[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 1]
[Extensions of Remarks]
[Pages 133-134]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




             INTRODUCTION OF NATIONAL SECURITY LANGUAGE ACT

                                 ______
                                 

                           HON. RUSH D. HOLT

                             of new jersey

                    in the house of representatives

                        Tuesday, January 4, 2005

  Mr. HOLT. Mr. Speaker, we can no longer keep our nation safe if we do 
not commit ourselves to learning the languages and cultures of critical 
areas around the world. The security of our troops overseas and the 
American people here at home demand that we act quickly to eliminate 
the severe shortage of critical need language professionals in this 
country. While the last Congress has taken some steps, we have not done 
enough.
  That's why I rise today to introduce legislation, the National 
Security Language Act, which would significantly expand our investment 
in foreign language education on the primary, secondary, and post-
secondary level.
  Al Qaeda operates in over 75 countries, where hundreds of languages 
and dialects are spoken. However, 99 percent of American high school, 
college and university programs concentrate on a dozen (mostly 
European) languages. In fact, more college students currently study 
Ancient Greek (20,858) than Arabic (10,596), Korean (5,211), Persian 
(1,117), and Pashto (14) put together. We need to do more to make sure 
that America has the language professionals necessary to defend our 
national security. This cannot be done overnight. We are already years 
overdue.
  The 911 Congressional Joint Inquiry reports our intelligence 
community is at 30 percent readiness in languages critical to national 
security. Despite this alarming statistic, we do not appear to be 
taking the necessary aggressive action to address this problem. Various 
agencies are making efforts to hire more linguists. When I asked a 
panel of intelligence experts at a recent Intelligence hearing what the 
federal, government is doing to increase the pool of critical need 
language professionals from which they hire these linguists, they 
answered with silence. Two years after the events of September 11, we 
are still failing to address one the most fundamental security problems 
facing this nation.
  Changing our recruiting methods alone will not solve the problem. To 
meet new security needs, we need to create a new domestic pool of 
foreign language experts and we can only do that by investing in the 
classroom.
  The National Security Language Act would expand federal investment in 
education in foreign languages of critical need, such as Arabic, 
Persian, Korean, Pashto, and Chinese.

[[Page 134]]

Specifically, my bill would provide loan forgiveness of up to $10,000 
for university students who major in a critical need foreign language 
and then take a job either in the federal workforce or as a language 
teacher. It would provide new grants to American universities to 
establish intensive in-country language study programs and to develop 
programs that encourage students to pursue advanced science and 
technology studies in a foreign language.
  My bill would also establish grants for foreign language partnerships 
between local school districts and foreign language departments at 
institutions of higher education. And it would authorize a national 
study to identify heritage communities here in the United States with 
native speakers of critical foreign languages and make them targets of 
a federal marketing campaign encouraging students to pursue degrees in 
those languages.
  Just as the National Defense Education Act of 1958 created a 
generation of scientists, engineers, and Russian linguists to confront 
the enemy of that time, the National Security Language Act will give us 
a generation of Americans able to confront the new threats we face 
today.

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