the Defense authorization bill has been 
brought to the floor by the chairman and ranking member, two Senators 
for whom I have high regard--Senator Levin and Senator Warner. They 
have done a masterful job for many years dealing with defense issues. I 
applaud them for their work and think they do this country a great 
service.
  Having said all that, I wish to speak about a number of issues 
related to this Defense authorization bill. This is a time, obviously, 
when the President has called for and the Congress will respond with an 
increase in funding for our Nation's defenses. We are at war. We have a 
war against terrorists, and clearly we are going to need some 
additional funds to prosecute that war. The President has asked for the 
funds, and we will provide them.
  Following the attack on this country on September 11 of last year, 
the men and women of our Armed Forces were called on once again to 
travel far from home and serve in our Armed Forces to defend our 
country's interests and our liberties.
  I have in recent months visited, as some of my colleagues have, our 
men and women in the Armed Forces who serve in central Asia. I have 
been to a former Soviet airbase in Uzbekistan. I have been to Baghram 
airbase in Afghanistan. I have been to see the troops in other of the 
countries surrounding that area of central Asia.
  I have visited many defense installations during my time as a member 
of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, but I have never before 
seen the kind of pride that I saw in the

[[Page 11509]]

eyes of the men and women who serve our country post 9/11, serving our 
country in difficult conditions, in places far from home.
  At an old Soviet airbase in Uzbekistan, I saw soldiers living in 
tents, walking through mud and snow up to their ankles and preparing to 
be involved in actions and operations in Afghanistan. I could see in 
their eyes and hear in their voices the pride they have in serving this 
country in this difficult and important time.
  I salute those men and women who are in the Armed Forces today who 
are doing dangerous work all around the world in prosecuting this war 
against terrorism.
  The question for the Congress is not whether we will increase funding 
for our defense needs--we will--the question is exactly how do we use 
that money in a way that represents an effective investment in this 
country's strength and in this country's defense.
  It is the case in this area, just as it is in other areas, that 
simply throwing money hoping some of it will stick will not necessarily 
improve this country's defense. So if there are areas where we just 
cast money about hoping enough of it makes some kind of a difference so 
we can say we made a difference, I think we do not serve the taxpayers 
very well in that circumstance. That brings me to the question of 
national missile defense.
  I know there is disagreement about that subject. For some time there 
has been an appetite in the Senate to dramatically increase funds for 
national missile defense so we can deploy very quickly a national 
missile defense system.
  Mr. President, from time to time I have shown my colleagues some 
items that I keep here in my desk. The items are a piece of a backfire 
bomber wing that was sawed off a Soviet bomber not too many years ago. 
In addition to that, I have copper wiring from a Soviet submarine. We 
got this copper wiring from a Soviet submarine, a Russian submarine, by 
grinding up the wiring under the Pentagon's Nunn-Lugar Cooperative 
Threat Reduction Program.
  The Nunn-Lugar program allows us to destroy our one-time adversary's 
weapons without firing at them. We reached arms control agreements and 
the US and the Soviet Union agreed to reduced nuclear warheads and 
delivery systems. Then we used the Nunn-Lugar program to help countries 
of the former Soviet Union actually destroy there excess weapons 
because they could not afford to do so themselves. Because of the Nunn-
Lugar program there is not one missile with a nuclear warhead left in 
the Ukraine, Kazakhstan or Belarus, and there are lots fewer in Russia.
  In Russia, and in the old Soviet Union, we have large circular metal 
saws cutting the wings off Backfire bombers. We did not shoot them 
down. We just sawed the wings off, and we paid for it because we were 
destroying the weapons of a former adversary and reducing nuclear 
weapons and reducing delivery systems.
  That is one way to defend this country: Get rid of nuclear weapons 
and delivery systems around the world, reduce the stockpile of weapons 
have threatened this country--the missiles with nuclear warheads that 
used to be targeted on American cities. On one plot in the Ukraine 
where there existed an SS-20 missile that was aimed at an American 
city, there now exists sunflowers. I showed a picture of the sunflowers 
one day. There used to be a missile buried underground with a nuclear 
warhead aimed at America. It is now simply dirt with sunflowers. The 
silo is gone. It is destroyed. The missile is gone. It is destroyed. 
And the nuclear weapon is dismantled. That makes good sense. That is a 
defense program that has given us enormous rewards.
  That is one part of defending our country: working on arms control 
and arms reduction agreements and on threat reduction programs that 
help pay for the destruction of delivery systems and nuclear weapons. 
That has been enormously successful.
  Another approach is developing and building new weapon systems, most 
of which I support. Take the F-22 fighter, for example. We now know 
with respect to the gulf war a decade ago and with respect to the war 
in Afghanistan against the Taliban and the al-Qaida terrorists that if 
you control the skies, you can control virtually everything.
  The F-22, for example, is expensive, but it is the next generation of 
fighters that will allow us to control the skies, and I support it. I 
think it makes sense. We must develop and fund those advanced systems 
that allow us anywhere in the world to defend liberty and give our 
Armed Forces the latest weapons technology in defense of America. That 
brings me to the question of national missile defense.
  Missile defense has been a desire by many for a long while. Would we 
like to have kind of a catcher's mitt of sorts by which if someone 
shoots a missile at our country we can catch it before it gets here, 
stop it, and destroy it? I think everyone in this Chamber believes that 
would be advantageous. Of course, the technology does not exist at this 
point. It is the equivalent of hitting a bullet with a bullet. It is a 
technology we have spent billions of dollars trying to develop, but it 
does not yet exist.
  Some say let's keep throwing money after it as quickly as we can 
possibly throw money at it. I say, no, let's invest substantial amounts 
of money in research and development, but let's not spend more than is 
justified.
  The chairman of the committee authorizes $6.8 billion in this 
authorization bill--that is ``billion'' with a ``b''--to continue the 
activities on national missile defense. That is roughly $800 million 
short of what the administration asked for, and that is what the Senate 
is now debating.
  It seems to me, when we take a look at the threats to this country, 
we should get ourselves a meter. What is the threat meter? With what 
are we threatened? One threat is that a terrorist, a rogue state, or a 
terrorist group would get access to an intercontinental ballistic 
missile, put a nuclear warhead on it, and shoot it at America.
  We have had that threat for a long while with respect to other 
countries. We lived for 40 years with the Soviet Union having literally 
thousands of missiles with nuclear warheads aimed at America's cities. 
Why did they not use those missiles? Because they knew if they sent one 
missile with a nuclear warhead into this country, we would vaporize 
their country because we had a deterrent capability with so many 
missiles and so many warheads that anyone who attacked our country 
would immediately be vaporized.
  Nuclear exchange is an exchange no other adversary, under any 
condition, could win. They knew that. We knew that. It was called 
mutually assured destruction.
  Some say that does not work with terrorists, it does not work with 
rogue nations. So we must create a national missile defense system.
  Now I speak with at least some small amount of authority in this 
Chamber because I come from the only State in the United States that 
had an antiballistic missile system built in it.
  In the year 1972, following years of funding, this country built one 
antiballistic missile site. It was built in Nekoma, ND, a very small 
community in northeastern North Dakota. If one drives there today, they 
will see a huge concrete pyramid, and they will see other buildings 
that are now in mothballs.
  In 1972, we had the one and only antiballistic missile site in the 
United States of America. Within 30 days of its activation, it was 
mothballed. It cost billions, was operational for 30 days, and it was 
mothballed.
  Now, that was a different technology from the one we are discussing 
now. Back then they decided what we will do is if someone shoots 
missiles at us we will send up an interceptor missile with a nuclear 
warhead and we will explode that nuclear warhead up in the heavens 
somewhere and we will destroy everything that is coming in. It was a 
very different technology.
  The United States decided that nuclear technology really is not 
something that would be workable. So now the research since 1972 has 
been on technology to try to find a way to hit a bullet with a bullet. 
We have spent billions and billions of dollars to do so.

[[Page 11510]]

  The question today for the Congress is, Do we want to spend another 
$800 million above that which the authorizing committee has authorized? 
Some say we need that. Others say, no, that is throwing money around, 
and it is not an effective investment and can be more effectively used 
in other areas. I mentioned that one threat on the threat meter is an 
incoming intercontinental ballistic missile with a nuclear warhead that 
is sent to us by a terrorist, a terrorist group, or a rogue nation. 
That is perhaps the least likely threat, if we have a threat meter, 
that we face.
  Perhaps more likely would be a terrorist, a terrorist group, or a 
rogue nation getting access to a cruise missile, which would be perhaps 
easier to get access to. It is the size of a couple of 100-pound 
propane tanks with a nuclear warhead. It flies very low to the ground, 
not very fast, following the terrain. It is more likely a terrorist 
might get access to a cruise missile than to an ICBM.
  Would the national missile defense system, once we get it built, 
protect us against a terrorist's or a rogue state's cruise missile? No, 
it would not.
  So we are planning to spend billion and billions on a national 
missile defense to defend against ICBMs that even if it works, and it 
is highly suspect whether the technology does exist today, will not 
help defend us from the more likely threat posed by cruise missiles.
  Then what about the rest of the threat meter? Let me describe the 
threat meter these days since September 11. The threat meter shows that 
we are much more likely to face a threat that comes in at 2 miles an 
hour rather than something that comes through at 12,000 miles an hour. 
Let me describe what that is.
  A suspected terrorist in the Middle East about last October or 
November put himself in a container and had himself loaded onto a 
container ship. A container ship has all of these containers. They look 
like the box that an 18-wheel truck hauls behind it. So container ships 
come into the ports of this country, they have all these containers 
stacked on board, and a suspected terrorist put himself in a container, 
got himself nailed in a container.
  He had a supply of water on board. He had a GPS. He had a radio. He 
had a wireless computer. He had a bed. He had a toilet. He put himself 
in a container and put himself on a container ship to ship himself to 
Canada.
  We have 5.7 million containers come into this country to our ports 
every single year; 100,000 of them are inspected, which leaves 5.6 
million that are not.
  I saw a container one day at a port I visited. They had opened up the 
back of this container, picked one at random out of the ship. I said, 
what is in that container? They opened the door for me and they said 
that is frozen broccoli from Poland.
  I said, that is interesting. Do you know anything about what is in 
that frozen broccoli? We see bags in the back. Do we know what is in 
the middle of this truck or this container?
  Well, no.
  Do we know the conditions under which it was grown?
  No.
  Do we know much about it?
  No.
  That was one container with frozen broccoli from Poland. We get 5.7 
million containers coming into this country's ports every year, and 5.6 
million are not inspected. When they pull up to the dock of an American 
port, they are pulling up at 2 to 3 miles an hour with a big ship. That 
is a much more likely delivery vehicle for a weapon of mass destruction 
than a terrorist getting ahold of an ICBM and putting a nuclear tip on 
the top of it.
  So what are we doing about that? Is there anyone who suggests we 
ought to spend the money so we have some satisfaction and some feeling 
that we are going to protect ourselves against a weapon of mass 
destruction in a container on a container ship that comes up to a dock 
in Los Angeles or New Jersey or some other port in this country at 2 
miles an hour, and then is loaded on a bank of tires and is pulled by a 
truck across the country and then sits in a lot somewhere outside a 
factory or outside a key installation, perhaps a nuclear power plant?
  Is anybody going to do anything about that?
  How much money are we going to spend on that? We are told we do not 
have enough money to solve that problem. So now we are debating $800 
million on the issue of national missile defense. The authorizing 
committee says let's spend $6.8 billion, and others, including the 
President, say no we need to boost that by $800 million.
  I look at the threat meter and I say, what are the threats and what 
are we doing to respond to those threats? Do we have enough to deal 
with the threat of the 5.7 million containers that come into our ports 
every year with the prospect that one of those containers might come 
into one of those ports with a weapon of mass destruction, sent to us 
by a terrorist? Everyone knows that it is far easier to do that than to 
find access to an ICBM with a nuclear weapon.
  Before I close let me say a few words about the recent nuclear arms 
agreements with Russia. I give to the President my compliments that he 
is dealing with the right subject. When you reach an agreement with 
Russia with respect to nuclear weapons, that is the right subject. But 
it is not enough to have a new agreement to simply put nuclear weapons 
in storage nuclear weapons and to allow their delivery systems to be 
kept intact.
  We need to be the world's leader, to try to stop the spread of 
nuclear weapons. And we need to be the world's leader in trying to 
achieve meaningful reductions in nuclear weapons and delivery vehicles.
  Frankly, agreements just to put weapons in storage do not reduce the 
threat. There are over 30,000 nuclear weapons in this world, and if one 
nuclear weapon is missing, just one, we have a very serious problem. If 
just one nuclear weapon gets in the wrong hands, we have a very serious 
problem. If just one additional country becomes a country that is part 
of the club that has nuclear weapons, this country is less safe and 
this world is less safe. It is our responsibility, this country's 
responsibility, to lead in the area of arms control and arms 
reductions.
  We need to do two things. I spoke about one today--and I compliment 
Senator Warner and Senator Levin--we do need to increase our funding 
for national defense. But we need to do that in the right way that 
produces muscle and strength for this country. That is one area.
  Second, it is just as important we be as aggressive in this country 
in pursuit of a world leadership role because it is our job and our 
role to reduce the spread of nuclear weapons, stop the spread of 
nuclear weapons, and reduce the number of nuclear weapons in this 
world. If September 11 tells us anything, it ought to tell us that.
  Mr. President, the murder of thousands of innocent Americans by 
terrorists who want to do additional harm to this country should alert 
everyone once again that we must be a world leader in stopping the 
spread of nuclear weapons. That means we must be the world leader in 
not just mothballing or warehousing weapons, but also in reducing the 
stockpiles of nuclear weapons.
  As we work our way through these discussions about defense, national 
missile defense, arms reductions and arms control treaties, I hope this 
country understands its special obligation and also its opportunity to 
be a leader in something that will make a big difference for this 
country's future and for the future of the world.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. WARNER. I inquire of the distinguished majority whip, in the 
period of time until the chairman and I have a consensus as to how to 
proceed, could Senators be recognized for the purpose of just debate on 
the question related to this bill?
  Mr. REID. I say to my friend from Virginia, I had a long conversation 
with the manager of the bill, the chairman of the committee. Probably 
about 12:30 we would be ready to offer the second-degree amendments. 
Staff is working as we speak.

[[Page 11511]]

  It is my understanding that the two managers of the bill have a 
number of amendments that could be cleared. It would be appropriate to 
do that if at all possible. The more time that goes by, the more 
difficult it is.
  Mr. DORGAN. I am unable to hear. I would like to understand what the 
procedure is.
  Mr. REID. Senator Levin indicated he will offer his amendment about 
12:30, a second-degree amendment. That is the next order of business.
  In the meantime, the comanagers will clear a number of amendments 
they and their staffs have worked on the last several hours. And the 
Senator from Virginia asked when they completed that, prior to the time 
that Senator Levin was available to offer the second-degree amendment, 
would it be appropriate for others to speak on the bill. Senator Levin, 
I am sure, agrees it is totally appropriate. I want to make sure it is 
cleared. If he would want to speak, there is nothing wrong with that.
  Mr. WARNER. I think that is constructive. We are anxious to proceed 
to the extent we have amendments which are cleared. Subject to the 
chairman's desire, we can proceed to clear those. Senators would be 
free to discuss any portion of the pending bill. I think they so 
desire.
  There would be an understanding, we will put it in unanimous consent 
form, that no further amendments can be offered until, say, the hour of 
12:30.
  Mr. REID. I believe the unanimous consent request now in effect 
covers that.
  Mr. WARNER. We will make certain.
  Mr. REID. I ask the chairman.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. No amendments are in order to the Warner 
amendment prior to filing the Levin second-degree amendment.
  Mr. WARNER. That is our understanding.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that in the time 
between now and when I lay down the second-degree amendment to Senator 
Warner's amendment, others be recognized to speak or we clear 
amendments between now and that time. Is that in order for a unanimous 
consent request?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Consent is not required for that.
  Mr. LEVIN. I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
  Mr. BAYH. Mr. President, I rise in support of the Defense 
Authorization Act. I begin by congratulating and thanking Senators 
Warner and Levin for their leadership on this important issue to ensure 
that our military men and women have the resources and tools to get the 
important job done of protecting America's homeland and our interests 
abroad.
  I would also like to thank a colleague of ours who was called away. 
That is Senator McCain, from Arizona. He bears the scars of battle, 
having served our Nation in the military. There is no one more 
dedicated to the defense of America than Senator McCain. He was 
instrumental in the provisions of this bill that will make it possible 
for more young Americans to serve our Nation in the military. It is 
ironic that at this time when we face greater national security 
challenges than at any time in a generation, so few Americans, 
particularly young Americans, have served our country in uniform.
  Senator McCain and I would like to change that by opening up greater 
avenues for Americans to serve in the military to protect this country, 
to attract America's best and brightest to military service. There are 
provisions in this bill that will do exactly that.
  Specifically, we establish a shorter track for military service: 15 
months of active duty following basic training with the balance of the 
service to be served in other capacities. In exchange for this, we will 
relieve up to $18,000 of student loans for each man or woman who has 
served in the military and goes on to higher education or has studied 
in higher education previously. In addition, we provide full 1-year GI 
benefits following leaving the military and two-thirds of GI benefits 
for up to 36 months following leaving active service.
  This, colleagues, will serve as a powerful incentive for those in our 
society who want to get a higher education to first or subsequently 
serve in the U.S. military and the cause of protecting America.
  At a time when a college degree is so important to success in the 
private sector, we believe it is equally important not only for our 
society as a whole but for the military particularly to attract more 
men and women with a background in college and higher education in the 
defense of our Nation. These provisions will accomplish exactly that.
  In addition, I am hopeful we can use the national service provisions 
included in this bill as an additional motivation and incentive to 
attract more Americans to serving our country in civilian capacities as 
well.
  The amendment of Senator McCain and I will accomplish exactly that. 
We will extend the AmeriCorps provisions a full fivefold, from 50,000 
to 250,000 Americans each and every year, so that every 4-year period 1 
million of our citizens, particularly young people, will have served 
our Nation in capacities that are important, and half of those new 
AmeriCorps members will be serving America in a homeland defense 
capacity.
  At a time when we need to secure our infrastructure, ports, airways, 
and railways, at a time when we need to protect our country against 
biological and other threats, it is important we do so to the extent we 
can using highly trained and motivated volunteers. It will not only 
help to instill the ethic of service but protect our country in 
tangible ways in a manner that is most cost effective.
  We seek to reach out and enlist more senior citizens in the cause of 
putting something back in our society. On the cusp of the baby boom 
generation beginning their retirement, we will have more Americans 
living longer, healthier lives than ever before, with more energy and 
resources to put back into this country. We think senior citizens have 
a lot to offer America and will seize this opportunity to serve our 
country if we give it to them, as I believe we must.
  We seek to challenge young people involved in our work/study programs 
to give back to the country that has made their higher education 
possible. Currently, only 7 percent of those involved in work/study are 
required to be involved in public service. Senator McCain and I seek to 
expand that to a full 25 percent over the course of the next 9 years, 
ensuring a corps of young Americans who are not only getting a higher 
education but, in the process, building and rebuilding the country that 
has helped to make that higher education possible.
  In all these capacities, we seek to harness the good intentions that 
have arisen from 9-11--the surge in patriotism, the desire to put 
something back in this country, to harness those intentions and to 
channel them into concrete action that will improve America for 
generations to come. This Defense Authorization Act will do that in 
terms of encouraging more young Americans to serve in uniform in ways 
that will tangibly protect this country from military aggression.
  At the same time, we seek to enact the Call To Service Act, to 
channel more energy into civil service as well, to help students learn, 
to help senior citizens lead independent, productive lives out of their 
homes, and to meet the other challenges that will make our country not 
only safe militarily but make our Nation more decent, more 
compassionate, more just; to remember the challenges we face at home 
and meet them, just as our brave military young men and women are 
meeting the security challenges we face abroad.
  In summary, the call to service, whether in the military or in the 
civilian sector, is in the finest of American traditions. It was Thomas 
Jefferson who once said, in reflecting upon the accomplishments of his 
own life:

       I would much prefer to be remembered for what I have been 
     privileged to do for others than for what others have so 
     kindly done for me.

  This spirit of national service could not be more timely, colleagues. 
The eyes of the world are upon us today, and they are asking: Does this 
generation of Americans have what it takes

[[Page 11512]]

to sacrifice, even for a moment, even in part, the ease and comfort to 
which we have been accustomed, in the cause of championing and 
protecting the ideals we claim to cherish? I believe we can. I believe 
we must.
  I thank Senators Warner and Levin for including the military 
components of our service legislation within this authorization act. I 
think it will do a lot to strengthen the military in years to come and 
will strengthen the fabric of society as more Americans, and 
particularly young Americans, will have had the experience of serving 
in uniform, with all that that means in forming their own citizenship 
in future years. At the same time, I urge my colleagues to carefully 
consider and support our Call To Service Act, which would do exactly 
the same in the civilian sector, strengthening America in ways that are 
beyond measure.
  I thank my colleagues and yield the floor.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, 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. MILLER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the 
quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. MILLER. Mr. President, recently, ABC canceled country music 
singer Toby Keith from its July Fourth TV special. They did not want 
him to sing his song about the September 11 attacks. ``Courtesy of the 
Red, White & Blue (The Angry American).''
  Earlier, a similar thing happened with PBS and Charlie Daniels.
  This is a disgrace and the rankest kind of hypocrisy from these 
advocates of free speech.
  I therefore ask unanimous consent that the lyrics of these two 
patriotic songs by Toby Keith and Charlie Daniels be entered into the 
Congressional Record. And just for good measure, I also ask to include 
the lyrics of another great patriotic country song from my generation, 
``Fightin' Side of Me,'' by Merle Haggard.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

          Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue (Angry American)

                            (By Toby Keith)

     American girls and Americans guys
     Will always stand up and salute
     Will always recognize
     When we see Old Glory flying
     There's a lot of men dead
     So we can sleep in peace at night
     When we lay down our head

     My Daddy served in the army
     Where he lost his right eye
     But he flew a flag out in our yard
     Till the day that he died
     He wanted my Mother, my Brother,
     My Sister and me
     To grow up and live happy
     In the land of the free

     Now this nation that I love
     Is falling under attack
     A mighty sucker punch came flying in
     From somewhere in the back
     As soon as we could see clearly
     Through our big black eye
     Man we lit up your world
     Like the Fourth of July

     Chorus:
     Hey, Uncle Sam put your name
     At the top of his list
     And the Statue of Liberty
     Started shaking her fist
     And the eagle will fly
     And it's going to be hell
     When you hear Mother Freedom
     Start ringing her bell
     And it will feel like the whole wide world
     Is raining down on you
     Brought to you courtesy
     Of the Red, White and Blue

     Oh, justice will be served
     And the battle will rage
     This big dog will fight
     When you rattle his cage
     You'll be sorry that you messed
     With the U.S. of A.
     Cause we'll put a boot in your ass
     It's the American way

     Chorus:
     Of the Red, White and Blue
     Of my Red, White and Blue
                                  ____


                          The Last Fallen Hero

                     (By the Charlie Daniels Band)

     Oh the cowards came by morning and attacked without a warning
     Leaving flames and death and chaos in our streets
     In the middle of this fiery hell brave heroes fell

     In the skies of Pennsylvania on a plane bound for destruction
     With the devil and his angels at the wheel
     They never reached their target on the ground
     Brave heroes brought it down

     Chorus:
     This is a righteous cause so without doubt or pause
     I will do what my country asks of me
     Make any sacrifice
     We'll pay whatever price
     So the children of tomorrow can be free
     Lead on red, white and blue
     And we will follow you until we win the final victory
     God help us do our best we will not slack or rest
     Till the last fallen hero rests in peace

     Now the winds of war are blowing and there's no way of 
           knowing
     Where this bloody path we're traveling will lead
     We must follow till the end
     Or face it all again

     And make no mistake about it, write it, preach it, talk it, 
           shout it
     Across the mountains and the deserts and the seas
     The blood of innocence and shame
     Will not be shed in vain

     Chorus:
     This is a righteous cause so without doubt or pause
     I will do what my country asks of me
     Make any sacrifice
     We'll pay whatever price
     So the children of tomorrow can be free
     Lead on red, white and blue
     And we will follow you until we win the final victory
     God help us do our best we will not slack or rest
     Till the last fallen hero rests in peace

     God help us do our best we will not slack nor rest
     Till the last fallen hero rests in peace
                                  ____


                   Fightin' Side of Me: Merle Haggard

                       (Written by Merle Haggard)

     I hear people talkin' bad,
     About the way we have to live here in this country,
     Harpin' on the wars we fight,
     An' gripin' 'bout the way things oughta be.
     An' I don't mind `em switchin' sides,
     An' standin' up for things they believe in.
     When they're runnin' down my country, man,
     They're walkin' on the fightin' side of me.

     Yeah, walkin' on the fightin' side of me.
     Runnin' down the way of life,
     Our fightin' men have fought and died to keep.
     If you don't love it, leave it:
     Let this song I'm singin' be a warnin'.
     If you're runnin' down my country, man,
     You're walkin' on the fightin' side of me.

     I read about some squirrely guy,
     Who claims, he just don't believe in fightin'.
     An' I wonder just how long,
     The rest of us can count on bein' free.
     They love our milk an' honey,
     But they preach about some other way of livin'.
     When they're runnin' down my country, hoss,
     They're walking on the fightin' side of me.

     Yeah, walkin' on the fightin' side of me.
     Runnin' down the way of life,
     Our fightin' men have fought and died to keep.
     If you don't love it, leave it:
     Let this song I'm singin' be a warnin'.
     If you're runnin' down my country, man,
     You're walkin' on the fightin' side of me.

     Yeah, walkin' on the fightin' side of me.
     Runnin' down the way of life,
     Our fightin' men have fought and died to keep.
     If you don't love it, leave it:
     Let this song I'm singin' be a warnin'.
     If you're runnin' down my country, man,
     You're walkin' on the fightin' side of me.

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, 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. LEVIN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the 
quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Carnahan). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                Amendment No. 4046 To Amendment No. 4007

  Mr. LEVIN. Madam President, I send a second-degree amendment to the 
desk and ask that it be read.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin] proposes an amendment 
     numbered 4046 to amendment No. 4007:
       On page 3, strike subsection (c) and insert the following:
       ``(c) Priority for Allocating Funds.--In the expenditure of 
     additional funds made

[[Page 11513]]

     available by a lower rate of inflation, the top priority 
     shall be the use of such funds for Department of Defense 
     activities for protecting the American people at home and 
     abroad by combating terrorism at home and abroad.''

  Mr. LEVIN. Madam President, just very briefly--I know the majority 
leader wants to be recognized if he returns to the floor--the amendment 
of the Senator from Virginia specifies two purposes for additional 
funds which would become available as a result of an adjustment to the 
inflation factor, a recalculation of the inflation factor.
  The Senator from Virginia has been assured that at least $814 million 
will become available. He made that representation to us yesterday. 
Based on that representation, he has offered an amendment which 
provides that the money be spent for one of two specified purposes. 
These are the purposes, I emphasize, that are set forth in the Warner 
amendment: whichever of the following purposes the President determines 
the money should be spent for--``(1) Research, development, test, and 
evaluation for ballistic missile defense programs of the Department of 
Defense.'' The second purpose specified in the Warner amendment is: 
``Activities of the Department of Defense for combating terrorism at 
home and abroad.''
  What the second-degree amendment provides is that combating terrorism 
at home and abroad is the highest priority for allocating these funds. 
Protecting the American people in this way, under the second-degree 
amendment, should be the top priority for these funds.
  We have all said that over and over again, that combating terrorism 
is now our No. 1 priority. And these funds, which will be made 
available as a result of the readjustment of inflation, should be 
dedicated, in our judgement, to that purpose.
  The amendment does not preclude the President from spending 
additional funds on missile defense should he determine that is a 
higher priority. This amendment does not preclude the President from 
reaching that judgment. It expresses our judgment that, of those two 
specified purposes in the underlying amendment, combating terrorism is 
the top priority to protect the American people at home and abroad.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Virginia.
  Mr. WARNER. Madam President, I thank the chairman for providing this 
amendment at this time, precisely at the stroke of 12:30. We will have 
the opportunity to examine it.
  You have basically reached the point where you are saying that the 
President wants to follow the law. And if this were adopted, it is my 
understanding it is not the intention of the second-degree amendment, 
the proposers of it, to in any way abrogate the flexibility to allocate 
these funds between the two stated purposes in my amendment--namely, 
missile defense and homeland security--in any way. In other words, he 
retains full flexibility to do so. Am I correct in that?
  When we talked yesterday that was the purport of the amendment the 
distinguished chairman was proffering yesterday. I presume this 
amendment continues your representation that the purpose of the 
amendment was not in any way to abrogate his flexibility to allocate 
between the two specific purposes as stated in the underlying 
amendment?
  Mr. LEVIN. This second-degree amendment does two things which the 
amendment I was going to offer yesterday would have done; that is, it 
states that in our judgment, the top priority for the use of these 
funds is to combat terrorism at home and abroad. But it does not 
preclude the President from spending this additional money on missile 
defense should that be his determination. It does both of those things. 
It does not preclude the President from spending the money on missile 
defense should he reach the judgment that is a higher priority than 
combating terrorism, that those additional funds above the $7.6 billion 
on missile defense is a higher priority than combating terrorism. This 
amendment would not preclude him from doing that, but the heart of this 
amendment remains as it was last night, expressing our judgment--that 
is, between these two specified purposes in the underlying amendment--
that the top priority is combating terrorism at home and abroad.
  The majority leader is in the Chamber.
  Mr. WARNER. If I could add further, that is the proportions of the 
allocation--it is implicit in there--he can make the allocation in such 
proportions to the two accounts as he deems appropriate?
  Mr. LEVIN. The President is not precluded by this language from 
reaching a different conclusion and allocating as he chooses. It is 
pretty clear what our judgment is as to the top priority. That is the 
purpose of this amendment.
  Mr. WARNER. Madam President, I thank my colleague. We will examine 
this amendment. Yesterday, at one point we were willing to accept the 
second degree. Let's see whether or not that can be achieved in the 
near future.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
  Mr. DASCHLE. Madam President, let me compliment the distinguished 
Senator from Michigan for his work in accommodating the dual priorities 
our two managers have attempted to address over the course of the last 
couple of days as we consider the issue of missile defense and the need 
to ensure adequate resources for homeland defense.
  We are debating what may be one of the most significant amendments to 
one of the most important pieces of legislation to come before the 
Senate this year. I am surprised, frankly, that objections have been 
raised to the Levin amendment. Both the Warner and Levin amendments 
agree that if additional resources become available to the Pentagon, 
only two programs, missile defense and counterterrorism, would be 
eligible for these resources.
  The only difference, as has just been described in the colloquy 
between our two colleagues on the Armed Services Committee, the only 
difference is that Senator Levin's amendment would put Congress on 
record that combating terrorism should be our top priority.
  After what America and the world witnessed on September 11 and the 
subsequent actions discussed in reports from intelligence agencies 
since, I question how anybody could challenge that this should be our 
top priority.
  How could anyone think, in the short term at least, we are more 
likely to be a target of a ballistic missile attack than another 
terrorist incident? The heinous terrorist attacks of September 11 did 
not involve ballistic missiles, and none of the warnings of possible 
future attacks issued by this administration since September 11 even 
mentioned the possibility of a ballistic missile attack.
  The steady stream of recent warnings from this administration have 
warned us about crop dusters, gasoline trucks, shoe bombers, ``dirty'' 
bombers, attacks on our financial institutions, shopping malls, nuclear 
powerplants, and large apartment buildings. All of these have been 
cited as possible attacks. More money for ballistic missile defense 
would not make any of them more preventable.
  This debate is about the best use of our national resources to 
protect our national security. It is not about whether to proceed with 
the construction of a missile defense facility at Fort Greeley, AK. 
Although I have many questions about the merit of and need for this 
facility, the underlying bill already fully funds the administration's 
proposal for constructing this test site.
  This debate is not about whether to provide missile defense with 
billions of dollars, although I have concerns that a huge missile 
defense program could crowd out funding for more important security 
programs such as counterproliferation and homeland defense. The 
underlying bill already provides missile defense with $6.8 billion, 
easily making it the largest acquisition program in the Pentagon's 
entire budget.
  And, if this body adopts both the Warner and Levin amendments, it 
will be possible for missile defense to receive additional resources if 
they become available.

[[Page 11514]]

  Nor is this debate about the proper timetable for deploying missile 
defense. Although I have strong reservations that the administration's 
rush to deployment could have some negative ramifications for our 
security, the underlying bill does nothing that would affect the 
administration's timetable for deploying missile defense.
  In short, this debate is not about who supports missile defense. In 
fact, where one stands on these amendments bears no relation to how one 
feels about missile defense. I strongly support a substantial missile 
defense program and the Levin amendment. Anyone who believes there is 
something inconsistent about this should read the underlying bill and 
the amendments before us.
  Rather, the pending amendments raise a larger, more fundamental 
question. In particular, what is the most immediate action we can take 
to make America more secure? Providing the funds that will help us 
dismantle al-Qaida and prevent acts of terrorism, or providing funds 
beyond the $6.8 billion already in this bill to help us deploy a 
missile defense system at some point in the future? That is the 
question. Your answer ought to be the former, not the latter.
  We should all be able to agree that terrorism is a threat that 
confronts us here and now. Therefore, I hope my colleagues will make 
fighting terrorism their first priority.
  I support the Levin amendment. I congratulate him on drafting it. I 
urge our colleagues to support it as well.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Virginia.
  Mr. WARNER. Madam President, I listened very carefully to the 
distinguished majority leader's comments. I am not so certain we have 
any major differences. I assure you, this administration and, indeed, 
the Senate as a whole is focused, as it should be, on homeland defense 
and taking those measures to protect the American people here at home 
and, indeed, abroad. There is no lack of emphasis I can find in the 
overall framework of legislative proposals now in law and hopefully to 
be enacted in law, making it very clear this President, under his 
leadership, is moving on a number of fronts to combat terrorism in the 
United States and where it affects our citizens abroad.
  Yes, I listened carefully, and others have mentioned the warnings we 
are receiving. They do address the weaponry--the weapons that are known 
to be in the hands of those who have interests antithetical to our 
great United States, our people, our freedom, and our way of life.
  But in this particular bill, as it relates to missile defense, we are 
looking into the future. There are many signs that clearly justify 
actions being taken, hopefully by this legislation, and to begin to 
take those steps to put in place such defenses as our technology can 
devise, and promptly, which would enable us to provide a limited 
system--not some giant umbrella but a limited system of defenses 
against a limited attack of missiles.
  So we are looking to the future. I share with the distinguished 
leader the fact that we have to forewarn our citizens today with regard 
to the weaponry available, whether it is biological, chemical, or 
possibly some mocked-up type of nuclear weapon by a rogue nation or 
some terrorist organization. I think we are all pulling together in the 
same direction.
  I hope we can address these amendments very promptly. I ask for a 
reasonable period of time within which to address the second-degree 
amendment.
  I thank the majority leader.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island is recognized.
  Mr. REED. Madam President, I rise to speak about the amendment 
proposed by the Senator from Virginia and the second-degree amendment 
proposed by the Senator from Michigan.
  As I understand the amendment of the Senator from Virginia, it does 
several things. First, it assumes there will be approximately $814 
million in savings because of the inflation figures. Then it sets up 
two categories of funding that this extra money, if found, is to be 
used for: missile defense or counterterrorism activities.
  But then at the end of the amendment, it proposes to set the 
priorities for allocating these scarce resources. As I read the 
priority, it is everything that the Department of Defense does, because 
the priority would be activities for combating terrorism and protecting 
the American people at home and abroad.
  I suggest--and I doubt anyone would argue--that the crew of an 
American nuclear submarine patrolling the depths of the Atlantic or the 
Pacific are protecting Americans at home and abroad. I argue that 
Marine guards in embassies throughout the world are protecting 
Americans. I argue that troops that are training for possible 
deployments overseas are protecting Americans at home and abroad.
  The fact is that this priority is no priority at all. The fact is, 
this debate is a debate about whether we will use extra resources to 
fight terrorism or for a national missile defense shield. If you ask 
any American, their answer would be obvious and automatic: Protect us 
from terrorism. Why? I don't know if they have read the national 
intelligence estimate of December 2001. It says:

       In fact, U.S. territory is more likely to be attacked with 
     [weapons of mass destruction] from non-missile delivery 
     means--most likely from terrorists--than by missiles, 
     primarily because non-missile delivery means are less costly, 
     easier to acquire, more reliable and accurate. They can also 
     be used without attribution.

  They might not have read in detail the national intelligence 
estimate, but that is what our intelligence officials are telling us: 
The most likely and immediate threat is terrorists attacking us, and 
perhaps with weapons of mass destruction, but not an intercontinental 
ballistic missile attack on the United States.
  On September 23, 2001, a few days after September 11, the Federal 
Aviation Administration grounded crop duster aircraft nationwide 
because of concerns that they might be used in chemical or biological 
terrorist attacks. This marks the third time since the September 11 
terrorist attacks that crop duster aircraft have been grounded. The 
other two groundings were from September 11 through September 14, and 
from September 16 through September 17.
  Again, ask yourself, is that a threat that national missile defense 
can prepare for? I should add that, as the Senator from Virginia said, 
we are concerned about the future; but this authorization is for next 
year. This issue is what funds will be spent next year--the extra funds 
that will be available. This year and next year, the American people 
will say unhesitatingly: Protect us from terrorism. That was September 
23, 2001.
  October 11, 2001: The Federal Bureau of Investigation issues a 
warning that there may be additional terrorist attacks in the United 
States and against U.S. interests overseas in the next several days.
  I do not suspect that any of those warnings were tied into the use of 
an intercontinental ballistic missile to attack.
  October 29: The Federal Bureau of Investigation issues a warning that 
there may be additional terrorist attacks in the United States and 
against U.S. interests overseas in the next several days and that 
Americans and police should be on the highest alert.
  Again, that is not coupled with any specific indication that an 
intercontinental ballistic missile would be involved.
  December 3, 2001: Director of the Office of Homeland Security Tom 
Ridge at a White House press briefing said: `` . . . the quantity and 
level of threats are above the norm and have reached a threshold where 
we should once again place the public on general alert, just as we have 
done on two previous occasions since September 11th.''
  December 22: Flight attendants and passenger subdue a man reportedly 
trying to set his shoes on fire on American Airlines Flight 63 from 
Paris to Miami carrying 185 passengers and 12 crew members. The plane 
is diverted to Boston's Logan International Airport, escorted by two 
U.S. Air Force F-15 fighter jets. Boston Airport authorities say the 
man appears to have been carrying C-4, a powerful plastic explosive,

[[Page 11515]]

in his shoes. The suspect is identified as Richard C. Reid on his 
British passport.
  Once again, ask yourself, if you are allocating money, do you 
allocate it to screening passengers better, or to x-ray baggage better, 
or to doing things for a national missile defense?
  January 29, 2001: In his State of the Union Address before Congress, 
President George W. Bush says U.S. forces in Afghanistan `` . . . have 
found diagrams of American nuclear power plants and public water 
facilities, detailed instructions for making chemical weapons, 
surveillance maps of American cities, and thorough descriptions of 
landmarks in America and throughout the world.'' Warning that 
``thousands of dangerous killers . . . often supported by outlaw 
regimes, are now spread throughout the world . . . '' The President 
promises to continue the war on terrorism at home and abroad.
  Were those plans and diagrams used to target an ICBM, or were they 
used to infiltrate terrorists into the U.S. to attack those facilities?
  January 31, 2002: An internal alert warning that Islamic terrorists 
are planning a major attack against American targets appears in a 
classified document issued by U.S. intelligence agencies. The alert 
reportedly specifies several potential methods of attack and targets: a 
nuclear powerplant or nuclear facility bombing, bombing a U.S. warship 
in Bahrain, a suicide airliner attack on a building, and bombing a 
vehicle in Yemen.
  Again, none of those threats raise an ICBM attack, or even a theater 
missile attack on the United States.
  February 11: Federal Bureau of Investigation issues a warning that 
more terrorist attacks may take place within the United States and 
against U.S. interests in the country of Yemen on or around February 
12, 2000. In its warning, the FBI specifically identifies Yemeni 
national Fawaz Yahya al-Rabeei and several of his associates as 
suspects, and Yemen as their possible target based on information 
gathered an detainee interrogations at Camp X-Ray on the U.S. Navy base 
at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and in Afghanistan. The warning advises 
Americans and law enforcement agencies to be on the highest alert and 
requests help in identifying these suspected terrorists.
  April 19: Federal Bureau of Investigation issues a terrorist threat 
alert identifying U.S. financial institutions in the Northeast as 
possible targets.
  April 24: The FBI issues a terrorist threat alert identifying 
shopping malls and other public places as possible targets, according 
to news sources.
  May 13: U.S. authorities have received reports from different 
intelligence sources of a threatened July 4, 2002, attack against an 
undetermined U.S. nuclear powerplant in the Northeast by al-Qaida 
terrorists.
  May 20: FBI Director Robert Mueller tells a gathering of the National 
District Attorneys Association that walk-in suicide bombings, such as 
those that have taken place in Israel, are likely to occur in the U.S. 
The Director says, ``We see that in the future. I think it is 
inevitable.''
  News sources report that the FBI has issued informal warnings that 
terrorists might rent apartments at large apartment complexes, pack the 
apartments with explosives, and detonate them.
  Ask yourself: How much will a missile defense system protect us 
against a suicide bomber walking into a mall or walking in and 
exploding an apartment building?
  May 21: The FBI issues a terrorist threat warning to New York law 
enforcement agencies that it has received ``unsubstantiated and 
uncorroborated information that terrorists are considering attacks 
against landmarks in New York City.''
  May 28: Hans Beth, director of the antiterrorism and organized crime 
division at Germany's BND foreign intelligence service, says at a 
conference in Bonn, Germany, that the al-Qaida terrorist network is 
active, regrouping, and recruiting new members, according to the 
Associated Press. The director says:

       We believe that bin Laden himself and several of his 
     confidants are still around to give the impulses for attacks.

  May 29: Customs Commissioner Robert Bonner, in an Associated Press 
interview, says that every Customs inspector will be equipped by 
January 2003 with a pocketsize radiation detector, and that Customs is 
working with other countries to screen cargo containers before they are 
shipped to the United States. The Commissioner cautions, however, that 
``there are no guarantees'' that improved border security will prevent 
a terrorist from smuggling a nuclear weapon into the United States.
  Again, this is not something with which a national missile defense 
system could cope and for which it is not even designed.
  May 30: New sources report that the Federal Bureau of Investigation 
issued an alert on May 22, 2002, to Federal, State, and local law 
enforcement agencies warning that al-Qaida terrorists may be trying to 
target commercial aircraft by using shoulder-fired antiaircraft 
missiles. Reportedly, the warning was issued after U.S. military 
personnel found a spent portable missile tube outside the Prince Sultan 
Air Base in Saudi Arabia earlier in May 2002.
  May 31: The Washington Times reports that classified U.S. Government 
intelligence reports indicate that Islamic terrorists may have smuggled 
portable shoulder-fired Russian SA-7 surface-to-air missiles or U.S. 
Stinger antiaircraft missiles into the United States.
  Again, ask yourself how we should be allocating extra funds to 
protect the people of the United States if those funds become 
available.
  June 7: Reuters News Service reports that CDR Jim McPherson, a U.S. 
Coast Guard spokesman, says the Coast Guard issued a warning to all of 
its units to be on alert during the June 7 through 9 weekend for 
``possible acts of terrorism targeting the Nation's ports, bays, 
rivers, and shores.''
  June 10: Attorney General John Ashcroft announces the disruption of 
``an unfolding terrorist plot to attack the United States by exploding 
a radioactive `dirty bomb.'''
  June 12: CBS News reports the Immigration and Naturalization Service 
issued a June 6, 2002, security alert instructing INS agents at U.S. 
airports, borders, and ports to do ``[a] complete and thorough search 
of all baggage'' carried by Yemeni travelers, except those carrying 
diplomatic passports, and make ``an inventory of all effects.'' The 
order was reportedly prompted by the discovery of several thermos 
bottles--some rigged with batteries and wire--during a raid in the 
northeastern United States of an apartment that housed several Yemeni 
nationals. The alert instructed agents to look for ``large sums of 
currency, night vision goggles, or devices.'' It also warned against 
agents opening any thermos bottles.
  June 14: A suicide bomber drives a car filled with explosives into a 
guard post outside the U.S. Consulate in Karachi, Pakistan, killing 11 
Pakistanis and injuring at least 45 people, including one U.S. marine 
who was slightly wounded by flying debris.
  June 16: The Washington Post reports that three Saudis seized in 
Morocco told interrogators that they fled Afghanistan and came to 
Morocco on a mission to use bomb-laden speedboats for suicide attacks 
on U.S. and British warships in the Strait of Gibraltar. The three 
Saudi men were captured in May 2002 in a joint Moroccan-Central 
Intelligence Agency operation.
  June 21: The Federal Bureau of Investigation issues a terrorist 
threat alert warning that terrorists might be plotting to use fuel 
tankers to attack undetermined Jewish neighborhoods and synagogues, 
according to the Associated Press.
  June 25: The New York Times reports that, according to congressional 
officials, Capitol Police in Washington, DC, are stockpiling up to 
25,000 gas masks to protect tourists, lawmakers, and their staffs in 
case of a terrorist attack.
  If you ask the American people how this money should be prioritized, 
the answer is clear, overwhelming, and irrefutable. The highest 
priority should be the war against terrorism, certainly

[[Page 11516]]

at this moment and certainly in this next fiscal year. As a result, I 
believe Senator Levin's amendment is not only crucial but essential so 
that the direction, at least the sense of this Congress, is clear. I 
hope we will support this second degree amendment.
  In addition, I should point out again that we are robustly funding 
missile defense activities. We have done that. Our proposal is $6.8 
billion for fiscal year 2003. We expect an additional $4 billion to be 
available since it was not spent last year. This gives us in the next 
fiscal year over $10 billion to use on national missile defense--
theater missile programs, national missile programs, boost phase, 
midcourse phase, terminal phase, the latest system which this 
administration is pursuing. That is adequate and sufficient in our 
view, but in addition, as Senator Levin pointed out, recognizing the 
top priority of terrorism, the language still would allow, even as 
amended, some resources to be devoted to additional national missile 
defense activity, if the President determines that.
  Having listened to this litany of warning emanating from the 
administration itself, it is hard to think that there is a higher 
priority at this moment and next year than counterterrorism.
  We have supported robust activities to test and deploy missile 
defense systems. There is full support for the Alaskan system. There is 
full support for research, experimentation, and testing. In fact, we 
have added money to these categories.
  We have added money for the Arrow missile, an important theater 
missile system we are developing jointly with the Israelis.
  We have added money for radars for Navy sea-based systems.
  What we have cut are those ill-defined, duplicative programs that are 
not going to advance, we feel, the development of this missile system, 
and we are looking to the future.
  A $10 billion investment next year, a combination of our 
authorization and residual funds, is an important downpayment, a 
substantial, robust downpayment on a future system that will counter 
future threats.
  What we are suggesting in this bill is that when you look closely at 
the suggestions and recommendations of the Department of Defense with 
respect to terrorism operations and contingencies, there is a long list 
of items not funded. Senator Levin's priority and my priority would be 
to fund these counterterrorism activities.
  There is, for example, $871 million for improved security on the list 
of unfunded priorities by the services. The Special Operations Command 
found an additional shortfall of $42 million in items that they could 
not provide to protect units fully, from their perspective, against 
terrorism on their installations.
  The second item, for example, on the Air Force list of unfunded items 
is $149 million for improved physical security at its bases.
  The Navy's list included an additional $263 million for improvements 
to Navy installations.
  The Army identified $110 million of unfunded force protection needs.
  These funds will be used to protect military installations, naval 
stations, shipyards, fencing off installations, airfields, and keeping 
intruders away. All of them are very necessary. But because we were 
making difficult judgments about priorities--and that is what our job 
is--we could not fund these compelling needs. I suggest if there are 
inflation savings, that is where they should go, and that is what the 
Levin amendment will direct, suggest, at least make as the policy of 
this Congress: That our highest priority is counterterrorism.
  In addition to this $914 million of unfunded force protection 
requirements, the services and Special Operations Command identified 
$184 million in unfunded priorities for defending against and managing 
the consequences of attacks using weapons of mass destruction.
  As a national intelligence estimate suggests, if such an attack takes 
place within the foreseeable future, it will not be as a result of a 
missile strike, but terrorists detonating some type of weapon of mass 
destruction in the United States. Our services are asking us for $184 
million to respond, to defend against, and manage the consequences of 
such an attack. The Marine Corps, for example, identified over $27 
million in shortfalls for their chemical and biological incident 
response force. The Air Force had an unfunded priority of $92 million 
for equipping installation first responders to manage WMD attacks.
  The Navy had a $20 million unfunded priority of this same line, the 
first responders within the services to respond to a weapons of mass 
destruction attack. The Air Force also had a $33 million unfunded 
requirement for bolstering the defenses of their personnel against 
weapons of mass destruction attack, and Special Operations Command had 
a $12 million shortfall for counterterrorism activities. If we add the 
$914 million of unfunded priorities related to protecting the Armed 
Forces by attack from terrorists to the $184 million of unfunded 
priorities related to defeating and managing WMD attacks, we reach a 
total of over $1 billion.
  So it is clear that the Special Operations Command have urgent, 
indeed critical, need to combat terrorism.
  So when we pass legislation that says there are two categories of 
spending for additional resources made available through inflation 
savings, one is missile defense, and one is combating terrorism, I 
think we need the Levin amendment to say our highest priority is 
combating terrorism, equipping our military forces to protect 
themselves and to protect us, at a minimum. But we also understand, 
even if we are able to provide these resources to our Department of 
Defense, where are the additional resources for the Department of 
Commerce to make sure that all of their activities complement and 
supplement the activities of the Department of Defense? What about the 
Coast Guard? Do they have enough resources to protect all of our ports? 
What about the FAA installing additional security measures in airports? 
All of these priorities are immediate, extraordinarily important, and 
have to be addressed.
  We have the opportunity today to make it clear that if these 
resources are available, they will be going to the most immediate, the 
most dire, threat we face, based upon our intelligence estimates, based 
upon the numerous statements by the administration, and we should do 
that confident we are providing a robust funding source for national 
missile defense development in every phase of their multilayered 
operation.
  I hope my colleagues will support enthusiastically the Levin 
amendment. I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Corzine). The Senator from Alabama.
  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I sometimes think we are like ships in 
the night as we discuss this issue and what the priorities of this 
country ought to be. I know Senator Reed is an esteemed colleague and a 
capable advocate, but I would like to talk about a few of the things he 
said that I think really do not give us the right perspective.
  Of course, terrorism is the No. 1 issue. We voted on a $40 billion 
FY01 supplemental budget. We have an FY02 supplemental in conference. A 
huge part of what we are spending in defense, transportation, and in 
all agencies of our Government, from the FBI to the CIA, is focused on 
securing this homeland. The arguments the Senator from Rhode Island 
make that suggests any other expenditure is not as valuable as homeland 
defense and that we can spend on nothing else apparently but homeland 
defense I do not believe are sound.
  In other words, are we going to stop all R&D for missile defense? Are 
we going to stop developing the future combat system we have been 
working on down the road that may be a decade in development? Are we 
just going to stop that because we have an immediate threat? The Navy's 
DD(X) program or other weapons systems we are developing, the new and 
superbly efficient precision guided munitions, should we continue to 
develop them? Well, of course we should.
  We cannot stop all that because we are into this war on terrorism. We 
need

[[Page 11517]]

to fund every dime that is needed on homeland defense. As a matter of 
fact, I just left a hearing in Judiciary where we heard from Governor 
Ridge as he laid out the proposal to completely reorganize our 
Government, one of the biggest reorganizations in the history of the 
U.S. Government. The homeland security Cabinet agency that is being 
proposed by President Bush would be an unprecedented move to focus a 
host of existing Federal agencies on one thing: Making sure their top 
priority is defending America.
  Back in 1999, a study done by a commission authorized by Congress 
came back and unanimously concluded we are under a growing threat from 
nations around the world, that 16 nations now have missile capability--
many of them are developing long-range capability--and that by 2005 
this Nation will be faced with and vulnerable to a missile attack. That 
is a reality with which we are faced.
  We voted in this Senate 97 to 3--and I quote--to deploy a national 
missile defense system as soon as technologically feasible. President 
Clinton signed that and supported it. Vice President Gore supported it 
during the past campaign. Senator Joe Lieberman, his Vice Presidential 
candidate, has been a champion of establishing a national missile 
defense system. President Bush made it a priority in his campaign, and 
he spoke openly about it. I submit this past election by the American 
people affirmed that commitment.
  So the President proposed a larger budget. Last year, he proposed 
$7.8 billion for national missile defense, $2.5 billion more than 
President Clinton had proposed over his $5.3 billion budget.
  This year, he is proposing roughly $200 million less for national 
missile defense, but fundamentally the President has laid out a 
sophisticated, long-term plan to get us prepared by the rapidly 
approaching time when we will be vulnerable to a potential missile 
attack.
  I know one of my colleagues quoted from the National Intelligence 
Estimate by the CIA on foreign missile developments that was issued 
earlier this year, and some other things in that report that I think 
are noteworthy. This is what the report says:

       The probability that a missile with a weapon of mass 
     destruction will be used against the United States forces or 
     interests is higher today than during most of the cold war.

  That was when we were facing the Russians and their missiles.

       And it will continue to grow as the capabilities of our 
     potential adversaries mature.

  Is there anybody in this body who is sorry we invested money in 
precision guided munitions? Are they sorry we invested money in 
developing a satellite system that has been the key to our 
communications and our military capabilities in Afghanistan? Are they 
sorry we developed bombers capable of delivering those things in the 
past, recognizing it would be necessary in the future? So that is what 
we are talking about: How do we get ready for this?
  The report adds further comments:

       Some of the states--these are countries--armed with 
     missiles have exhibited a willingness to use chemical weapons 
     with other delivery means. In addition, some non-state 
     entities are seeking chemical, biological, radiological and 
     nuclear materials and would be willing to use them in other 
     ways than employing them simply on a missile. In fact, the 
     U.S. territory is more likely to be attacked on the ground 
     with these materials primarily because a non-missile delivery 
     system is less costly, easier to acquire and more reliable 
     and accurate. They can also be used without attribution. 
     Nevertheless, the missile threat will continue to grow, in 
     part because missiles have become important regional weapons 
     in the arsenals of numerous countries. Moreover, missile 
     systems provide a level of prestige, coercive diplomacy and 
     deterrence that non-missile systems do not.

  We are dealing with a threat that is developing and is really here to 
some degree right now. We need to recognize that.
  I point out some of the other testimony we have heard in the Armed 
Services Committee. In addition to the 1999 Rumsfeld report, we have 
received a number of other bits of information and important reports in 
the Armed Services Committee and I am sure in the Intelligence 
Committee and Foreign Affairs Committee. These are areas I share with 
Members as we think about the question of the type of threats we face 
from hostile nations with missiles.
  Vice Admiral Wilson, the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, 
in his testimony about Iran, said that they continue ``the development 
and acquisition of longer range missiles and weapons of mass 
destruction''--that is nuclear, biological, chemical weapons--``to 
deter the United States and to intimidate Iran's neighbors.'' Also, he 
says: Iran is buying and developing longer range missiles.
  They are buying these missiles and developing these missiles right 
now. This is a nation the President referred to as part of the ``axis 
of evil,'' a nation whose government is not in the hands of its people, 
and a nation which could veer off into the extreme at any time. Admiral 
Wilson further notes that Iran already has chemical weapons and is 
``pursuing biological and nuclear capability.''
  Admiral Wilson concludes on Iran that it will ``likely acquire a full 
range of weapons of mass destruction capabilities, field substantial 
numbers of ballistic missiles and cruise missiles, including perhaps an 
ICBM,'' capable of reaching this country. That is what they are seeking 
to do. That is what we need to prepare for today. We do not need to end 
up in 2005, 2006, or 2007 being totally vulnerable to a missile attack 
from Iran.
  With regard to Iraq, Admiral Wilson said:

       Baghdad continues to work on short-range 150 kilometer 
     missiles and can use this expertise for future long-range 
     missile development.

  Is that not a threat to us? It troubles me. He adds:

       Iraq may also have begun to reconstitute a chemical and 
     biological weapons program.

  That seems to be clear. He has rejected any inspection that he at one 
time agreed to.
  Admiral Wilson continues:

       It is possible that Iraq could develop and test an ICBM 
     capable of reaching the United States by 2015.

  On North Korea, Admiral Wilson said:

       North Korea continues to place heavy emphasis on the 
     improvement of its military capabilities and continues its 
     robust efforts to develop more capable ballistic missiles. 
     They made a good deal of progress, as everyone knows and read 
     in the papers, about the launches they have demonstrated.

  Specifically, as to North Korea, Admiral Wilson said:

       It is developing an ICBM capability with its Tapeo Dong 2 
     missile, judged capable of delivering a several hundred 
     kilogram payload to Alaska or Hawaii and a lighter payload to 
     the western half of the United States.

  This is one of the most bizarre nations in the world, or in the 
history of the world. I was in South Korea in January 2002. I was on 
the DMZ. I saw what was occurring. It is one of the most dramatic 
demonstrations anyone could ever see on the difference between a free 
society and a totalitarian Communist society. The people of North Korea 
cannot feed themselves. Yet their obsessed leadership is driving the 
nation to spend more and more money on missiles, technology, and war 
while their people cannot feed themselves. Go just south of that DMZ in 
South Korea. I was in Seoul and traveled around that country. We 
visited our military people. It is a nation of impressive progress. 
They are producing some of the finest materials and products the world 
knows. I was pleased this year South Korea announced they would invest 
$1 billion in my State of Alabama to build an automobile plant. They 
continue to have greater increases in sales than almost any other 
automobile country.
  This is free South Korea compared to the totalitarian north.
  I asked why we could not send messages to the group in North Korea, 
do a Radio Free Europe-type message, to get our message out and maybe 
destabilize this regime. I was told the television stations only have 
two or three channels, and those are all government channels. You 
cannot even turn to another channel. The same is true with the radio. 
It is virtually impossible to get an outside message in there. People 
are afraid that the leadership in North Korea could act in a bizarre 
and illogical way and even trigger an attack on the United States.

[[Page 11518]]

  For example, Admiral Wilson noted that North Korea ``probably has the 
capability to field an ICBM within the next couple of years.''
  That is frightening. When our President gets into a dispute, an 
argument, a disagreement with the leadership in North Korea or Iraq or 
Iran, and they end up in the final analysis saying: You do that, and we 
are going to launch our missiles, and you know we can hit your cities 
and you have no defense.
  It affects our foreign policy and affects deeply the ability of the 
President to lead and be bold and courageous on behalf of the just 
interests of the United States and freedom in the world.
  He also noted with regard to North Korea that they continue to 
``proliferate weapons of mass destruction, especially missile 
technology.'' So they are selling missile technology around the world 
to countries, leaving them, although they may not have the development 
capability, leaving them capable of threatening us.
  CIA Director George Tenet, March 19 of this year--and the reports I 
have been reading from earlier this year--March 19, Director Tenet said 
this about the Chinese military: They announced a 17.6-percent increase 
in defense spending replicating last year's increase of 17.7 percent. 
If this trend continues, China could double its announced defense 
spending between 2000 and 2005.
  Tenet, on China, continues that they are near ``toward fielding its 
first generation of road mobile strategic missiles, the DF-31, a longer 
range version capable of reaching targets in the United States that 
will become operational later in the decade.''
  Those are some of the reasons we made a decision in 1999 to start now 
to develop a missile defense system. We have a clear threat to our 
military in the field. They are subject to the shorter range missiles, 
the 150-kilometer type missiles. Those type threats are also important. 
The proposal floated earlier that came out of committee, unfortunately, 
on a party line vote, would have cut our research into THAAD, our 
theater missile defense system. We cannot put our troops in the 
battlefield and have them subject to missile attack. We lost more 
people from missile attack in the gulf war than anything else. It is 
definitely a threat to us and our allies in the region. We need our 
allies to know we can deploy missile defense systems in the case of 
combat in their region that can give them hope of being protected from 
attack, or how can they support us when they go forward? We need to go 
forward with this.
  I believe if we can give the President the authority to go forward, 
we will have done a good day's work.
  Frankly, I do not want to vote, and I hope we are not required to 
cast a vote that says this is less important than other defense 
spending items. I think it is part of the whole defense bill. I think 
it is critical to our national defense. I think it is an integral part 
of it.
  I would not like to have a vote here to say we think it is not 
critical, that it is not somehow as important as any other effort to 
defend America. But I do say it appears we are making some progress. I 
hope we can reach an agreement on this.
  The American people expect us to protect this country. The American 
people still do not fully understand we have absolutely no defense 
against incoming missiles. When they are told that, and when this 
matter is discussed with them, and when they are told that we have an 
officer such as Lieutenant General Ron Kadish, directing this program 
providing it extraordinary leadership, professionalism, and production, 
and that he is moving this national missile defense program forward and 
will soon be able to deploy a successful missile defense system, they 
are frustrated some might try and slow down the progress needed to 
provide the nation the protection it requires. That is where we need to 
go.
  Let's protect our homeland through attacks on terrorism around the 
globe. Let's harden our defenses here at home in every way possible. 
Let's also continue this steady development of a national missile 
defense system that can save the lives of innocent Americans who are 
now vulnerable to attack.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Hawaii.
  Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, as chairman of the Readiness Subcommittee, 
I rise in support of the Levin second degree to Senator Warner's 
amendment restoring $814 million either to the President's missile 
defense request or to combating terrorism. Senator Levin's amendment 
clarifies what we know to be true, that the need to address the scourge 
of terrorism is urgent and is the top priority of our Nation.
  I want to mention that I do have some concerns about Senator Warner's 
amendment. I am not aware of the committee receiving any information 
from the administration that the suggested savings from inflation might 
in fact be realized. I sincerely hope that we are not just talking 
about ``funny money,'' and that we could be sure that the funds are 
there before we start talking about how to spend them.
  The Levin amendment makes clear that, while both missile defense and 
efforts to defeat terrorism are important, our priorities are obvious. 
Let me be clear, I do understand the need to defend our country against 
missile attack. I believe that all of us here in this chamber would do 
everything in our power to ensure that U.S. citizens are protected 
against vicious attacks from those who would do us harm, including 
those who would launch those attacks with missiles. However, I believe 
that the reductions taken in this bill to the President's fiscal year 
03 budget request for the missile defense program are judicious and 
based on sound reasoning. I support a missile defense effort that is 
sensible, thoroughly tested, and progresses in a rational manner. I 
believe that the $6.8 billion included in this bill provides ample 
funding for reasonable missile defense efforts.
  I also believe that there are many immediate threats that we know all 
too well. The horror of September 11 is seared forever in our minds and 
shows what these terrorists are capable of. If additional funds become 
available, I believe we have no choice but to direct them to actions we 
can take immediately to help us win the war on terror.
  As chairman of the Readiness Subcommittee, I am acutely aware of the 
costs incurred by the Department of Defense as we continue to send our 
military men and women around the globe to hunt down terrorists. Even 
beyond the supplemental appropriations which may be provided this year 
and funds for the war already included in this bill, the military 
services still have war-related needs that are not being met. When we 
began consideration of the fiscal year 2003 budget, the Chiefs of Staff 
of the Army and Air Force, the Chief of Naval Operations, and the 
Commandant of the Marine Corps provided us with a prioritized list of 
those needs that remain unfunded.
  For those who may not have had a chance to review those lists, let me 
note just a few examples. Over the last few years, we have suffered 
repeated attacks on U.S. embassies overseas, on the USS Cole, and on 
Khobar Towers. These attacks make clear that terrorists will strike 
U.S. assets all over the world, and that we have been engaged in this 
war for longer than we realized. September 11 showed us that we can no 
longer assume we are safe within our own borders, and that they will 
try to attack us here at home as well. We are a trusting nation, and, 
after the earlier attacks, had expected to improve the security of our 
military installations over time. The atrocities of September 11 made 
it clear that time may be a luxury we no longer have. If in fact these 
inflation savings are real, one of the key areas where the money could 
go is for anti-terrorism and force protection improvements to our bases 
and installations.
  The Service Chiefs agree--the Army, Navy and Air Force included $863 
million for improved security for our installations in their list of 
unfunded priorities for fiscal year 2003. The second item on the Air 
Force's list was $491 million to improve physical security systems at 
its bases, to enhance its detection capabilities with night vision

[[Page 11519]]

devices and thermal imagers, to strengthen its facilities to minimize 
the impact of possible explosions, and to improve security measures at 
nuclear security storage areas.
  The Navy's list included an additional $263 million for improvements 
to Navy installations. These funds would be spent strengthening the 
gates at various naval stations and shipyards, fencing off 
installations and airfields so that intruders would face some obstacle 
before just walking on to military property, establishing emergency 
operations centers, and installing better lighting to deter and improve 
detection of possible incursions.
  The remaining $110 million would go to fund the Army's unmet force 
protection needs, number eight on General Shinseki's list of 
priorities. This includes installing fencing, more robust gates and 
barriers, and improving lighting for active, guard and reserve posts.
  There are other key war-related needs as well. When the Department 
developed the budget for the coming fiscal year about 2 years ago, DOD 
obviously did not know that we would be at war. Therefore, the budget 
included assumptions about fuel prices that were based on normal 
training and deployments needs, and about where that fuel would be 
purchased.
  The global war effort has changed the reality underlying those 
assumptions. For example, the Defense Logistics Agency, which is 
responsible for providing fuel to all of the military services, has had 
to deploy its personnel to areas in and around Afghanistan to make fuel 
purchases. Moving fuel to and from areas that do not have adequate 
infrastructure and where there is little competition has proven 
extremely expensive. In its latest estimates, the General Accounting 
Office, which monitors fuel prices, projects that DOD will face a fuel-
related shortfall of $1.5 billion by the end of the next fiscal year. 
If these funds are not restored, DOD will be forced to reallocate funds 
from other sources so that the military continues to have adequate fuel 
supplies. This is an immediate need, made worse by the war, where any 
potential savings could easily be redirected.
  The Service Chiefs included other priorities on their list of 
unfunded needs that also deserve consideration. For example, the Air 
Force needs an additional $92 million to purchase protective equipment, 
chemical senors, medical treatment materials, and training for the 
teams that respond to nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons attacks. 
Improving security at the sites where the Army stores chemical weapons 
would cost an additional $103 million. The Marine Corps needs an 
additional $39 million for ammunition, and the Army's ammunition 
shortfalls total over $500 million more. These bullets would be used to 
support deployed troops and to train the soldiers and Marines who will 
replace them in future operations. The Navy, whose ships have been out 
on surge deployments since the September 11 attacks, needs an 
additional $164 million to maintain the fleet so that it can continue 
to support future operations.
  These are just a few examples of the costs of this war that remain 
unfunded because of resource constraints. If savings materialize in the 
mid-session review, I believe they are better spent on programs that 
our forces need right now. They need better protection on the 
installations where they live and work. They need more ammunition, and 
they need enough fuel to chase terrorists down wherever they are 
hiding.
  This budget provides for an adequate missile defense. Senator Levin's 
amendment ensures that funds are used where they are needed most 
urgently. We know where those needs are, because the Nation's top 
military leaders have told us. We need these funds to fight the scourge 
of terrorism. I urge my colleagues to support Senator Levin's 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island.
  Mr. REED. Thank you, Mr. President.
  I rise to respond to some of the arguments made today.
  First, my colleague, the Senator from Alabama, at least suggested the 
Levin amendment somehow would curtail additional spending on future 
combat systems, on R&D, and on technology. Frankly, if there is any 
curtailment, as has been suggested, it is the underlying amendment by 
Senator Warner. It is very clear. He said, if we have additional 
savings from inflation adjustments, they will go to two categories of 
spending: Missile defense, or counterterrorism.
  The Levin amendment simply says: Listen, we want to prioritize those 
expenditures. The President has the right to decide, but it should be 
the law and the view of Congress--that the most pressing and urgent 
need of those two is counterterrorism. That is the essence of the Levin 
amendment.
  There is also a suggestion made that somehow this underlying 
legislation is oblivious to the missile threats we face. That is not at 
all correct.
  Let me go back to the intelligence estimates. I suggested--and, in 
fact, I read--that U.S. territories are more likely to be attacked 
using materials from nonmissile delivery means--most likely from 
terrorists--than by missiles, primarily because nonmissile delivery 
means are less costly, easier to acquire, more reliable, and accurate.
  I suggest if the national intelligence is already telling us the most 
immediate and the most dire threat we face is a terrorist attack using 
unconventional munitions, that goes a long way in suggesting the 
priorities we should adopt in spending the money.
  Let me quote further.

       They also can be used without attribution. Nevertheless, 
     the missile threat will continue to grow in part because 
     missiles have become important regional weapons.

  Here we are talking about regional missiles, which were referred to 
in the old parlance as theatre missiles or medium-ranged missiles.
  We are funding and supporting robustly the development of a missile 
defense for the United States.
  The PAC-3 system--our most advanced development--is fully funded in 
this proposal, both R&D and procurement. We propose in fiscal year 2003 
to buy 72 of these missiles. The first set of operational tests is 
scheduled for this year. They will complete the first set of 
operational tests. Soldiers are already operating these systems. And it 
is capable of prompt deployment to protect U.S. troops from the types 
of regional missile threats that have been identified by national 
intelligence assessments. These regional missile threats are different 
from the long-range, intercontinental ballistic missiles that are the 
sum and substance of the rationale for a national missile defense.
  So we are fully cognizant of the missile threat we face, and we are 
robustly funding missile defense systems.
  Let me also suggest with respect to THAAD--that is another theater 
missile defense we are developing--that this legislation fully funds 
the testing and development program. First flight tests are scheduled 
for fiscal year 2005. That is fully funded at $985 million--almost $1 
billion.
  What we don't support in the proposal by the administration that they 
want to buy 10 extra missiles before the first missile is flight-
tested. That is not the way you effectively develop a system that will 
protect the people of the United States. It makes some sense, I think, 
to at least have the first test flight before you acquire the 
additional missile.
  We have increased the resources available for the sea-based, 
midcourse--formerly, Navy theatre-wide.
  We have added $40 million for the shipboard radar system, which we 
believe is important if this is ever to work properly.
  We increased the administration's request for the Arrow missile, 
precisely the type of system that will counter a threat from Iran and 
from Iraq, because long before those missiles could effectively reach 
the United States, they would likely be targeted on Israel. The Arrow 
missile system is an Israeli-United States partnership designed to 
counter some of those threats. We added $40 million.
  No one would suggest--at least I won't suggest--that the 
administration was oblivious to the real needs of defense in that 
region of the world when

[[Page 11520]]

they requested $66 million. But I would suggest that we were more 
sensitive, in a way, to the regional missile threat. So we added $40 
million to that. This legislation fully supports and is consistent with 
the threat.
  One of other things I think we have to understand--again, it goes to 
the point of why we should, if we have to prioritize, be more sensitive 
in this year and the next fiscal year to terrorism--is that, frankly, 
our opponents, much to our dismay, are clever, cunning, calculating, 
ruthless people. They know where our strengths are. They do not attack 
us on our strength. They find our weaknesses and our vulnerabilities. 
They will look for these vulnerabilities. As a result, they will 
conduct, I think, unconventional means of attack. They will challenge 
us in a host of different ways.
  What we are simply saying is, if there are additional resources, and 
if the choice, as suggested by the amendment from the Senator from 
Virginia is between missile defense and counterterrorism, the obvious 
answer, I believe, is counterterrorism. That is what the Levin 
amendment does. That is what the American people, I believe, will 
demand.
  I think it is also illustrative that the military professionals, the 
uniformed officers, the men and women who have sworn their lives to 
protect this country, have a long list of unfunded needs just to 
protect the security of DOD installations and to respond to incidents 
of mass destruction caused by some type of weapon. You could fund those 
needs upwards of $1 billion with the extra moneys available.
  So, again, I rise not only to respond, but to place in perspective 
the point that before we adopt this Levin amendment as a second-degree 
amendment we must look very closely at what the Senator from Virginia 
is proposing. Simply, he is saying if we have extra money through 
savings, through inflation adjustments, then they will apply to two 
categories--missile defense or counter-terrorism. Of course, our 
highest priority is everything the Department of Defense has requested 
in the President's budget. I think we have to make it clear our highest 
priority today and for fiscal year 2003 is countering the obvious, 
immediate, dramatic threat of terrorism here at home and abroad in the 
context, of course, of robust and full funding for national missile 
defense, and in particular theater missile defense, that precisely 
responds to the issues raised by the Intelligence Estimate of the 
growing regional threat from missiles.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama.
  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I rise to discuss a few items. The 
inflation index is an index that is in all of our budgetary 
projections. We figure out how our budget is going to be. When that 
index altered, it did free up some money previously committed to 
inflationary cost increases. It left that money available.
  I point out that in our Armed Services Committee, as we discussed 
this, we did not hear, when the budget passed, that we had to have more 
money for homeland defense or any particular item that amendments were 
offered on and voted down. It was only after this index became altered 
and funds were freed up. The President said: I will accept what the 
Senate Democrats offered in the Armed Services Committee for extra 
spending. He said: The money they took from missile defense--that he 
requested and was spent on other items that they wanted--I will allow 
that to go. I suggest we use this extra money so I can complete my 
projections for national missile defense.
  That is where we are today. Hopefully, we will be able to work 
through this and be happy with it. But I think we will have that 
inflation index money. I think it will be available.
  There is strong bipartisan support in this country for developing a 
national missile defense program and keeping it on track.
  The House passed their Defense authorization bill recently. They 
increased the President's request for national missile defense by $21 
million. The House bill passed by a huge margin, 359 to 58. It is a 
totally bipartisan bill. Liberals, Conservatives, Democrats, and 
Republicans supported it. It had more in it for national missile 
defense than the President is asking for or that Senator Warner has 
asked for.
  I suggest that before we get real pure about spending money for a 
critical national need such as national missile defense, and developing 
this program, that we ask ourselves what we did a few weeks ago when 
the President asked for a $28 billion fiscal year 2002 emergency 
supplemental for homeland defense and the war on terrorism. Members of 
the body have increased that supplemental to $32 billion and it has all 
kind of pork and special interest items in it. So I do not know where 
we are going to go on that supplemental, but the President is very 
concerned about this additional spending and pork that went into that. 
Those are just some comments I wanted to make.
  I believe we are on track to maintain the steady development of 
national missile defense. It is something I support.
  I point out, with regard to the threat, that threats are not 
exclusive. In our Armed Services Committee, which Senator Levin chairs 
so ably, the Director of CIA, George Tenet, testified that we don't 
have the luxury of choosing between threats. He noted that missile 
defense threats have sometimes developed more rapidly than the 
intelligence community has predicted. And, indeed, the Rumsfeld 
commission, in 1999, unanimously concluded that missile programs of 
some of the rogue nations, and some other nations hostile to the United 
States, were developing far faster than had previously been predicted.
  Then there is this question about the money that is building up in to 
the counter-terrorism account. There is some $10 billion available for 
missile defense in the year 2003 if the bill is approved as is. But I 
think to do so would really be creative bookkeeping.
  The new budget authority for missile defense in this bill is $6.8 
billion. That is $1 billion less than was appropriated last year. And 
the President proposed a modest reduction this year. There is another 
$814.3 million by the committee. That is a big cut by any standard.
  Senator Reed gets his $10 billion figure by mixing apples and oranges 
or, precisely, old fiscal year 2002 funding and new fiscal year 2003 
funding. All funding for the Missile Defense Agency is for research and 
development. Research and development is what we are funding. R&D 
funding is available for obligations for 2 years and for expenditures 
over 5 years. That is the way we do it. We do not give money for 
research and development and say you have to spend it all this year, 
ready or not. That is by design because R&D projects, by their nature, 
require some flexibility in execution and stability in funding and 
planning.
  If Senators disagree with that, we can take away that extended 
availability of funds. But most Senators, I suspect, would say that the 
flexibility in execution and stability in funding and planning is a 
good thing. I think that is the way we need to continue to proceed.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, the Armed Services Committee conducted an 
exhaustive examination of the proposed missile defense budget request. 
We held two strategic subcommittee hearings on missile defense under 
Senator Reed's leadership. We reviewed 400 pages of missile defense 
budget documentation, participated in more than 25 hours of staff 
briefings by the Department of Defense. Based on that exhaustive 
review, the committee recommended funding the vast majority of the 
Department's missile defense request, an amount that is sufficient to 
aggressively fund all the specific systems that the Department wants to 
develop.
  At the same time, the committee identified roughly $810 million of 
the

[[Page 11521]]

missile defense request--about 11 percent--that the Department did not 
justify, after a detailed review of available documentation and 
repeated hearings and briefings.
  For example, the budget request included $1.1 billion in the 
ballistic missile defense program element, an increase of $258 million 
over the current funding level. The major purpose of this program 
element is to develop integrated architecture ballistic missile defense 
systems.
  While this is an important goal, most of the systems that will 
comprise the ballistic missile defense architecture are years away from 
being deployed, making the development and definition of a detailed BMD 
architecture impossible at this point.
  After receiving more than $800 million for this program element in 
fiscal year 2002, the Missile Defense Agency has yet to provide 
Congress any indication of what the overall BMD architecture might be. 
In fact, the committee determined that of the $800 million appropriated 
for this program element in 2002, only $50 million--5-0--of the $800 
million appropriated had been spent halfway through the fiscal year.
  Because of that slow execution, the Missile Defense Agency informed 
us that $400 million of these funds will be available for expenditure 
in fiscal year 2003. Under these circumstances, it is hard to see why 
the Department would need a $250 million increase in the program 
element in 2003.
  So we made a choice. We made a choice to make some careful and well-
justified reductions in missile defense requests of $7.6 billion. Our 
bill provides the Missile Defense Agency as much money as can 
reasonably be executed for the Missile Defense Program in the year 2003 
and would ensure that this money is expended in a sound manner.
  The Senator from Virginia has assured this body that the midyear 
review will make sufficient funds available to cover added spending 
which would be authorized by his amendment. We assume that would be the 
case, based on what he has been told and based on his statement to this 
body.
  The underlying amendment of Senator Warner provides that the 
additional $800 million, approximately, would be spent as the President 
determines in one of two ways--and they are very specific--one, 
research, development, test, and evaluation for ballistic missile 
defense programs, or, two, activities of the Department of Defense for 
combating terrorism at home and abroad. Those are the two specific 
programs on which the President could spend this authorized additional 
money under the underlying Warner amendment.
  Under my second-degree amendment, we simply state our view that the 
highest priority at this time is the war against terrorism. The 
amendment states that, in the expenditure of additional funds made 
available by a lower rate of inflation, the top priority shall be the 
use of such additional funds for combating terrorism at home and 
abroad.
  Our second-degree amendment does not preclude the President from 
spending some or all of the money for missile defense. It does not 
preclude him from spending that additional money on missile defense, if 
the President determines that the additional money on missile defense 
is more necessary, more vital than combating terrorism at home and 
abroad.
  I believe we should put the money into the fight against terrorism 
because we have no higher priority than the war against terrorism. Over 
and over again we are informed and we believe--I think every Member of 
this body believes--that we are vulnerable to a terrorist attack. We 
hear warnings of attacks against our cities, our banks, our nuclear 
powerplants, sporting events. We hear warnings about more attacks by 
aircraft, about car bombs, about truck bombs, ``dirty'' bombs. As a 
member of the Intelligence Committee, a member of the Armed Services 
Committee, I believe there is a good reason to be concerned about these 
threats.
  The likelihood of these threats is far greater than the likelihood of 
being attacked by a missile from North Korea when such an attack would 
lead to the immediate destruction of North Korea, of the attacker. 
North Korea can attack us with a truck bomb or a car bomb or an 
envelope full of anthrax, if she chose, with greater accuracy, far 
cheaper and with a much lesser possibility of our identifying the 
attacker so as to respond with a massive attack of our own.
  These are real threats. The war on terrorism is here and now. We have 
not adequately funded the war on terrorism. With all the funds we have 
put in here, there are additional places that we can usefully spend 
money in the war against terrorism.
  To give some specific examples of where the Department of Defense has 
identified areas where it needs additional funds which could be funded 
by this $800 million--these are what we call the ``unfunded priorities 
list''; in other words, where there is a priority of the Department of 
Defense that they have identified but we have not been able to find the 
funds to put into these priorities so they have given us the unfunded 
priorities list--$491 million for improved security at Air Force 
facilities, including the security of nuclear weapons areas; $92 
million to help prepare our first responders to help address weapons of 
mass destruction. These are just two of the items which total about $1 
billion in what are the unfunded priorities list of the Department of 
Defense.
  We should be making a choice, at least expressing a preference and a 
judgment as to where the highest priorities are. That is our 
responsibility. We serve on these committees. We listen to testimony. 
We should make a judgment. If $891 million is available for additional 
spending, which we hope it will be, then the question is, What is the 
greatest need at this time?
  We express that need in the second-degree amendment. We say the war 
on terrorism; of those two identified, specified items in this 
underlying amendment, the war on terrorism is the highest priority this 
country faces. And we have unmet needs in meeting this priority.
  The President can make a different choice. We do not preclude that. I 
emphasize that.
  The President, if he determines it is more essential to spend even 
more money on missile defense than we provide, more than the almost $7 
billion we provide, if the President determines that spending 
additional funds on missile defense is a higher priority than the war 
on terrorism, we do not preclude him from doing so. But we express our 
perspective and our point of view that the war on terrorism is the 
highest priority.
  Should we address all threats that face us? Of course, we should 
address all threats that face us. And we do. But we have to allocate 
resources. We should allocate resources against the greatest threats 
that we face. Those greatest threats are the terrorist threats. We have 
had so much evidence of this that we have all reached that basic 
conclusion. I hope we express that perspective by adopting the second-
degree amendment which has been offered.
  I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Carper). The Senator from Michigan.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, while Senator Sessions is still here as 
comanager of the bill, I ask unanimous consent, in the event Senator 
Bill Nelson, who I believe is working with Senator Smith and Senator 
Roberts on an amendment which we support, gets to the floor before we 
dispose of the Warner amendment and the second-degree amendment, that 
we set aside the Warner amendment temporarily to allow them to offer 
their amendment. I ask unanimous consent that we do that, while my 
comanager is on the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. LEVIN. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.

[[Page 11522]]


  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, we have a number of cleared amendments 
which Senator Allard and I can now offer and hopefully dispose of. We 
understand Senator Nelson and Senator Roberts are on their way to offer 
an amendment which previously by unanimous consent we have agreed they 
could offer, and I also believe has been cleared on both sides. So 
perhaps we can start down the road I described to offer some cleared 
amendments, get those adopted but then perhaps interrupt if Senator 
Nelson and Senator Roberts come to the floor.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, that is agreeable with me.


                           Amendment No. 4087

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I send to the desk an amendment which 
provides additional funding for the development of solar cell 
technology for the military, and I believe it has been cleared on both 
sides.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin] proposes an amendment 
     numbered 4087.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

  (Purpose: To increase the amount provided for RDT&E, Air Force, for 
silicone substrates for flexible solar cells (PE 62601F), and to offset 
   the increase by reducing the amount provided for RDT&E, Army, for 
                  countermobility systems (PE 62624A))

       On page 23, line 24, increase the amount by $2,000,000.
       On page 23, line 22, reduce the amount by $2,000,000.

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, this amendment authorizes an additional $2 
million for Air Force applied research to develop new substrate 
materials for solar cells. The Air Force Space Power Generation program 
is working on novel high-temperature materials in order to develop 
advanced flexible thin film solar cells for military applications. New 
materials will enable lighter, cheaper, and more efficient solar arrays 
that are critical to achieving Air Force technology performance goals. 
I urge my colleagues to support this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4087) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4088

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Warner, I offer an 
amendment that authorizes $2 million for the analysis of emerging 
threats at the Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory. I believe this 
amendment has been cleared on both sides.
  Mr. LEVIN. It has been cleared. We have no objection.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Warner, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4088.

  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

   (Purpose: To authorize, with an offset, $2,000,000 for research, 
  development, test, and evaluation for the Navy for the Marine Corps 
 Advanced Technology Demonstration (ATD) (PE0603640M) for analysis of 
                           emerging threats)

       At the end of subtitle B of title II, add the following:

     SEC. 214. ANALYSIS OF EMERGING THREATS.

       (a) Increase in Authorization of Appropriations.--The 
     amount authorized to be appropriated by section 201(2) for 
     research, development, test, and evaluation for the Navy is 
     hereby increased by $2,000,000 with the amount of the 
     increase to be allocated to Marine Corps Advanced Technology 
     Demonstration (ATD) (PE0603640M).
       (b) Availability.--(1) Of the amount authorized to be 
     appropriated by section 201(2) for research, development, 
     test, and evaluation for the Navy, as increased by subsection 
     (a), $2,000,000 may be available for analysis of emerging 
     threats.
       (2) The amount available under paragraph (1) for analysis 
     of emerging threats is in addition to any other amounts 
     available under this Act for analysis of emerging threats.
       (c) Offset.--The amount authorized to be appropriated by 
     section 201(1) for research, development, test, and 
     evaluation for the Army is hereby reduced by $2,000,000, with 
     the amount of the reduction allocated as follows:
       (1) $1,000,000 may be allocated to Weapons and Munitions 
     Technology (PE0602624A) and available for countermobility 
     systems.
       (2) $1,000,000 may be allocated to Warfighter Advanced 
     Technology (PE0603001A) and available for Objective Force 
     Warrior technologies.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Colorado.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I urge that the Senate adopt this 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate? Without objection, 
the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4088) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4089

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Kennedy and seven 
other Senators, I send an amendment to the desk which concerns the 
Department of Defense Medical Free Electron Laser Program.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Kennedy, for 
     himself, Mr. Helms, Mr. Edwards, Mr. Frist, Mr. Thompson, Mr. 
     Kerry, Mrs. Boxer, and Mrs. Feinstein, proposes an amendment 
     numbered 4089.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

 (Purpose: To prohibit the transfer of the Medical Free Electron Laser 
         program (PE0602227D8Z) from the Department of Defense)

       At the end of subtitle B of title II, add the following:

     SEC. 214. PROHIBITION ON TRANSFER OF MEDICAL FREE ELECTRON 
                   LASER PROGRAM.

       Notwithstanding any other provision of law the Medical Free 
     Electron Laser Program (PE0602227D8Z) may not be transferred 
     from the Department of Defense to the National Institutes of 
     Health, or to any other department or agency of the Federal 
     Government.

  Mr. KENNEDY. I am proposing this amendment, along with Senators 
Kerry, Helms, Thompson, Edwards, Frist, Boxer and Feinstein, which will 
retain the Medical Free Electron Laser Program, (MFEL); in the 
Department of Defense. This program was initiated in 1985 and the 
benefit to military personnel and all Americans was realized 
immediately. This successful and visionary program has benefited the 
military in many ways. For example, new and innovative methods 
developed in the MFEL program to diagnose and treat burns, the number 
one combat casualty injury, are now in practical application. Current 
research involving tissue-welding and tissue-bonding is going to be of 
great value for treating battlefield injuries by allowing for the 
immediate repair of soft tissue and vascular wounds.
  This technology also has some special applications, such as for 
pilots with ocular injuries. Of particular interest to me, however, is 
its potential to help diagnose and deactivate other types of biological 
contamination and injury. This research has yielded very promising 
results.
  The Office of Management and Budget is attempting to move the program 
from the Department of Defense to the National Institutes of Health. 
Moving the program from DoD would be detrimental to the MFEL program 
and would jeopardize many promising research and development efforts. A 
proposed transfer of the MFEL program to the NIH is ill-advised since 
so much of the work centers around combat injury

[[Page 11523]]

and specifically targets biological injury. The program has a track 
record of success, and moving it would disrupt, delay and possibly 
impede this crucial research. The Department of Defense is without 
question the best place for the MFEL program.
  Congressional intent is clear on this subject. This peer-reviewed, 
competitive MFEL program must remain in DoD, where it was originally 
included and funded.
  I am pleased to offer this amendment, along with my colleagues, on 
behalf of this most worthy program.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4089) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4090

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Warner, I offer an 
amendment which would authorize the Secretary of the Army to convey 
property at the engineering proving ground, Fort Belvoir, VA.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Warner, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4090.

  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

(Purpose: To authorize land conveyances at the Engineer Proving Ground, 
                        Fort Belvoir, Virginia)

       At the end of subtitle C of title XXVIII, add the 
     following:

     SEC. 2829. LAND CONVEYANCES, ENGINEER PROVING GROUND, FORT 
                   BELVOIR, VIRGINIA.

       (a) Conveyance to Fairfax County, Virginia, Authorized.--
     (1) The Secretary of the Army may convey, without 
     consideration, to Fairfax County, Virginia, all right, title, 
     and interest of the United States in and to a parcel of real 
     property, including any improvements thereon, consisting of 
     approximately 135 acres, located in the northwest portion of 
     the Engineer Proving Ground (EPG) at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, 
     in order to permit the County to use such property for park 
     and recreational purposes.
       (2) The parcel of real property authorized to be conveyed 
     by paragraph (1) is generally described as that portion of 
     the Engineer Proving Ground located west of Accotink Creek, 
     east of the Fairfax County Parkway, and north of Cissna Road 
     to the northern boundary, but excludes a parcel of land 
     consisting of approximately 15 acres located in the southeast 
     corner of such portion of the Engineer Proving Ground.
       (3) The land excluded under paragraph (2) from the parcel 
     of real property authorized to be conveyed by paragraph (1) 
     shall be reserved for an access road to be constructed in the 
     future.
       (b) Conveyance of Balance of Property Authorized.--The 
     Secretary may convey to any competitively selected grantee 
     all right, title, and interest of the United States in and to 
     the real property, including any improvements thereon, at the 
     Engineering Proving Ground, not conveyed under the authority 
     in subsection (a).
       (c) Consideration.--(1) As consideration for the conveyance 
     authorized by subsection (b), the grantee shall provide the 
     United States, whether by cash payment, in-kind contribution, 
     or a combination thereof, an amount that is not less than the 
     fair market value, as determined by the Secretary, of the 
     property conveyed under that subsection.
       (2) In-kind consideration under paragraph (1) may include 
     the maintenance, improvement, alteration, repair, remodeling, 
     restoration (including environmental restoration), or 
     construction of facilities for the Department of the Army at 
     Fort Belvoir or at any other site or sites designated by the 
     Secretary.
       (3) If in-kind consideration under paragraph (1) includes 
     the construction of facilities, the grantee shall also convey 
     to the United States--
       (A) title to such facilities, free of all liens and other 
     encumbrances; and
       (B) if the United States does not have fee simple title to 
     the land underlying such facilities, convey to the United 
     States all right, title, and interest in and to such lands 
     not held by the United States.
       (4) The Secretary shall deposit any cash received as 
     consideration under this subsection in the special account 
     established pursuant to section 204(h) of the Federal 
     Property and Administrative Services Act of 1949 (40 U.S.C. 
     485(h)).
       (d) Repeal of Superseded Authority.--Section 2821 of the 
     Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Years 1990 
     and 1991 (division B of Public Law 101-189; 103 Stat. 1658), 
     as amended by section 2854 of the Military Construction 
     Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1996 (division B of Public 
     Law 104-106; 110 Stat. 568), is repealed.
       (e) Description of Property.--The exact acreage and legal 
     description of the real property to be conveyed under 
     subsections (a) and (b) shall be determined by surveys 
     satisfactory to the Secretary. The cost of each such survey 
     shall be borne by the grantee.
       (f) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may 
     require such additional terms and conditions in connection 
     with the conveyances under subsections (a) and (b) as the 
     Secretary considers appropriate to protect the interests of 
     the United States.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further discussion on the amendment?
  Mr. ALLARD. The amendment is cleared on this side.
  Mr. LEVIN. The amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4090) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4091

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Inouye, I offer an 
amendment which would increase the grade of the heads of the Nurse 
Corps of each of the services to major general or rear admiral, upper 
half.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Inouye, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4091.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

(Purpose: To amend title 10, United States Code, to increase the grade 
     provided for the heads of the nurse corps of the Armed Forces)

       On page 100, between lines 3 and 4, insert the following:

     SEC. 503. INCREASED GRADE FOR HEADS OF NURSE CORPS.

       (a) Army.--Section 3069(b) of title 10, United States Code, 
     is amended by striking ``brigadier general'' in the second 
     sentence and inserting ``major general''.
       (b) Navy.--The first sentence of section 5150(c) of such 
     title is amended--
       (1) by inserting ``rear admiral (upper half) in the case of 
     an officer in the Nurse Corps or'' after ``for promotion to 
     the grade of''; and
       (2) by inserting ``in the case of an officer in the Medical 
     Service Corps'' after ``rear admiral (lower half)''.
       (c) Air Force.--Section 8069(b) of such title is amended by 
     striking ``brigadier general'' in the second sentence and 
     inserting ``major general''.

  Mr. INOUYE. Mr. President, today I propose a timely and important 
amendment to increase the grade for the Chief Nurses of the Army, the 
Navy, and the Air Force to that of two stars. The existing law limits 
the position of Chief Nurse of the three branches of the military to 
that of brigadier general in the Army and Air Force, and rear admiral, 
lower half, in the Navy.
  Chief Nurses have a tremendous responsibility--their scope of duties 
include peacetime and wartime health care delivery, plus establishing 
standards and policy for all nursing personnel within their respective 
branches. They are responsible for thousands of Army, Navy, and Air 
Force officers and enlisted nursing personnel in the active, reserve, 
and guard components of the military. The military medical mission 
could not be carried out without nursing personnel. They are crucial to 
the mission in war and peace time, at home and abroad.
  Organizations are best served when the leadership is composed of a 
mix of specialties--of equal rank--who bring their unique perspectives 
to the table when policies are established and decisions are made. This 
increased rank would guarantee that the nursing perspective is 
represented on critical issues that affect the military medical 
mission, patient care, and nursing

[[Page 11524]]

practice. I believe it is time to ensure that the military health care 
system fully recognize and utilize the leadership ability of these 
outstanding patient care professionals.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further discussion on the amendment?
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, it has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4091) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4092

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of myself and Senator Reid, I 
offer an amendment that would require that the chief of the Army 
Veterinary Corps be appointed as a brigadier general.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for himself and Mr. 
     Reid, proposes an amendment numbered 4092.

  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

(Purpose: To prescribe the composition and leadership of the Veterinary 
                           Corps of the Army)

       On page 200, between lines 14 and 15, insert the following:

     SEC. 905. VETERINARY CORPS OF THE ARMY.

       (a) Composition and Administration.--(1) Chapter 307 of 
     title 10, United States Code, is amended by inserting after 
     section 3070 the following new section 3071:

     ``Sec. 3071. Veterinary Corps: composition; Chief and 
       assistant chief; appointment; grade

       ``(a) Composition.--The Veterinary Corps consists of the 
     Chief and assistant chief of that corps and other officers in 
     grades prescribed by the Secretary of the Army.
       ``(b) Chief.--The Secretary of the Army shall appoint the 
     Chief from the officers of the Regular Army in that corps 
     whose regular grade is above lieutenant colonel and who are 
     recommended by the Surgeon General. An appointee who holds a 
     lower regular grade may be appointed in the regular grade of 
     brigadier general. The Chief serves during the pleasure of 
     the Secretary, but not for more than four years, and may not 
     be reappointed to the same position.
       ``(c) Assistant Chief.--The Surgeon General shall appoint 
     the assistant chief from the officers of the Regular Army in 
     that corps whose regular grade is above lieutenant colonel. 
     The assistant chief serves during the pleasure of the Surgeon 
     General, but not for more than four years and may not be 
     reappointed to the same position.''.
       (2) The table of sections at the beginning of such chapter 
     is amended by inserting after the item relating to section 
     3070 the following new item:

``3071. Veterinary Corps: composition; Chief and assistant chief; 
              appointment; grade.''.

       (b) Effective Date.--Section 3071 of title 10, United 
     States Code, as added by subsection (a), shall take effect on 
     October 1, 2002.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4092) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4093

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Akaka, I offer an 
amendment which I send to the desk to shift $2.5 million to the 
demonstration of renewable energy use from the facilities improvement 
line to the Navy energy program line within the Navy R&D account.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Akaka, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4093.

  Mr. LEVIN. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To provide for the amount for the demonstration or renewable 
 energy use of the Navy to be available within the Navy energy program 
(PE 0604710N) and not within Navy facilities improvement (PE 0603725N))

       On page 26, after line 22, and insert the following:

     SEC. 214. DEMONSTRATION OF RENEWABLE ENERGY USE.

       Of the amount authorized to be appropriated by section 
     201(2), $2,500,000 shall be available for the demonstration 
     of renewable energy use program within the program element 
     for the Navy energy program and not within the program 
     element for facilities improvement.

  Mr. LEVIN. I believe the amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4093) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4094

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Collins, I offer an 
amendment which would extend the authority for the Navy to enter into 
multiyear contracts for DDG-51 destroyers by 2 years until fiscal year 
2007.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Ms. Collins, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4094.

  Mr. ALLARD. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose To extend multiyear procurement authority for DDG-51 class 
                              destroyers)

       On page 17, strike line 14 and insert the following:

     SEC. 121. EXTENSION OF MULTIYEAR PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY FOR 
                   DDG-51 CLASS DESTROYERS.

       Section 112(b) of the National Defense Authorization Act 
     for Fiscal Year 1997 (Public Law 104-201; 110 Stat. 2446), as 
     amended by section 122 of Public Law 106-65 (113 Stat. 534) 
     and section 122(a) of the Floyd D. Spence National Defense 
     Authorization act for Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law 
     by Public Law 106-398; 114 Stat. 1654A-24), is further 
     amended by striking ``October 1, 2005'' in the first sentence 
     and inserting ``October 1, 2007''.

  Mr. ALLARD. The amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4094) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4095

  Mr. LEVIN. On behalf of Senator Landrieu and Senator Roberts, I offer 
an amendment concerning the Defense Experimental Program to Stimulate 
Competitive Research. I send the amendment to the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Ms. Landrieu and 
     Mr. Roberts, proposes an amendment numbered 4095.

  Mr. LEVIN. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

     (Purpose: To authorize additional activities for the Defense 
Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research, and to require 
                     an assessment of the program)

       On page 71, between lines 9 and 10, insert the following:

     SEC. 246. ACTIVITIES AND ASSESSMENT OF THE DEFENSE 
                   EXPERIMENTAL PROGRAM TO STIMULATE COMPETITIVE 
                   RESEARCH.

       (a) Authorized Activities.--Subsection (c) of section 257 
     of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
     1995 (Public Law 103-337; 10 U.S.C. 2358 note), is amended--
       (1) in paragraph (1), by striking ``research grants'' and 
     inserting ``grants for research and instrumentation to 
     support such research''; and

[[Page 11525]]

       (2) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
       ``(3) Any other activities that are determined necessary to 
     further the achievement of the objectives of the program.''.
       (b) Coordination.--Subsection (e) of such section is 
     amended by adding at the end the following:
       ``(4) The Secretary shall contract with the National 
     Research Council to assess the effectiveness of the Defense 
     Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research in 
     achieving the program objectives set forth in subsection (b). 
     The assessment provided to the Secretary shall include the 
     following:
       ``(A) An assessment of the eligibility requirements of the 
     program and the relationship of such requirements to the 
     overall research base in the States, the stability of 
     research initiatives in the States, and the achievement of 
     the program objectives, together with any recommendations for 
     modification of the eligibility requirements.
       ``(B) An assessment of the program structure and the 
     effects of that structure on the development of a variety of 
     research activities in the States and the personnel available 
     to carry out such activities, together with any 
     recommendations for modification of program structure, 
     funding levels, and funding strategy.
       ``(C) An assessment of the past and ongoing activities of 
     the State planning committees in supporting the achievement 
     of the program objectives.
       ``(D) An assessment of the effects of the various 
     eligibility requirements of the various Federal programs to 
     stimulate competitive research on the ability of States to 
     develop niche research areas of expertise, exploit 
     opportunities for developing interdisciplinary research 
     initiatives, and achieve program objectives.''.

  Mr. ALLARD. It has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4095) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4096

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Inhofe and Senator 
Akaka, I offer an amendment which would increase the maximum amount of 
assistance the Secretary of Defense may provide to a tribal 
organization to carry out a procurement and technical assistance 
program. I believe this amendment has been cleared on both sides.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Inhofe and 
     Mr. Akaka, proposes an amendment numbered 4096.

  Mr. ALLARD. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

    (Purpose: To increase the maximum amount of assistance that the 
 Secretary of Defense may provide to a tribal organization or economic 
 enterprise to carry out a procurement technical assistance program in 
          two or more Bureau of Indian Affairs service areas)

       On page 194, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following:

     SEC. 828. INCREASED MAXIMUM AMOUNT OF ASSISTANCE FOR TRIBAL 
                   ORGANIZATIONS OR ECONOMIC ENTERPRISES CARRYING 
                   OUT PROCUREMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS 
                   IN TWO OR MORE SERVICE AREAS.

       Section 2414(a)(4) of title 10, United States Code, is 
     amended by striking ``$300,000'' and inserting ``$600,000''.

  Mr. LEVIN. The amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4096) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4097

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senators Cleland and Thurmond, 
I send an amendment to the desk which will repeal a prohibition on the 
use of Air Force Reserve AGR personnel for Air Force base security 
functions.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Cleland and 
     Mr. Thurmond, proposes an amendment numbered 4097.

  Mr. LEVIN. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

   (Purpose: To repeal a prohibition on use of Air Force Reserve AGR 
            personnel for Air Force base security functions)

       On page 101, between the matter following line 14 and line 
     15, insert the following:

     SEC. 513. REPEAL OF PROHIBITION ON USE OF AIR FORCE RESERVE 
                   AGR PERSONNEL FOR AIR FORCE BASE SECURITY 
                   FUNCTIONS.

       (a) Repeal.--Section 12551 of title 10, United States Code, 
     is repealed.
       (b) Clerical Amendment.--The table of sections at the 
     beginning of chapter 1215 of such title is amended by 
     striking the item relating to section 12551.

  Mr. ALLARD. The amendment has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4097) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4098

  Mr. ALLARD. On behalf of Senators Helms and Cleland, I offer an 
amendment that would require the Secretary of Defense to establish a 
policy and a risk mitigation plan for testing and certification 
requirements for telecommunications switches connected to the Defense 
Switch Network. I believe this amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Helms and 
     Mr. Cleland, proposes an amendment numbered 4098.

  Mr. ALLARD. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To require the Secretary of Defense to establish clear and 
uniform policy and procedures regarding the installation and connection 
           of telecom switches to the Defense Switch Network)

       On page 90, between lines 19 and 20, insert the following:

     SEC. 346. INSTALLATION AND CONNECTION POLICY AND PROCEDURES 
                   REGARDING DEFENSE SWITCH NETWORK.

       (a) Establishment of Policy and Procedures.--Not later than 
     180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the 
     Secretary of Defense shall establish clear and uniform policy 
     and procedures, applicable to the military departments and 
     Defense Agencies, regarding the installation and connection 
     of telecom switches to the Defense Switch Network.
       (b) Elements of Policy and Procedures.--The policy and 
     procedures shall address at a minimum the following:
       (1) Clear interoperability and compatibility requirements 
     for procuring, certifying, installing, and connecting telecom 
     switches to the Defense Switch Network.
       (2) Current, complete, and enforceable testing, validation, 
     and certification procedures needed to ensure the 
     interoperability and compatibility requirements are 
     satisfied.
       (c) Exceptions.--(1) The Secretary of Defense may specify 
     certain circumstances in which--
       (A) the requirements for testing, validation, and 
     certification of telecom switches may be waived; or
       (B) interim authority for the installation and connection 
     of telecom switches to the Defense Switch Network may be 
     granted.
       (2) Only the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, 
     Control, Communications, and Intelligence, after consultation 
     with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, may approve a 
     waiver or grant of interim authority under paragraph (1).
       (d) Inventory of Defense Switch Network.--The Secretary of 
     Defense shall prepare and maintain an inventory of all 
     telecom switches that, as of the date on which the Secretary 
     issues the policy and procedures--
       (1) are installed or connected to the Defense Switch 
     Network; but
       (2) have not been tested, validated, and certified by the 
     Defense Information Systems Agency (Joint Interoperability 
     Test Center).
       (e) Interoperability Risks.--(1) The Secretary of Defense 
     shall, on an ongoing basis--
       (A) identify and assess the interoperability risks that are 
     associated with the installation or connection of uncertified 
     switches to

[[Page 11526]]

     the Defense Switch Network and the maintenance of such 
     switches on the Defense Switch Network; and
       (B) develop and implement a plan to eliminate or mitigate 
     such risks as identified.
       (2) The Secretary shall initiate action under paragraph (1) 
     upon completing the initial inventory of telecom switches 
     required by subsection (d).
       (f) Telecom Switch Defined.--In this section, the term 
     ``telecom switch'' means hardware or software designed to 
     send and receive voice, data, or video signals across a 
     network that provides customer voice, data, or video 
     equipment access to the Defense Switch Network or public 
     switched telecommunications networks.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4098) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4099

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senators Bill Nelson, McCain, 
Cleland, Roberts, and Daschle, I offer an amendment which would provide 
for the disclosure to the Department of Veterans Affairs of information 
on the shipboard hazard and defense project of the Navy.
  I ask that the clerk report the amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Nelson of 
     Florida, for himself, Mr. McCain, Mr. Cleland, Mr. Roberts, 
     and Mr. Daschle, proposes an amendment numbered 4099.

  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To provide for the disclosure to the Department of Veterans 
 Affairs of information on the Shipboard Hazard and Defense project of 
                               the Navy)

       At the end of subtitle E of title X, add the following:

     SEC. 1065. DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION ON SHIPBOARD HAZARD AND 
                   DEFENSE PROJECT TO DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS 
                   AFFAIRS.

       (a) Plan for Disclosure of Information.--Not later than 90 
     days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the 
     Secretary of Defense shall submit to Congress and the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs a comprehensive plan for the 
     review, declassification, and submittal to the Department of 
     Veterans Affairs of all medical records and information of 
     the Department of Defense on the Shipboard Hazard and Defense 
     (SHAD) project of the Navy that are relevant to the provision 
     of benefits by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to members 
     of the Armed Forces who participated in that project.
       (b) Plan Requirements.--(1) The records and information 
     covered by the plan under subsection (a) shall be the records 
     and information necessary to permit the identification of 
     members of the Armed Forces who were or may have been exposed 
     to chemical or biological agents as a result of the Shipboard 
     Hazard and Defense project.
       (2) The plan shall provide for completion of all activities 
     contemplated by the plan not later than one year after the 
     date of the enactment of this Act.
       (c) Reports on Implementation.--(1) Not later than 90 days 
     after the date of the enactment of this Act, and every 90 
     days thereafter until completion of all activities 
     contemplated by the plan under subsection (a), the Secretary 
     of Defense shall submit to Congress and the Secretary of 
     Veterans Affairs a report on progress in the implementation 
     of the plan during the 90-day period ending on the date of 
     such report.
       (2) Each report under paragraph (1) shall include, for the 
     period covered by such report--
       (A) the number of records reviewed;
       (B) each test, if any, under the Shipboard Hazard and 
     Defense project identified during such review;
       (C) for each test so identified--
       (i) the test name;
       (ii) the test objective;
       (iii) the chemical or biological agent or agents involved; 
     and
       (iv) the number of members of the Armed Forces, and 
     civilian personnel, potentially affected by such test; and
       (D) the extent of submittal of records and information to 
     the Secretary of Veterans Affairs under this section.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate? Without objection, 
the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4099) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4100

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Warner, I offer an 
amendment which would authorize $5 million to conduct a preliminary 
engineering study and environmental analysis for an alternate road to 
Woodlawn Road, which was closed as a force protection measure at Fort 
Belvoir. The funding would be offset by a reduction to increase in the 
M-Gator program authorized in this bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Warner, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4100.

  Mr. ALLARD. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To require an engineering study and environmental analysis of 
 road modifications to address the closure of roads in the vicinity of 
         Fort Belvoir, Virginia, for force protection purposes)

       At the end of subtitle D of title III, add the following:

     SEC. 346. ENGINEERING STUDY AND ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS OF 
                   ROAD MODIFICATIONS IN VICINITY OF FORT BELVOIR, 
                   VIRGINIA.

       (a) Study and Analysis.--(1) The Secretary of the Army 
     shall conduct a preliminary engineering study and 
     environmental analysis to evaluate the feasibility of 
     establishing a connector road between Richmond Highway 
     (United States Route 1) and Telegraph Road in order to 
     provide an alternative to Beulah Road (State Route 613) and 
     Woodlawn Road (State Route 618) at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, 
     which were closed as a force protection measure.
       (2) It is the sense of Congress that the study and analysis 
     should consider as one alternative the extension of Old Mill 
     Road between Richmond Highway and Telegraph Road.
       (b) Consultation.--The study required by subsection (a) 
     shall be conducted in consultation with the Department of 
     Transportation of the Commonwealth of Virginia and Fairfax 
     County, Virginia.
       (c) Report.--The Secretary shall submit to Congress a 
     summary report on the study and analysis required by 
     subsection (a). The summary report shall be submitted 
     together with the budget justification materials in support 
     of the budget of the President for fiscal year 2006 that is 
     submitted to Congress under section 1105(a) of title 31, 
     United States Code.
       (d) Funding.--Of the amount authorized to be appropriated 
     by section 301(a)(1) for the Army for operation and 
     maintenance, $5,000,000 may be available for the study and 
     analysis required by subsection (a).

  Mr. LEVIN. The amendment has been cleared.
  Mr. ALLARD. It has been cleared on this side, too.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4100) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I see Senator Nelson of Florida is on the 
floor with Senator Roberts. Under the previous unanimous consent order, 
it was understood that Senator Nelson would be recognized at this time 
to offer an amendment, that we would set aside the Warner amendment and 
the second-degree amendment pending thereto so Senator Nelson could 
offer his amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.


                           Amendment No. 4101

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, I send to the desk, amendment 
No. 3952, and ask for its immediate consideration. My understanding is 
the clerk will give it another number, so I simply send an amendment to 
the desk.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Florida [Mr. Nelson], for himself and Mr. 
     Roberts, Mr. Daschle, Mr. Smith of New Hampshire, and Mr. 
     Graham, proposes an amendment numbered 4101.

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. I ask unanimous consent the reading of the 
amendment be dispensed with.

[[Page 11527]]

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

(Purpose: To require reports on efforts to resolve the whereabouts and 
     status of Captain Michael Scott Speicher, United States Navy)

       At the end of subtitle C of title X, add the following:

     SEC. 1035. REPORTS ON EFFORTS TO RESOLVE WHEREABOUTS AND 
                   STATUS OF CAPTAIN MICHAEL SCOTT SPEICHER, 
                   UNITED STATES NAVY.

       (a) Reports.-- Not later than 60 days after the date of the 
     enactment of this Act, and every 90 days thereafter, the 
     Secretary of Defense shall, in consultation with the 
     Secretary of State and the Director of Central Intelligence, 
     submit to Congress a report on the efforts of the United 
     States Government to determine the whereabouts and status of 
     Captain Michael Scott Speicher, United States Navy.
       (b) Period Covered by Reports.--The first report under 
     subsection (a) shall cover efforts described in that 
     subsection preceding the date of the report, and each 
     subsequent report shall cover efforts described in that 
     subsection during the 90-day period ending on the date of 
     such report.
       (c) Report Elements.--Each report under subsection (a) 
     shall describe, for the period covered by such report--
       (1) all direct and indirect contacts with the Government of 
     Iraq, or any successor government, regarding the whereabouts 
     and status of Michael Scott Speicher;
       (2) any request made to the government of another country, 
     including the intelligence service of such country, for 
     assistance in resolving the whereabouts and status of Michael 
     Scott Speicher, including the response to such request;
       (3) each current lead on the whereabouts and status of 
     Michael Scott Speicher, including an assessment of the 
     utility of such lead in resolving the whereabouts and status 
     of Michael Scott Speicher; and
       (4) any cooperation with nongovernmental organizations or 
     international organizations in resolving the whereabouts and 
     status of Michael Scott Speicher, including the results of 
     such cooperation.
       (d) Form of Reports.--Each report under subsection (a) 
     shall be submitted in classified form, but may include an 
     unclassified summary.

  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, Senator Roberts and I come to 
the floor to offer this amendment. I ask unanimous consent that Senator 
Graham of Florida be added as a cosponsor. I believe Senator Bob Smith 
of New Hampshire is already a cosponsor. If he is not, I ask unanimous 
consent he be added as a cosponsor as well.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, we walked away from a downed 
flier. There were a series of mistakes that occurred. Senator Roberts 
can give you the detail of that. But the fact is, CDR Scott Speicher, 
who, by the way, our Armed Services Committee and this Senate has now 
promoted to Captain, was the first U.S. serviceman shot down in the 
gulf war. Then there was a series of incredible mistakes. For example, 
his buddies flying with him gave the proper coordinates, but when the 
coordinates were transmitted for our surveillance assets to look, the 
numbers were transposed so they didn't look in the right place.
  Through one thing and another, suddenly a press conference is held in 
Washington with the then-Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, and the 
then-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, GEN Colin Powell. Out of 
that press conference came the statement that Commander Speicher was 
dead. In fact, we have since learned that through this series of 
mistakes we never looked in the right place. Testimony was convoluted. 
Then, lo and be hold, years later comes forth an eye witness account 
that someone actually drove him to a hospital. Through several 
corroborations, that testimony was determined to be true.
  So, what we want to do, as Senator Roberts has done so eloquently and 
so courageously over the years, is keep this matter alive and find out 
what happened and where is CDR Scott Speicher, and is he living? And, 
if he is not, then to have proof. Because what we have back in 
Jacksonville, FL, is a family wanting to know what is the fate of their 
loved one. That is the very least the U.S. Government can do.
  So the question now comes up about what we are going to do in Iraq. 
That is something that Senator Roberts and I do not know. But we do 
know that there is the question of a delegation going to Iraq. Should 
it be a low level delegation or a high level delegation? What we want 
are some answers.
  I have taken every opportunity--where I have been in a place that I 
sensed was the right place at the right time--to talk about Commander, 
now CAPT Scott Speicher and the need of us to press the issue, to find 
out from Iraq about his status.
  I talked to the young President of Syria in Damascus about him and 
asked him to use his intelligence apparatus to help us. I talked to the 
King of Jordan. I have talked to the Secretary of Defense and the 
Assistant Secretary of Defense. I have talked to the Secretary of State 
and the Deputy Secretary of State.
  When there was someone to talk to, I tried to bring the loss and 
possible abandonment of Navy fighter pilot CAPT Scott Speicher to their 
attention.
  With that introduction, I ask unanimous consent that after Senator 
Roberts has finished his statement, I be allowed to conclude my 
statement. We would like for him to share with our colleagues what has 
transpired over the past several years. I ask unanimous consent that I 
be able to finish my statement after Senator Roberts.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Kansas.
  Mr. ROBERTS. Mr. President, I thank the distinguished Senator from 
Florida, who has joined what I call the Speicher Team. I thank him for 
his interest, for his leadership, for his perseverance, and for his 
very aggressive action with regard to legislation I am cosponsoring as 
of today in behalf of Scott Speicher.
  I rise today in support of the amendment. The amendment simply 
requires frequent reports by the Department of Defense on their efforts 
to determine the fate of CAPT, Select, Scott Speicher.
  Why on Earth would we have to pass legislation requiring the 
Department of Defense to report back to Congress with periodic reports?
  It is all about Scott Speicher--Scott Speicher--a lieutenant 
commander who was shot down in his Navy F-18 fighter within the first 
few hours of the start of the gulf war. He was streaking towards 
Baghdad on a strike mission. Within 24 hours, he was declared a 
fatality by the U.S. Navy and the Department of Defense--our first 
casualty in the Persian Gulf war.
  Unfortunately for Scott, as we have learned since that time through a 
series of mistakes and still very unexplained action--and when I say a 
``series of mistakes,'' I am talking about an unbelievable set of 
circumstances that are so bizarre and so unexplainable that it is 
difficult to imagine. At any rate, through this series of mistakes, 
there was no confirmation--no confirmation--that Scott Speicher died in 
the shootdown. Tragically, there was not 1 minute of search and rescue 
effort made in behalf of Scott Speicher. He was declared a fatality 
based solely on the report of a fellow flier who saw a bright fireball 
in the direction of Scott's plane and determined that nobody could have 
survived that hit.
  That was relayed up the command to the point that the Secretary of 
Defense--Vice President Cheney, today--was told that he was a casualty, 
which he announced on national television.
  So Scott was dead. He was killed in action. And he remained dead in 
the eyes of the Department of Defense and the Department of the Navy 
until investigations forced upon the DIA--the Defense Intelligence 
Agency--and the CIA by Congress made it so obvious that the probability 
was that he survived the shootdown and ended up in the hands of Iraqis, 
as has been pointed out by the distinguished Senator.
  But even with this information, the Department of Defense and the 
Department of the Navy again had to be pressured to change his status 
from killed in action--i.e., KIA--to missing in action. Finally, in 
January of 2001--10 years later--the Secretary of the Navy changed the 
status of Scott from KIA to missing in action. It took a lot of effort 
to get that done on the part of some of my colleagues and what I call 
the Scott Speicher Team.
  In February of this year, I wrote to the Secretary of Defense and 
requested

[[Page 11528]]

that CAPT, Select, Scott Speicher be designated not as missing in 
action but as a prisoner of war.
  My request was based upon ``The Intelligence Community Assessment of 
the Lieutenant Commander Speicher Case.'' That is what it is called. 
That is the title. That assessment actually concluded that ``Scott 
Speicher probably survived the loss of his aircraft, and, if he 
survived, he was most certainly captured by the Iraqis.''
  My colleagues, today is the 25th of June, and yet the Department is 
still delaying on the obvious. CAPT, Select, Scott Speicher was, and 
is, and should be a prisoner of war.
  Let me be clear. I don't know if Scott is alive today. I hope and I 
pray so. But let me be equally clear. There is no evidence that he is 
dead either. Either way, colleagues, ``prisoner of war'' is the 
appropriate designation for the warrior we left behind.
  Today, we are not here to argue the status of Scott Speicher but, 
rather, whether or not Senator Nelson, I, others who support this bill, 
and the Senate go on record as requiring the Department of Defense to 
report frequently on their efforts to resolve his whereabouts and 
status.
  Sadly, my colleagues, my history with the Scott Speicher case says we 
must keep pressure on the Department if we are to finally determine the 
fate of an American warrior we left behind in the desert of Iraq.
  This Nation prides itself on the commitment to our men and women who 
sacrifice for our freedom. My colleagues, we saw that commitment in the 
effort to recover the remains of the victims of the 9/11 terrorist 
attack. We saw that effort on a hilltop in Afghanistan in our efforts 
to recover a lost Special Forces member. We saw that commitment in the 
streets of Mogadishu when a Blackhawk helicopter was shot down. We saw 
that effort in Kosovo and in Bosnia when downed airmen were heroically 
rescued.
  In each of our wars or conflicts, the American servicemen were told 
they would never be left behind. We owe no less to Scott Speicher.
  If we are to maintain any credibility with the fighting men and women 
of our military today--that is why it has special pertinence today in 
the war on terrorism--we must honor our commitment to leave no one 
behind.
  I urge my colleagues to support this amendment to keep the pressure 
on the Department of Defense to determine the fate of Scott Speicher.
  Senator Nelson indicated that I have a story to tell. Actually, 
Senator Smith, I, and Senator Grams, who is no longer a Member of the 
Senate, and others of us became interested in this case by accident.
  By the way, it is quite a chronology of trying to piece together what 
happened to Scott with some cooperation or degree of lack of 
cooperation from the authorities. Let me go over a short history, if I 
might.
  January 18, 1991: Secretary of Defense Cheney--as I referred to 
earlier in my remarks--received word that he was a casualty, and it was 
announced over national television. He referred to the ``death'' of 
Commander Speicher.
  January 26, 1991: His status was established as ``missing in 
action,'' however, by his commanding officer.
  May 22, 1991: While the law requires a 1-year interval--let me repeat 
that. While the law requires a 1-year interval before changing an MIA 
determination to ``killed in action,'' Commander Speicher's status 
changed to ``killed in action.'' The Office of Naval Intelligence 
available evidence did support the KIA status at that particular time--
clear back in 1991.
  January 13, 1993: We have moved ahead 2 years. The report of the 
Senate Select Committee on POW-MIA Affairs concludes that the Defense 
Intelligence Agency's POW-MIA Office--now called DPMO, the acronym we 
use--has historically--I am not talking about today's operation, I am 
talking about the operation back in the early 1990s--has historically 
been, No. 1, guilty of overclassification; No. 2, defensive toward 
criticism; No. 3, handicapped by poor coordination with other elements 
of the intelligence community, i.e., not asking for it; and, No. 4, 
slow to follow up on live-sighting and other reports.
  September 30, 1996--another 3 years--May 22, 1991, presumptive 
finding of death ``was determined to have been in error after a 
thorough analysis of classified information and status review 
procedures.'' Chief of Naval Personnel backdated--backdated--the 
presumptive finding of death. Navy staff states to Senator Smith, on 
June 22, 1999, that they did not review the intelligence community's 
information for this finding--did not review the intelligence 
community's information for this finding, did not take into 
consideration the available intelligence.
  Let's move to December 7, 1997 and a front page, New York Times 
article by Tim Weiner, titled ``Gulf War's First Casualty Leaves 
Lasting Trail of Mystery,'' in which he writes the story about Scott.
  When asked by Weiner if Speicher could have survived the crash, he 
said, ``We don't know.'' That was from ADM Stanley Arthur, Vice Chief 
of Naval Operations at the time of the loss. He is quoted as believing 
that ``Commander Speicher had ejected successfully and survived.''
  Arthur also said, ``The Warriors believed they had a responsibility . 
. . You lose one of your own, you go back and get him.''
  Move ahead to January 5, 1998: Our Committee on Intelligence in the 
Senate tasked the Director of Central Intelligence for an intelligence 
community chronology of the Speicher case.
  February 19 of 1998: The head of DPMO, the Department of Missing in 
Action, Mr. Liotta, updates our Senate Committee on Intelligence on the 
Speicher case and concludes that this loss is the only unresolved U.S. 
case of Desert Storm.
  July 1, 1998: Restatement of Federal regulations--a finding of 
presumptive death is made by the Secretary of the Navy when a survey of 
all available sources of information indicates beyond doubt that the 
presumption of continuance of life has been overcome for the purpose of 
Naval administration that he is no longer alive, that the person is no 
longer alive.
  That was not done with Scott Speicher. That was a clarification that 
came back.
  It took us until September 9 of 1998: The Senate Committee on 
Intelligence receives the report of the Director of Central 
Intelligence in regards to the chronology of the Speicher case.
  March 12, 1999: Our staff in the Intelligence Committee receives an 
update on the Speicher case and requested additional rigor by the 
Defense Intelligence Agency.
  May 13, 1999: The committee letter to the Director of Central 
Intelligence. We say the September 1998 chronology report does not 
enable Senator Smith, Senator Grams, Senator Roberts to make informed 
judgments about the intelligence process nor the analysis. We request 
additional data.
  July 30, 1999: I ask the Intelligence Committee to conduct an inquiry 
into the Speicher matter, stating that it is my understanding that it 
is a primary role of U.S. intelligence to assist our military 
commanders in making informed decisions, and suggest that the 
assignment of the killed in action status may be in error. Scott's 
wife, Joanne Speicher Harris, asks the Senate Committee on Intelligence 
for a full accounting regarding the fate of her former husband. This is 
some 10 years later.
  September 15, 1999: The Senate Intelligence Committee holds a member-
level briefing with the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency, 
Admiral Wilson, the Department of State, and the Secretary of the Navy. 
Followup questions for the record are sent to the executive branch.
  October 28 of 1999: We hold a closed, on-the-record hearing with the 
same folks, and ask them followup questions for the record, and sent 
that to the executive branch.
  May 4 of 2000: I author legislation to force the Pentagon and the 
U.S. intelligence community to better handle cases of military 
personnel missing in action or unaccounted for. It was passed by this 
body in the intelligence authorization bill.
  Then we initiated in the committee to task the Director of Central 
Intelligence for an assessment.

[[Page 11529]]

  Finally, after learning there was no intelligence wrapped up in this 
particular case on the fate of Scott Speicher, we ask the DCI, we ask 
the head of the CIA: Please, please, come in and make an assessment on 
the fate of Commander Speicher.
  I also had the committee request the CIA and the DOD inspectors 
general to jointly and expeditiously examine the intelligence to 
support the Speicher case.
  July 25, 2000: The committee holds another on-the-record briefing in 
regards to the Speicher case. Questions for the record then follow.
  September of 2000: Congress receives the Intelligence Committee's 
first ever assessment of the fate of Commander Speicher. I believe the 
preponderance of evidence does not support the KIA status.
  Since that time he has been changed to MIA. I might point out that 
just before President Clinton left office, he reported to the country 
that he may be alive.
  Now, since that time, we have followed very closely, in the 
Intelligence Committee, all of the intelligence assessments that have 
come in. And let me say the people in charge today are doing that with 
due diligence. I am not trying to point any fingers of blame. I just do 
not understand how on Earth this case could have been so badly handled 
over an 11- or 12-year period. Without really pointing any fingers of 
blame, we are receiving good cooperation from those people in charge 
now.
  But what this legislation will do, what the Nelson-Roberts-Smith 
legislation will do is make sure that, on a timely basis, we have these 
reports.
  I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record my letter to 
Secretary Rumsfeld, dated February 12, 2002, because I think it is very 
clear that Scott Speicher should be classified a POW. And I feel in my 
heart--as I say, again, I do not know whether he is alive or not, but I 
feel in my heart, with continuing intelligence assessment and open-
source assessments that we are receiving on a roller coaster timely 
basis, and more and more publicity and attention given to this issue, 
and all of the foreign policy discussion and military mission 
discussion in regards to Iraq, he may be alive. I say he may be alive. 
I do not know if Scott is alive. But, my colleagues, we must press 
ahead in behalf of everybody who wears the uniform to determine his 
fate.
  There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the 
Record, as follows:

                                                February 12, 2002.
     Hon. Donald Rumsfeld,
     Secretary of Defense, Department of Defense, The Pentagon, 
         Washington, DC.
       Dear Mr. Secretary: I write to request that you designate 
     and use the title Prisoner-of-War (POW) for Captain Michael 
     Scott Speicher. Captain Speicher was the first and only 
     Coalition pilot shot down the first night of the Persian Gulf 
     War in January 1991. He was not returned with all other POWs 
     at the end of the war. After being listed improperly as 
     Killed-in-Action (KIA) in May 1991, and reaffirmed in that 
     status in 1996, Captain Speicher's status was changed to 
     Missing-in-Action (MIA) in January 2001. President Clinton 
     stated on January 11, 2001 that Captain Speicher ``might be 
     alive,'' and ``if he is, where he is; and how we can get him 
     out. . . . Because since he was a uniformed service person, 
     he's clearly entitled to be released, and we're going to do 
     everything we can to get him out.''
       I wrote to Secretary of Defense Cohen on October 2, 2000, 
     requesting that Captain Speicher's status be changed to a 
     category less decisive and final than KIA (see attachment). 
     At the time, I felt that there was considerable evidence that 
     Captain Speicher had not been killed during the crash of his 
     aircraft. This was based on The Intelligence Community 
     Assessment of the Lieutenant Commander Speicher Case, that 
     concluded ``LCDR Speicher probably survived the loss of his 
     aircraft, and if he survived, he was almost certainly 
     captured by the Iraqis.'' This strongly suggested the more 
     appropriate designator or status of POW. However, I find it 
     odd that Title 10, USC 1513(2)(D) does not identify POW as an 
     officially recognized status although it does define a 
     subcategory under ``missing'' status as ``captured.'' Captain 
     Speicher clearly fits the term ``missing, captured.'' 
     Subparagraph E2.1.20.4 of DOD Instruction 2310.5, the 
     regulation that implements the statute, contains identical 
     language.
       Common usage of the status of ``missing, captured'' is that 
     of POW.
       There is a precedent for maintaining the status of an 
     American as POW many years after a war. Long after virtually 
     all Vietnam War MIA's had been given a presumptive finding of 
     death, one American, Colonel Charles Shelton, USAF, remained 
     listed as a POW for symbolic reasons, although U.S. analysts 
     felt that available evidence suggested that Shelton died in 
     captivity. He remained in POW status to indicate that the 
     U.S. Government had not ruled out the possibility that POWs 
     might still be alive in Southeast Asia after the end of the 
     war. Colonel Shelton's status was finally changed to KIA on 
     September 20, 1994.
       Mr. Secretary, the Shelton precedent establishes that clear 
     evidence of continued survival is not required for 
     identifying the status of a captured American as a POW. 
     Therefore, I am asking that Captain Speicher's designator or 
     status be that of POW and that the Department use the term 
     ``POW'' in all future references regarding Speicher.
       As often happens on the battlefield, this matter relates 
     very much to what happens in the hearts as well as the minds 
     of those who serve, and those on whose behalf they serve. By 
     stating to the world that we indeed believe that Captain 
     Speicher survived--at least for some period of time--in Iraqi 
     custody, we would acknowledge his unique and honored service 
     as an American Gulf War POW. A change in status and 
     terminology would add credibility and urgency to efforts to 
     secure his release. Finally, if Captain Speicher lives, we 
     must make every effort to attain for him the freedom he has 
     so long been denied. His case reaffirms to our nation, albeit 
     somewhat belatedly, that we will never abandon our soldiers 
     even if some embarrassment befalls to our Government. It 
     would render its service--maybe Captain Speicher's greatest 
     service--in the inevitable next war. If the natural tendency 
     of a bureaucracy is to take the easy way out and to declare 
     an American soldier dead, when in fact it is really not clear 
     what happened to him, then this is not the America our 
     forefathers envisioned, nor one I proudly support.
       I believe the status of POW sends a symbolic message not 
     only to the Iraqis, but to other adversaries, current and 
     future--and most importantly, to the men and women of the 
     U.S. Armed Forces and the American people. It would tell the 
     Iraqis what we now believe that they have much more to tell 
     us about his fate and increases our leverage of 
     accountability. It tells our military that we will not stand 
     for anything less than full disclosure.
           Sincerely,
                                                      Pat Roberts.

  Mr. ROBERTS. I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida is recognized under 
the previous order.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Thank you, Mr. President. And thanks to 
Senator Roberts, the distinguished Senator from Kansas, for his 
perseverance and for his dedication.
  I am glad that Senator Smith has come to the Chamber so we can hear 
from him and his perspective, as he has been one of the leaders over 
the years in calling this matter to the attention of the American 
people.
  As I said earlier, I have spoken with a number of world leaders, 
including the Prime Minister of Lebanon, asking them to task their 
intelligence apparatus to see if they can get any kind of information 
about Scott Speicher. And while intelligence is central to the 
potential for our success in resolving his fate, it is not the only 
aspect of this situation that certainly merits the congressional 
attention that we are trying to give it right now.
  This amendment that is offered by me, Senator Roberts, Senator Smith, 
Senator Graham of Florida, as well as the majority leader, Senator 
Daschle--and his name should be on the amendment. If it is not, I ask 
unanimous consent that he be added as a cosponsor of this amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. This amendment sets in place a firm schedule 
of updates on actions taken by the Departments of Defense and State as 
well as the Central Intelligence Agency. It sets a firm schedule of 
reports to determine the fate of Captain Speicher; a schedule of 
accountability, if you will, that puts the department squarely and 
clearly within the view of Congress and America so that we can take the 
measure of their efforts and their progress. And they must make 
progress.
  In American military philosophy, no one is left behind on the 
battlefield. That is particularly the creed among pilots. If a pilot 
goes down, you know that there is a rescue team coming in to get you.

[[Page 11530]]

  Our effort today, through this amendment, is to encourage those whose 
responsibility it is in government to find our missing and to leave no 
effort unturned in the search for Captain Speicher.
  To that end, this amendment requires regular updates to the Congress 
on contacts with the Government of Iraq, on contacts with foreign 
governments and intelligence services, and on current leads in the 
case, and efforts to coordinate with groups such as the United Nations 
and the International Committee of the Red Cross.
  We expect to see action and progress in these reports. We expect to 
shake loose any bureaucratic inaction that has slowed the search until 
now.
  I spoke as recently as 2 hours ago with the Deputy Secretary of State 
and the Deputy Secretary of Defense on this matter. As a nation, we 
have come a long way in living up to our philosophy over the years of 
not leaving anyone downed behind. There are nearly 79,000 Americans 
still missing from World War II. There are almost 8,000 missing from 
Korea. There are fewer than 2,000 still missing from Vietnam. Slowly 
but surely, we have reduced these numbers as the new information, the 
new evidence on the remains of those missing is recovered from around 
the world.
  Scott Speicher is the only American missing from the gulf war. Over 
11 years after, his fate still remains unknown. The horrors of war and 
the frailty of the human body make it impossible to guarantee that we 
know with certainty the fate of every American who may be lost in 
battle. Nonetheless, Americans must have the confidence that the sons 
and daughters, the brothers and sisters, the fathers and mothers we 
send into harm's way will find their way home, even if it is only to 
their final honored resting place. We owe this to those who go and 
those they leave behind.
  I am confident some day we will know what happened to Scott Speicher. 
I hope it is soon. I pray that he will return to us safe and sound, 
alive. In the meantime, we must watch this effort closely and pray that 
resolution will bring peace to the shipmates and the Navy squadron and 
the family of CAPT Scott Speicher.
  I thank the Senate for what they will do in a few minutes, which is 
adopt this amendment. I look forward to the comments of the 
distinguished Senator from New Hampshire.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire.
  Mr. SMITH of New Hampshire. Mr. President, I compliment my 
colleagues, Senators Nelson and Roberts, for their continued leadership 
on this issue. I rise in strong support of the amendment.
  The case of Scott Speicher is a terrible tragedy that never should 
have happened. I know my distinguished colleague is not familiar with 
all of the background I have had on the issue. I began in the mid-1990s 
to question our Government based on information I was receiving from my 
own sources within the intelligence community, which, much to their 
consternation, they have not been able to identify yet, thankfully, 
that there was something wrong, that there may be information 
suggesting that Speicher may not, should not have been declared KIA or 
killed in action.
  As has been said, Speicher was shot down on the first night of the 
gulf war and immediately declared killed in action. The truth is, as I 
stand here today, that a search and rescue mission for Commander 
Speicher, now Captain Speicher, was never launched.
  At a Department of Defense press conference shortly after the 
shootdown, it was announced that he was killed in action and that was 
it.
  We told Saddam Hussein and the world that Speicher was dead and, 
therefore, there would have been absolutely no incentive for Hussein to 
provide him to us or any information on him to us.
  It was a mistake. That announcement, pure and simple, was a mistake. 
It was based on incomplete information which can happen in wartime. We 
understand that. But it was passed up the chain of command, and it was 
a mistake. Mistakes can be rectified. We didn't rectify it. Mrs. 
Speicher and the children were told that he was killed in action. There 
is a big difference between being killed in action and missing in 
action. Missing in action, there may be some hope, or POW there may be 
some hope you may be found alive. She made her decisions in life based 
on that information which was never corrected, never changed until 
recently.
  At the conclusion of the war, the Iraqis returned remains. I don't 
know if my colleague mentioned this; I was not in the Chamber at the 
time. They sent remains back that they claimed belonged to a pilot 
named Michael. When we tested the DNA, it was not Speicher. You have to 
ask yourself, why would the Iraqis return remains that were not 
Speicher if they didn't have some ulterior motive.
  In spite of that, Speicher was officially declared killed in action 
in May of 1991, and the status was reaffirmed again in August of 1996.
  Supposedly, all of these decisions were based on a comprehensive 
review of the case. The truth is, there was not a comprehensive review. 
I can assure you these decisions were a terrible mistake.
  When the U.S. Government finally visited the crash site in December 
of 1995, it was determined that Speicher had ejected from his aircraft. 
There was no information given to Mrs. Speicher about that. Our 
investigators were able to determine that, despite the fact that the 
Iraqis clearly tampered with the crash site to confuse us. We had that 
information. Navy statistics show that 90 percent of pilots who eject 
from an F-18 survive the ejection. Speicher was flying an F-18. He 
ejected. The ejection seat came out of the plane.
  In over 7 years that I have been involved in this case, I have never 
seen--I want to be clear about this--any information remotely 
suggesting that Scott Speicher was killed in action. I don't say that 
in any way to encourage anybody or enhance anybody's hopes. I am 
telling you that there has never been any information I have seen that 
would suggest that Scott Speicher was killed in action.
  Under the laws and rules of the Defense Department and the way we 
determine the definition of KIA, he should not have been declared 
killed in action. Yet he was. In spite of the fact that month after 
month, year after year, more and more information was coming forth, 
they still left him killed in action.
  In March of 1999, I sent a letter to then-Secretary of the Navy 
Danzig requesting that the ``finding of death'' determination made by 
the Navy in May of 1991 be changed because there was no evidence 
supporting the determination that Speicher was killed in action. In 
fact, there is information to the contrary--a lot of information to the 
contrary, which my colleagues have already discussed.
  I encourage my colleagues--and I know the Senator from Florida has 
done this, and I am not suggesting that this could be done prior to the 
vote. I think this amendment will pass overwhelmingly. I encourage 
colleagues to read the intelligence on this case. It is a fascinating 
case. Some of the things we cannot talk about. But I can tell you that 
there is an overwhelming amount of evidence out there that suggests 
Speicher could have survived. There is no evidence that suggests he was 
killed. There is a very important distinction here. Yet he was declared 
killed, and his wife made decisions in life that people do make, such 
as getting remarried and so forth, based on that information.
  In spite of the fact that I challenged it month after month, year 
after year, beginning in the mid-1990s, to try to get more information 
from my own sources who were saying, They are not telling you the truth 
in the intelligence community or giving you all the information--in 
spite of that, they would not change the designation.
  As a matter of fact, I say to my colleague--because I know this is 
his constituent--I was trashed by some in the agency to the family 
directly. The family will tell Senator Nelson that if he talks to them. 
They said I was a troublemaker, causing undue stress to the

[[Page 11531]]

family. This was given by bureaucrats in this Government in the DPMO 
office. They provided information to Mrs. Speicher that I was a 
troublemaker for getting involved in this because, as one who lost his 
dad in the Second World War and was raised without a father, I wanted 
the son and daughter of Mrs. Speicher to know what happened to their 
father. That is what I was declared a troublemaker for.
  After working closely with Danzig for a number of months, the 
Secretary, to his credit, prior to the Clinton administration leaving 
office, changed the status of Commander Speicher from KIA to MIA. That 
is exactly what it should be. It should never have been otherwise.
  I think this has been read into the Record, but I will give one 
paragraph of the intelligence community's assessment of the Speicher 
case. This is unclassified:

       We assess that Iraq can account for Lieutenant Commander 
     Speicher, but that Baghdad is concealing information about 
     his fate. Lieutenant Commander Speicher probably survived the 
     loss of his aircraft, and if he survived, he almost certainly 
     was captured by the Iraqis.

  We know, because there is a lot of information to indicate, that he 
could have survived the ejection from the aircraft and that there is 
all kinds of intelligence information about what may or may not have 
happened to him afterwards. We also know that the Iraqis know the 
answer. They could return Speicher one way or the other, dead or alive, 
or give us information that would indicate one way or the other.
  I don't know if Commander Scott Speicher is alive, but I do know 
there is no information that he is dead. A lot of information suggests 
he may be alive. I want to again re-encapsulate this because it is very 
important. In spite of all the information we had at our disposal up 
until the last 2 or 3 years, from the early nineties, crossing two 
administrations, the previous Bush administration and the Clinton 
administration--in spite of the fact that information was in the DPMO 
office and in the intelligence office and the Navy, in spite of all of 
that information that showed an overwhelming amount of evidence that he 
may have survived, they still declared him KIA and refused to change 
the status.
  When I asked to change the status, I was declared a troublemaker in 
the secret conversations and documents to which I was not privy. I 
don't care because the issue is not me. If we can find out that Scott 
Speicher is alive and could come home to his family, I would like to 
join my colleague in Jacksonville for that homecoming. But we owe 
nothing less to the Speicher family than that. All the men and women 
who serve in uniform in our Nation's military deserve nothing less than 
that--that the U.S. Government finds out what happens.
  We realize we are dealing with a nation and a leader who isn't 
exactly willing to cooperate and is not the greatest humanitarian the 
world has ever seen. I don't blame the U.S. Government for that. I do 
blame the U.S. Government for not sharing this with me. I was not a 
member of the Intelligence Committee, so I was basically kept from 
getting the information, frankly, by the chairman of the committee. I 
wasn't able to get it.
  Finally, after raising enough ruckus, I began to challenge the 
intelligence reports and documents and evidence we were getting, and I 
was able to get before the committee--even though I am not a member--
and ask some questions, and then, subsequently, all this information 
began to come out. It is amazing.
  We know the Iraqis do hold prisoners. They released an Iranian pilot 
in 1998 who had been held for 18 years. So it is not unprecedented. I 
hope sincerely that we will move forward. I think the Senator's bill 
will help. I just caution one thing, which is that we don't turn this 
thing into a 90-day reporting period and get off focus. The main focus 
should be, let's find him, or find out what happened to him. And let's 
do it quickly so that the Senator's legislation will be over with 
quickly because, hopefully, in the first 90 days we will get the 
answers. I hope it will not be a series of 90-day reports in succession 
as we see years and years go by.
  If Scott Speicher is alive, the thought of him languishing in some 
prison cell somewhere in Iraq--God knows what is going on--is a 
horrible thing to even think about. If he is dead, then Saddam Hussein 
should tell us what happened to him.
  I want to make it clear, before I conclude, that the current 
intelligence community, starting in the previous administration and 
then into this one, Admiral Wilson of DIA, and others have been very 
helpful and very responsive in helping us to get the answers. We have 
had a number of occasions where we could do that. So I am optimistic 
and I know the Senator's legislation will help.


                 Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Ruling

  Before I yield the floor, this has an impact here. I want my 
colleagues to know this because here we are talking now about a missing 
pilot who was shot down in 1991 in the Persian Gulf war, fighting for 
his country, for the flag, fighting for this Nation under God, the flag 
we salute every single day, ``one nation under God.'' I want to 
announce to my colleagues a decision that just came down from the Ninth 
Circuit Court--the infamous Ninth Circuit court. Listen to this article 
on the ruling:

       A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that the Pledge of 
     Allegiance is an unconstitutional endorsement of religion and 
     cannot be recited in schools.

  That is the wording of the Ninth Circuit Court.

       The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a 1954 act 
     of Congress inserting the phrase ``under God'' after the 
     words ``one nation'' in the pledge. The court said the phrase 
     violates the so-called Establishment Clause in the 
     Constitution that requires a separation of church and state.

  I will be very brief in deference to my colleague. But they further 
said:

       A profession that we are a nation ``under God'' is 
     identical, for Establishment Clause purposes, to a profession 
     that we are a nation ``under Jesus,'' a nation ``under 
     Vishnu,'' a nation ``under Zeus,'' or a nation ``under no 
     god,'' because none of these professions can be neutral with 
     respect to religion,'' Judged Alfred T. Goodwin wrote for the 
     three-judge panel.

  I wonder what Scott Speicher would have to say about that. 
Unbelievable.
  I sponsored, in 1999, at the request of a constituent of mine, 
legislation to require the Senate--which ironically was not doing it--
to cite the Pledge of Allegiance before convening every day. Until 
1999, we never recited the Pledge of Allegiance. A constituent was 
watching C-SPAN one day and said: What in the world is going on? Why 
don't you guys salute the flag?
  I said: I don't know; let's find out.
  We implemented it. The House of Representatives recites the Pledge 
every day. We had a unanimous resolution that passed the Congress. I 
wish to recite from the resolution because it shows we ought to be 
pretty outraged by that judicial decision:

       Whereas the Flag of the United States of America is our 
     Nation's most revered and preeminent symbol. . . .

  And it goes on to talk about the flag and it even talks about the 
Pledge.
  Here we are talking about a Naval officer who may or may not be alive 
in Iraq who is basically not looked for by his own Government for 10 
years, and now we get an appeals court decision in the Ninth Circuit 
that says we have to take ``under God'' out of the Pledge of Allegiance 
to the flag of the United States of America.
  Frankly, to Judge Goodwin: May God bless us all and pray for us.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. Mr. President, we are going to wind up the 
debate on our amendment having to do with Scott Speicher, but since the 
distinguished Senator has told me of two events, I want to comment.
  First, the Senator from New Hampshire told me that certain 
bureaucrats label him a troublemaker. If that is the case, I like that 
kind of troublemaker.
  Second, the Senator from New Hampshire referred to a recent decision 
by a Federal district court of appeals, of which I was not aware, to 
take the words ``under God'' out of the Pledge of Allegiance.

[[Page 11532]]

  I have faith in our judicial system. Senator Byrd, the distinguished 
senior Senator from West Virginia, reminds all of us to carry around a 
copy of the Constitution and a copy of the Declaration of Independence. 
I remind my colleagues the second paragraph of the Declaration of 
Independence has these immortal words:

       We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are 
     created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with 
     certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, 
     Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

  Whether it be the judicial system that would correct a decision by a 
court of appeals which absolutely stuns me or whether it would be the 
checks and balances found in this Constitution of the United States, to 
which constitutional amendments can be initiated by this body, then I 
have the confidence to know that the constitutional system will work 
under this time-tested document.
  I thank the Senator from New Hampshire for bringing that to our 
attention.
  Mr. President, I know of no further debate on the Scott Speicher 
amendment. I ask the Presiding Officer to put the question.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, Senator Levin is not here. I cannot allow 
that to happen.
  Mr. NELSON of Florida. If the Senator will yield, Senator Levin has 
just come into the Chamber.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I understand the pending amendment is the 
amendment of Senator Nelson of Florida; is that correct?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. That is correct.
  Mr. LEVIN. Which Senator Roberts and Senator Smith have cosponsored. 
I commend them on their amendment and their continuing efforts to 
remind us of the missing hero of whom we can never lose sight. As long 
as there is hope, we are going to remain targeted on trying to locate 
our wonderful American who is always on our minds.
  I do not know if there is further debate on the amendment. If not, I 
hope that amendment can be adopted at this time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate? The Senator from 
Colorado.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I believe that amendment has been cleared 
on this side. I also compliment my colleagues on their tenacity in 
sticking with this issue. I was on the Intelligence Committee when this 
was called to our attention. I believe Senator Smith was one of the 
first to get involved, as well as Senator Roberts and then Senator 
Nelson from Florida.
  We need to get to the bottom of this matter. I think this amendment 
is something the Senate needs to adopt. There is no objection on this 
side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate on the amendment? If 
not, without objection the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4101) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I think we will return to offering 
amendments which have been approved by both sides.


                           Amendment No. 4102

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I start by sending an amendment to the desk 
on behalf of Senators Biden and Carper which will extend the Work 
Safety Demonstration Program through the end of fiscal year 2003.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Biden, for 
     himself and Mr. Carper, proposes an amendment numbered 4102.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

   (Purpose: To extend the work safety demonstration program of the 
                         Department of Defense)

       At the end of subtitle D of title III, add the following:

     SEC. 346. EXTENSION OF WORK SAFETY DEMONSTRATION PROGRAM.

       (a) Extension of Demonstration Program.--Section 1112 of 
     the Floyd D. Spence National Defense Authorization Act for 
     Fiscal Year 2001 (as enacted into law by Public Law 106-398; 
     114 Stat. 1654A-313) is amended--
       (1) in subsection (d), by striking ``September 30, 2002'' 
     and inserting ``September 30, 2003''; and
       (2) in subsection (e)(2), by striking ``December 1, 2002'' 
     and inserting ``December 1, 2003''.

  Mr. LEVIN. I believe the amendment has been cleared by the other 
side.
  Mr. ALLARD. It has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4102) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4103

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Warner, I offer an 
amendment that would amend the National Defense Authorization Act for 
fiscal year 2000 to modify the requirement for the Secretary of Defense 
to submit a master plan on the use of the Navy Annex.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Warner, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4103.

  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

 (Purpose: To provide for a master plan for the use of the Navy Annex, 
                          Arlington, Virginia)

       At the end of subtitle C of title XXVIII, add the 
     following:

     SEC. 2829. MASTER PLAN FOR USE OF NAVY ANNEX, ARLINGTON, 
                   VIRGINIA.

       (a) Repeal of Commission on National Military Museum.--
     Title XXIX of the Military Construction Authorization Act for 
     Fiscal Year 2000 (division B of Public Law 106-65; 113 Stat. 
     880; 10 U.S.C. 111 note) is repealed.
       (b) Modification of Authority for Transfer from Navy 
     Annex.--Section 2881 of the Military Construction 
     Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 (113 Stat. 879) is 
     amended--
       (1) in subsection (b)(2), as amended by section 2863(f) of 
     the Military Construction Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 
     2002 (division B of Public Law 107-107; 115 Stat. 1332), by 
     striking ``as a site--'' and all that follows and inserting 
     ``as a site for such other memorials or museums that the 
     Secretary considers compatible with Arlington National 
     Cemetery and the Air Force Memorial.''; and
       (2) in subsection (d)--
       (A) in paragraph (2), by striking ``the recommendation (if 
     any) of the Commission on the National Military Museum to use 
     a portion of the Navy Annex property as the site for the 
     National Military Museum'', and inserting ``the use of the 
     acres reserved under (b)(2) as a memorial or museum''; and
       (B) in paragraph (4), by striking ``the date on which the 
     Commission on the National Military Museum submits to 
     Congress its report under section 2903'' and inserting ``the 
     date of the enactment of the National Defense Authorization 
     Act for Fiscal Year 2003''.
       (c) Construction of Amendments.--The amendments made by 
     subsections (a) and (b) may not be construed to delay the 
     establishment of the United States Air Force Memorial 
     authorized by section 2863 of the Military Construction 
     Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2002 (115 Stat. 1330).

  Mr. LEVIN. The amendment has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4103) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4104

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Durbin, I offer an 
amendment which would provide authority

[[Page 11533]]

for nonprofit organizations to self-certify for treatment as qualified 
organizations employing the severely disabled for purposes of the DOD 
Mentor-Protege Program. I send the amendment to the desk. I believe it 
has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Durbin, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4104.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

  (Purpose: To provide authority for nonprofit organizations to self-
certify eligibility for treatment as qualified organizations employing 
   the severely disabled for purposes of the Mentor-Protege Program)

       At the end of subtitle C of title VIII, add the following:

     SEC. 828. AUTHORITY FOR NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS TO SELF-
                   CERTIFY ELIGIBILITY FOR TREATMENT AS QUALIFIED 
                   ORGANIZATIONS EMPLOYING SEVERELY DISABLED UNDER 
                   MENTOR-PROTEGE PROGRAM.

       Section 831 of the National Defense Authorization Act for 
     Fiscal Year 1991 (10 U.S.C. 2302 note) is amended by adding 
     at the end the following new subsection:
       ``(n) Self-Certification of Nonprofit Organizations as 
     Qualified Organizations Employing the Severely Disabled.--(1) 
     The Secretary of Defense may, in accordance with such 
     requirements as the Secretary may establish, permit a 
     business entity operating on a non-profit basis to self-
     certify its eligibility for treatment as a qualified 
     organization employing the severely disabled under subsection 
     (m)(2)(D).
       ``(2) The Secretary shall treat any entity described in 
     paragraph (1) that submits a self-certification under that 
     paragraph as a qualified organization employing the severely 
     disabled until the Secretary receives evidence, if any, that 
     such entity is not described by paragraph (1) or does not 
     merit treatment as a qualified organization employing the 
     severely disabled in accordance with applicable provisions of 
     subsection (m).
       ``(3) Paragraphs (1) and (2) shall cease to be effective on 
     the effective date of regulations prescribed by the Small 
     Business Administration under this section setting forth a 
     process for the certification of business entities as 
     eligible for treatment as a qualified organization employing 
     the severely disabled under subsection (m)(2)(D).''.

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, it has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4104) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4105

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Kyl, I offer an 
amendment which would authorize the transfer of the DF-9E Panther 
aircraft to the Women Air Force Service Pilots Museum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Kyl, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4105.

  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

(Purpose: To authorize the transfer of a DF-9E Panther aircraft to the 
                 Women Airforce Service Pilots Museum)

       At the end of subtitle E of title X, add the following:

     SEC. 1065. TRANSFER OF HISTORIC DF-9E PANTHER AIRCRAFT TO 
                   WOMEN AIRFORCE SERVICE PILOTS MUSEUM.

       (a) Authority to Convey.--The Secretary of the Navy may 
     convey, without consideration, to the Women Airforce Service 
     Pilots Museum in Quartzsite, Arizona (in this section 
     referred to as the ``W.A.S.P. museum''), all right, title, 
     and interest of the United States in and to a DF-9E Panther 
     aircraft (Bureau Number 125316). The conveyance shall be made 
     by means of a conditional deed of gift.
       (b) Condition of Aircraft.--The aircraft shall be conveyed 
     under subsection (a) in ``as is'' condition. The Secretary is 
     not required to repair or alter the condition of the aircraft 
     before conveying ownership of the aircraft.
       (c) Reverter Upon Breach of Conditions.--The Secretary 
     shall include in the instrument of conveyance of the aircraft 
     under subsection (a)--
       (1) a condition that the W.A.S.P. museum not convey any 
     ownership interest in, or transfer possession of, the 
     aircraft to any other party without the prior approval of the 
     Secretary; and
       (2) a condition that if the Secretary determines at any 
     time that the W.A.S.P. museum has conveyed an ownership 
     interest in, or transferred possession of, the aircraft to 
     any other party without the prior approval of the Secretary, 
     all right, title, and interest in and to the aircraft, 
     including any repair or alteration of the aircraft, shall 
     revert to the United States, and the United States shall have 
     the right of immediate possession of the aircraft.
       (d) Conveyance at No Cost to the United States.--The 
     conveyance of the aircraft under subsection (a) shall be made 
     at no cost to the United States. Any costs associated with 
     the conveyance, costs of determining compliance with 
     subsection (b), and costs of operation and maintenance of the 
     aircraft conveyed shall be borne by the W.A.S.P. museum.
       (e) Additional Terms and Conditions.--The Secretary may 
     require such additional terms and conditions in connection 
     with a conveyance under this section as the Secretary 
     considers appropriate to protect the interests of the United 
     States.

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, the amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4105) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4106

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Kerry, I offer an 
amendment which would require the Army to report to Congress on the 
impact that a proposed reorganization of contracting authority will 
have on small business. I send the amendment to the desk and ask for 
its immediate consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Kerry, for 
     himself, Mr. Bond, and Mrs. Carnahan, proposes an amendment 
     numbered 4106.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

 (Purpose: To require the Secretary of the Army to submit a report on 
     the effects of the Army Contracting Agency on small business 
                   participation in Army procurement)

       On page 194, between lines 13 and 14, insert the following:

     SEC. 828. REPORT ON EFFECTS OF ARMY CONTRACTING AGENCY.

       (a) In general.--The Secretary of the Army shall submit a 
     report on the effects of the establishment of an Army 
     Contracting Agency on small business participation in Army 
     procurements during the first year of operation of such an 
     agency to--
       (1) the Committee on Armed Services of the House of 
     Representatives;
       (2) the Committee on Armed Services of the Senate;
       (3) the Committee on Small Business of the House of 
     Representatives; and
       (4) the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship of 
     the Senate.
       (b) Content.--The report required under subsection (a) 
     shall include, in detail--
       (1) the justification for the establishment of an Army 
     Contracting Agency;
       (2) the impact of the creation of an Army Contracting 
     Agency on--
       (A) Army compliance with--
       (i) Department of Defense Directive 4205.1;
       (ii) section 15(g) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
     644(g)); and
       (iii) section 15(k) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 
     644(k));
       (B) small business participation in Army procurement of 
     products and services for affected Army installations, 
     including--
       (i) the impact on small businesses located near Army 
     installations, including--

       (I) the increase or decrease in the total value of Army 
     prime contracting with local small businesses; and
       (II) the opportunities for small business owners to meet 
     and interact with Army procurement personnel; and

       (ii) any change or projected change in the use of 
     consolidated contracts and bundled contracts; and
       (3) a description of the Army's plan to address any 
     negative impact on small business

[[Page 11534]]

     participation in Army procurement, to the extent such impact 
     is identified in the report.
       (c) Time for Submission.--The report under this section 
     shall be due 15 months after the date of the establishment of 
     the Army Contracting Agency.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4106) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4107

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Santorum, I offer an 
amendment that would authorize an increase of $1 million for 
procurement of M821A1 high explosive insensitive munition and would 
authorize a decrease of $1 million for the procurement of the CH-47 
crashworthy seat modification.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Santorum, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4107.

  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

(Purpose: To add $1,000,000 for the Army for procurement of M821A1 High 
 Explosive (HE) insensitive munition for the 81-millimeter mortar, and 
to offset the increase by reducing the amount provided for the Army for 
aircraft procurement for CH-47 cargo helicopter modifications, for the 
    procurement of commercial, off-the-shelf, crashworthy seats by 
                              $1,000,000)

       On page 13, line 18, increase the amount by $1,000,000.
       On page 13, line 14, reduce the amount by $1,000,000.

  Mr. LEVIN. The amendment has been cleared.
  Mr. ALLARD. It has been cleared on this side also.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4107) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4108

  Mr. LEVIN. On behalf of Senators Cleland, Hutchinson, and Kennedy, I 
offer an amendment which would authorize the Secretary of Defense to 
pay interest on student loans of service members for 3 years during 
their first term of service.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Cleland, for 
     himself, Mr. Hutchinson, and Mr. Kennedy, proposes an 
     amendment numbered 4108.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

  (Purpose: To authorize the payment of interest on student loans of 
                      members of the Armed Forces)

       On page 148, after line 22, add the following:

     SEC. 655. PAYMENT OF INTEREST ON STUDENT LOANS.

       (a) Authority.--(1) Chapter 109 of title 10, United States 
     Code, is amended by adding at the end the following new 
     section:

     ``Sec. 2174. Interest payment program: members on active duty

       ``(a) Authority.--(1) The Secretary concerned may pay in 
     accordance with this section the interest and any special 
     allowances that accrue on one or more student loans of an 
     eligible member of the armed forces.
       ``(2) The Secretary of a military department may exercise 
     the authority under paragraph (1) only if approved by the 
     Secretary of Defense and subject to such requirements, 
     conditions, and restrictions as the Secretary of Defense may 
     prescribe.
       ``(b) Eligible Personnel.--A member of the armed forces is 
     eligible for the benefit under subsection (a) while the 
     member--
       ``(1) is serving on active duty in fulfillment of the 
     member's first enlistment in the armed forces or, in the case 
     of an officer, is serving on active duty and has not 
     completed more than three years of service on active duty;
       ``(2) is the debtor on one or more unpaid loans described 
     in subsection (c); and
       ``(3) is not in default on any such loan.
       ``(c) Student Loans.--The authority to make payments under 
     subsection (a) may be exercised with respect to the following 
     loans:
       ``(1) A loan made, insured, or guaranteed under part B of 
     title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1071 
     et seq.).
       ``(2) A loan made under part D of such title (20 U.S.C. 
     1087a et seq.).
       ``(3) A loan made under part E of such title (20 U.S.C. 
     1087aa et seq.).
       ``(d) Maximum Benefit.--The months for which interest and 
     any special allowance may be paid on behalf of a member of 
     the armed forces under this section are any 36 consecutive 
     months during which the member is eligible under subsection 
     (b).
       ``(e) Funds for Payments.--Appropriations available for the 
     pay and allowances of military personnel shall be available 
     for payments under this section.
       ``(f) Coordination.--(1) The Secretary of Defense and, with 
     respect to the Coast Guard when it is not operating as a 
     service in the Navy, the Secretary of Transportation shall 
     consult with the Secretary of Education regarding the 
     administration of the authority under this section.
       ``(2) The Secretary concerned shall transfer to the 
     Secretary of Education the funds necessary--
       ``(A) to pay interest and special allowances on student 
     loans under this section (in accordance with sections 428(o), 
     and 464(j) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 
     1078(o), 1087e(a), and 1087dd(j)); and
       ``(B) to reimburse the Secretary of Education for any 
     reasonable administrative costs incurred by the Secretary in 
     coordinating the program under this section with the 
     administration of the student loan programs under parts B, D, 
     and E of title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965.
       ``(g) Special Allowance Defined.--In this section, the term 
     `special allowance' means a special allowance that is payable 
     under section 438 of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20 
     U.S.C. 1087-1).''.
       (2) The table of sections at the beginning of such chapter 
     is amended by adding at the end the following new item:

``2174. Interest payment program: members on active duty.''.

       (b) Federal Family Education Loans and Direct Loans.--(1) 
     Subsection (c)(3) of section 428 of the Higher Education Act 
     of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1078) is amended--
       (A) in clause (i) of subparagraph (A)--
       (i) by striking ``or'' at the end of subclause (II);
       (ii) by inserting ``or'' at the end of subclause (III); and
       (iii) by adding at the end the following new subclause:

       ``(IV) is eligible for interest payments to be made on such 
     loan for service in the Armed Forces under section 2174 of 
     title 10, United States Code, and, pursuant to that 
     eligibility, the interest is being paid on such loan under 
     subsection (o);'';

       (B) in clause (ii)(II) of subparagraph (A), by inserting 
     ``or (i)(IV)'' after ``clause (i)(II)''; and
       (C) by striking subparagraph (C) and inserting the 
     following:
       ``(C) shall contain provisions that specify that--
       ``(i) the form of forbearance granted by the lender 
     pursuant to this paragraph, other than subparagraph 
     (A)(i)(IV), shall be temporary cessation of payments, unless 
     the borrower selects forbearance in the form of an extension 
     of time for making payments, or smaller payments than were 
     previously scheduled; and
       ``(ii) the form of forbearance granted by the lender 
     pursuant to subparagraph (A)(i)(IV) shall be the temporary 
     cessation of all payments on the loan other than payments of 
     interest on the loan, and payments of any special allowance 
     payable with respect to the loan under section 438 of this 
     Act, that are made under subsection (o); and''.
       (2) Section 428 of such Act is further amended by adding at 
     the end the following new subsection:
       ``(o) Armed Forces Student Loan Interest Payment Program.--
       ``(1) Authority.--Using funds received by transfer to the 
     Secretary under section 2174 of title 10, United States Code, 
     for the payment of interest and any special allowance on a 
     loan to a member of the Armed Forces that is made, insured, 
     or guaranteed under this part, the Secretary shall pay the 
     interest and special allowance on such loan as due for a 
     period not in excess of 36 consecutive months. The Secretary 
     may not pay interest or any special allowance on such a loan 
     out of any funds other than funds that have been so 
     transferred.
       ``(2) Forbearance.--During the period in which the 
     Secretary is making payments on a loan under paragraph (1), 
     the lender shall grant the borrower forbearance in accordance 
     with the guaranty agreement under subsection 
     (c)(3)(A)(i)(IV).
       ``(3) Special allowance defined.--For the purposes of this 
     subsection, the term `special allowance', means a special 
     allowance that is payable with respect to a loan under 
     section 438 of this Act.''.

[[Page 11535]]

       (c) Federal Perkins Loans.--Section 464 of the Higher 
     Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1087dd) is amended--
       (1) in subsection (e)--
       (A) by striking ``or'' at the end of paragraph (1);
       (B) by striking the period at the end of paragraph (2) and 
     inserting ``; or''; and
       (C) by adding at the end the following new paragraph:
       ``(3) the borrower is eligible for interest payments to be 
     made on such loan for service in the Armed Forces under 
     section 2174 of title 10, United States Code, and, pursuant 
     to that eligibility, the interest on such loan is being paid 
     under subsection (j), except that the form of a forbearance 
     under this paragraph shall be a temporary cessation of all 
     payments on the loan other than payments of interest on the 
     loan that are made under subsection (j).''; and
       (2) by adding at the end the following new subsection:
       ``(j) Armed Forces Student Loan Interest Payment Program.--
       ``(1) Authority.--Using funds received by transfer to the 
     Secretary under section 2174 of title 10, United States Code, 
     for the payment of interest on a loan made under this part to 
     a member of the Armed Forces, the Secretary shall pay the 
     interest on the loan as due for a period not in excess of 36 
     consecutive months. The Secretary may not pay interest on 
     such a loan out of any funds other than funds that have been 
     so transferred.
       ``(2) Forbearance.--During the period in which the 
     Secretary is making payments on a loan under paragraph (1), 
     the institution of higher education shall grant the borrower 
     forbearance in accordance with subsection (e)(3).''.
       (d) Effective Date.--The amendments made by this section 
     shall apply with respect to interest, and any special 
     allowance under section 438 of the Higher Education Act of 
     1965, that accrue for months beginning on or after October 1, 
     2003, on student loans described in subsection (c) of section 
     2174 of title 10, United States Code (as added by subsection 
     (a)), that were made before, on, or after such date to 
     members of the Armed Forces who are on active duty (as 
     defined in section 101(d) of title 10, United States Code) on 
     or after that date.

  Mr. ALLARD. The amendment has been cleared on this side.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4108) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4109

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Santorum, I offer an 
amendment which provides key enabling robotics technologies that will 
support Army, Navy, and Air Force robotics and unmanned military 
platforms.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I ask that the clerk withhold the reading 
of that for one moment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will withhold.
  Mr. LEVIN. 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. ALLARD. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Colorado.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I have an amendment on behalf of Senator 
Santorum, which I believe is at the desk, which authorizes $1 million 
for the Civil Reserve Space Service, and to offset by a million dollars 
the CH-47 cargo helicopter commercial, off-the-shelf, crashworthy 
seats.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Santorum, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4109.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  Mr. ALLARD. 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 as follows:

 (Purpose: To add $1,000,000 for the Air Force for RDT&E for space and 
 missile operations, Civil Reserve Space Service (CRSS) initiative (PE 
 305173F), and to offset the increase by reducing the amount provided 
    for the Army aircraft procurement, CH-47 cargo helicopter COTS 
                    crashworthy seats by $1,000,000)

       On page 23, line 24, increase the amount by $1,000,000.
       On page 13, line 14, reduce the amount by $1,000,000.

  Mr. LEVIN. The amendment has been cleared.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4109) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.


                           Amendment No. 4110

  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, on behalf Senator Reid, I offer an 
amendment which would revise the language in section 2841 of the bill 
authorizing transfer of funds from the Air Force to the U.S. Fish and 
Wildlife Service to carry out the terms of a provision in the National 
Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2000 relative to a land 
withdrawal at Nellis Air Force Base, NV.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Michigan [Mr. Levin], for Mr. Reid, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4110.

  Mr. LEVIN. 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 as follows:

 (Purpose: To provide alternative authority regarding the transfer of 
funds for the acquisition of replacement property for National Wildlife 
                     Refuge system lands in Nevada)

       Strike section 2841, relating to a transfer of funds in 
     lieu of acquisition of replacement property for National 
     Wildlife Refuge system in Nevada, and insert the following:

     SEC. 2841. TRANSFER OF FUNDS FOR ACQUISITION OF REPLACEMENT 
                   PROPERTY FOR NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE SYSTEM 
                   LANDS IN NEVADA.

       (a) Transfer of Funds Authorized.--(1) The Secretary of the 
     Air Force may, using amounts authorized to be appropriated by 
     section 2304(a), transfer to the United States Fish and 
     Wildlife Service $15,000,000 to fulfill the obligations of 
     the Air Force under section 3011(b)(5)(F) of the Military 
     Lands Withdrawal Act of 1999 (title XXX of Public Law 106-65; 
     113 Stat. 889).
       (2) Upon receipt by the Service of the funds transferred 
     under paragraph (1), the obligations of the Air Force 
     referred to in that paragraph shall be considered fulfilled.
       (b) Contribution to Foundation.--(1) The United States Fish 
     and Wildlife Service may grant funds received by the Service 
     under subsection (a) in a lump sum to the National Fish and 
     Wildlife Foundation for use in accomplishing the purposes of 
     section 3011(b)(5)(F) of the Military Lands Withdrawal Act of 
     1999.
       (2) Funds received by the Foundation under paragraph (1) 
     shall be subject to the provisions of the National Fish and 
     Wildlife Foundation Establishment Act (16 U.S.C. 3701 et 
     seq.), other than section 10(a) of that Act (16 U.S.C. 
     3709(a)).

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the amendment is agreed to.
  The amendment (No. 4110) was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  The motion to lay on the table was agreed to.
  Mr. LEVIN. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the 
quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                           Amendment No. 4111

  Mr. ALLARD. Mr. President, on behalf of Senator Lott, I send an 
amendment to the desk to authorize the Secretary of Defense to waive 
the time-in-grade requirement for officers in the grades of 0-4 and 
above as set forth in section 1370 of title 10, United States Code.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendment.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Colorado [Mr. Allard], for Mr. Lott, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 4111.


[[Page 11536]]

  Mr. ALLARD. I ask unanimous consent reading of the amendment be 
dispensed with.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

 (Purpose: To add restrictions on the proposed authority for reducing 
the minimum period of service in grades above 0-4 for eligibility to be 
                     retired in highest grade held)

       On page 2, strike lines 4 through 6, and insert the 
     following:
       (a) Officers on Active Duty.--Subsection (a)(2)(A) of 
     section 1370 of title 10, United States Code, is amended--
       (1) by striking ``may authorize'' and all that follows and 
     inserting ``may, in the case of retirements effective during 
     the period beginning on September 1, 2002, and ending on 
     December 31, 2004, authorize--''; and
       (2) by adding at the end the following:
       ``(1) the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel 
     and Readiness to reduce such 3-year period of required 
     service to a period not less than two years for retirements 
     in grades above colonel or, in the case of the Navy, captain; 
     and
       ``(2) the Secretary of a military department or the 
     Assistant Secretary of a military department having 
     responsibility for manpower and reserve affairs to reduce 
     such 3-year period to a period of required service not less 
     than two years for retirements in grades of lieutenant 
     colonel and colonel or, in the case of the Navy, commander 
     and captain.''.
       (b) Reserve Officers.--Subsection (d)(5) of such section is 
     amended--
       (1) in the first sentence--
       (A) by striking ``may authorize'' and all that follows and 
     inserting ``may, in the case of retirements effective during 
     the period beginning on September 1, 2002, and ending on 
     December 31, 2004, authorize--''; and
       (B) by adding at the end the following:
       ``(A) the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel 
     and Readiness to reduce such 3-year period of required 
     service to a period not less than two years for retirements 
     in grades above colonel or, in the case of the Navy, captain; 
     and
       ``(B) the Secretary of a military department or the 
     Assistant Secretary of a military department having 
     responsibility for manpower and reserve affairs to reduce 
     such 3-year period of required service to a period not less 
     than two years for retirements in grades of lieutenant 
     colonel and colonel or, in the case of the Navy, commander 
     and captain.'';
       (2) by designating the second sentence as paragraph (6) and 
     realigning such paragraph, as so redesignated 2 ems from the 
     left margin; and
       (3) in paragraph (6), as so redesignated, by striking 
     ``this paragraph'' and inserting ``paragraph (5)''.
       (c) Advance Notice to the President and Congress.--Such 
     section is further amended by adding at the end the following 
     new subsection:
       ``(e) Advance Notice to Congress.--(1) The Secretary of 
     Defense shall notify the Committees on Armed Services of the 
     Senate and House of Representatives of--
       ``(A) an exercise of authority under paragraph (2)(A) of 
     subsection (a) to reduce the 3-year minimum period of 
     required service on active duty in a grade in the case of an 
     officer to whom such paragraph applies before the officer is 
     retired in such grade under such subsection without having 
     satisfied that 3-year service requirement; and
       ``(B) an exercise of authority under paragraph (5) of 
     subsection (d) to reduce the 3-year minimum period of service 
     in grade required under paragraph (3)(A) of such subsection 
     in the case of an officer to whom such paragraph applies 
     before the officer is credited with satisfactory service in 
     such grade under subsection (d) without having satisfied that 
     3-year service requirement.
       ``(2) The requirement for a notification under paragraph 
     (1) is satisfied in the case of an officer to whom subsection 
     (c) applies if the notification is included in the 
     certification submitted with respect to such officer under 
     paragraph (1) of such subsection.
       ``(3) The notification requirement under paragraph (1) does 
     not apply to an officer being retired in the grade of 
     lieutenant colonel or colonel or, in the case of the Navy, 
     commander or captain.''.

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The question is on agreeing to the amendment 
of the Senator from Mississippi.
  The amendment (No. 4111) was agreed to.
  Mr. ALLARD. I move to reconsider the vote.
  Mr. LEVIN. I move to lay that motion on the table.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the proceedings 
under the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. LEVIN. I ask unanimous consent Senator Nelson be recognized as in 
morning business and that we then return immediately to the pending 
amendment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Florida.

                          ____________________