[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 4]
[House]
[Pages 4769-4770]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                   SUPPORT THE GOVERNMENT OF BAHRAIN

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of 
January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Indiana (Mr. Burton) is recognized 
for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
  Mr. BURTON of Indiana. Mr. Speaker, this past break that we were just 
on, I had an occasion to visit a great friend and ally in the Persian 
Gulf area. If we ever needed allies in that area because of Iran, we 
sure need them right now. I'm talking about the country of Bahrain.
  Bahrain is a great friend, not only because they have been 
historically a friend of the United States, but we have the Fifth Fleet 
there, and the Fifth Fleet is there to protect the interests of that 
part of the world as well as the United States of America. The Strait 
of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf are right there, and the Fifth Fleet is 
there to guarantee that shipping of oil from that part of the world can 
get through. So Bahrain is extremely important to the United States, as 
well as being a friend and an ally. In addition to that, Bahrain is 
also a free trade agreement partner. We have a great free trade 
agreement with them, and they've been absolutely great as far as trade 
is concerned. I think we have a trade surplus with them.
  The reason I've brought this up tonight, Mr. Speaker, is because I 
watch television, and I've seen where there has been a repressive 
government in Bahrain. There is no question there have been problems in 
the past. There has been overreaction by the police in certain 
instances in the past year, year and a half. As a result, there were 
people who were hurt severely when they were demonstrating in the 
streets of Bahrain. But the King and the Crown Prince have worked very 
hard to solve this problem.
  One of the problems they have over there is the Iranian Government is 
working to try to undermine many of the countries in the Persian Gulf, 
and Bahrain is one of them; and there have been people coming from Iran 
into Bahrain to try to work with the demonstrators to undermine that 
government and overthrow it. People from Bahrain who are fairly radical 
have gone to Iran and Iraq to learn tactics to employ against the 
government there.
  We have found that just recently there have been firebombings of 
homes of police. There have been firebombings of police in the streets. 
Some of them have burned to death. Just recently, at one of the homes 
of a policeman there who was gone, his wife and child were there and 
their house was firebombed.
  The police have been ordered by the government, the King, and the 
Crown Prince to be very careful in how they react to the demonstrators. 
As a matter of fact, they don't use ammunition; they use tear gas to 
control the crowds. So there is no attempt right now to hurt the people 
there who are trying to hurt the police and the government.
  I think it's important that we get the proper perspective on what's 
going on over there because this is one country that is extremely 
important to the United States because of energy that we get as well as 
trade and other things. If the Strait of Hormuz were to be closed down, 
if the Persian Gulf was closed down, if they sank some ships in there 
or if they put mines in the Strait of Hormuz or the Persian Gulf, the 
Fifth Fleet would have to go in and clean those out to make sure that 
commerce continued through the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz. 
So Bahrain is extremely important.
  Now I want to make a couple of points tonight that are extremely 
important.
  First of all, the government and the police have made mistakes in the 
past; there is no question about that. Demonstrators, as I said before, 
have been infiltrated by outside radical elements. The demonstrators 
have used terrorist tactics, as I said, to try to destroy and undermine 
the government, and the Molotov cocktail is one of the things that 
they've been using. They've also been learning other things from the 
radicals that come in there or have been trained by the Iranians.
  The government has attempted to solve the problems. As a matter of 
fact, the King appointed an outside commission, and this is the 
commission report: Report of the National Commission Charged with the 
Recommendations of the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry (BICI) 
Report. This is a huge report. It's not by the Government of Bahrain. 
It's by an outside group of people who were being fair and objective 
when they made these recommendations to the government. The King and 
the Crown Prince and the government are doing everything they can to 
implement these recommendations, and we need to applaud them for doing 
that.
  They are reaching out to the demonstrators and the more radical 
elements to try to get them to the conference table to solve these 
problems. So far the demonstrators, supported in large part by these 
radical elements, will not come to the conference table and discuss 
these issues. The government is trying to reach out to them, but the 
demonstrators don't want to. That's something I think the world needs 
to know and the people in this country need to know. I hope our State 
Department is paying attention to this, because the State Department 
has a different view in many respects than what I found when I was 
there.
  I want to stress very clearly tonight that the government has reached 
out to the demonstrators to discuss their grievances, but they can't 
get them to sit down with them. The government is reaching out, but the 
radical elements of the demonstrators are trying to make sure that the 
government continues to be undermined and stopped.
  Let me just end by saying that we don't have a lot of friends in that 
part of the world. We have seen all kinds of problems in Libya. Libya 
is now in a state of confusion. If you look at Egypt right now, radical 
elements are trying to take over the Government of Egypt. That's the 
biggest country in that area. We see the problems in Syria. People are 
being killed, and we're trying to see a resolution of that problem 
through the mitigation of the United Nations and the former head of the 
United Nations.
  But that entire area is in a state of flux, and we need all the 
friends that we can get. One of the best friends we have in the world, 
in my opinion, is Bahrain. Since they are our friend and the Fifth 
Fleet is there and since they are a great trading partner, I think that 
we should make sure that the American people and the rest of the world 
know how important Bahrain is to this country and to the world.
  Thirty-five to 40 percent of our energy comes through the Persian 
Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz. If that area were to be bottled up, we 
would be in big trouble. Lights would go off. Energy would be 
curtailed. We would have

[[Page 4770]]

electricity curtailed, and it would be bad for the industry and the 
commerce of this country. So the Fifth Fleet being there is extremely 
important.
  Bahrain has been very supportive of our military, very supportive of 
our intelligence, very supportive of the Navy and the Fifth Fleet, and 
we need to make sure that that relationship continues for as many years 
as possible. The best way to do that is to make sure there is stability 
in the government, and the information that has been coming back 
through the State Department and others is that the Government of 
Bahrain has been repressive and that we ought to be putting pressure on 
them to make positive changes. They have made the changes. They are 
using tear gas only to stop the demonstrators.

                              {time}  1920

  They have reached out to the demonstrators to get them to the 
conference table to support and change rules and regulations and laws 
there that will solve the problem. This, again, is a report, an 
independent report, by outside entities, experts, that came up with a 
very voluminous report on things that should be changed in Bahrain by 
the royal family and the government to make sure that everybody can 
live together in peace and that there will be stability in the region.
  I want to stress one more time the demonstrators will not come to the 
conference table. So tonight I'd like to urge those who are 
demonstrating to take a step back, take a deep breath and reach out and 
take the hand of the government, sit down at the conference table and 
work things out because that's what they want to do. If they do that, 
I'm sure there will be peace and harmony in Bahrain, and it will be 
great for the United States of America because a great friend, a great 
ally and a great government over there will be secure and be able to 
protect our interests as well as other interests that are very 
important to the entire world.
  With that, Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.

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