Remarks of U.S. Senator Russ Feingold
On the Feingold-Reid Iraq Amendment
As Delivered from the Senate Floor
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May 16, 2007
Mr. President, as we speak, more than 150,000 brave American troops
are in the middle of a violent civil war in Iraq, with more troops
on the way. Meanwhile, the President has repeatedly made it clear
that nothing – not the wishes of the American people, not the
advice of military and foreign policy experts, not the concerns of
members of both parties -- will discourage him from pursuing a war
that has no end in sight.
Congress cannot wait for the President to change course – we
must change the course ourselves. Iraq’s problems will not be
solved by an open-ended, massive U.S. military engagement. And our
own national security will be weakened until we bring this war to
a close.
That is why, Mr. President, I am pleased to join the Majority Leader
and Senators Dodd, Whitehouse, Sanders, Leahy, Kerry, Kennedy, Boxer,
Harkin, and Wyden in introducing an amendment to bring this war to
a close. Our amendment, which is the same as the Feingold-Reid bill,
would require the President to begin safely redeploying US troops
from Iraq within 120 days of enactment, and would require redeployment
to be completed by March 31, 2008. At that point, with our troops
safely out of Iraq, funding for the war would be ended, with three
specific and limited exceptions: protecting U.S. infrastructure and
personnel; training and equipping Iraqi security forces; and, perhaps
most important, conducting “targeted operations, limited in
duration and scope, against members of al Qaeda and other international
terrorist organizations.” By enacting Feingold-Reid, we can
finally focus on what should be our top national security priority
-- defeating al Qaeda.
Defeating al Qaeda means recognizing that the U.S. presence in Iraq
is being used as a recruiting tool for terrorist organizations from
around the world. The longer we stay in Iraq, the longer that country
will continue to be what the recently declassified National Intelligence
Estimate called a “cause celebre” for a new generation
of terrorists.
Defeating al Qaeda also means recognizing that it is not a one-country
franchise, Mr. President. While we have been distracted in Iraq, terrorist
networks have developed new capabilities and found new sources of
support throughout the world. By redeploying our troops from Iraq,
we can refocus on creating a more effective, comprehensive strategy
to defeat these networks.
Consider how our efforts in Afghanistan, the country where the 9/11
attacks were plotted, have been short-changed by the Administration’s
myopic focus on Iraq. Afghanistan has been put on the back-burner,
and if we don’t strengthen our efforts to defeat the Taliban
and to help create long-term stability in Afghanistan and the region,
Afghanistan will remain what it was on 9/11 – a haven for those
that seek to harm our country, and a bastion of instability with dire
consequences for our national security.
Somalia is another instance in which the U.S. government response
has been insufficient. Last fall, Mr. President, it became publicly
known that the Administration had, for quite some time, been narrowly
focusing on targeting terrorists in Somalia instead of taking a holistic
approach to dealing with that country’s fragility and grave
weaknesses. The situation on the ground continues to be unstable and
tense, and the administration’s initial response – or
lack thereof – suggests they were too focused elsewhere to properly
address how failed states, terrorist safe havens, instability, and
regional conflict can interlock to create chaos and lawlessness.
Mr. President, we can no longer ignore the rest of the world to focus
solely on Iraq. We need a strategy for a post-redeployment Iraq and
the region that allows us to refocus our global fight against al-Qaeda.
Contrary to what the Administration has implied, al Qaeda is not abandoning
its efforts to fight us globally so that it can fight us in Iraq.
As we redeploy from Iraq, and afterwards, we should continue to provide
assistance to the Iraqi government and people. We should work with
the Iraqi government, and key players in the region, to find a legitimate
political solution that is inclusive and sustainable. We must not
abandon the country and allow it to become another failed state, like
Afghanistan in the 1990s or Somalia. If we do, al Qaeda will exploit
it to its advantage.
But we cannot – we must not – allow this war to continue.
It is time to end the war, Mr. President, and the way to do that is
by ending funding for the war. That’s what the Feingold-Reid
amendment does.
Some have suggested that cutting off funds for the war could mean
cutting off funds for the troops. They would have people believe that,
under my approach, our brave troops will be left to fend for themselves
in Iraq, without training, equipment or resources.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Using our power of the purse
to end our involvement in the war would in no way endanger our brave
servicemembers. By setting a date after which funding for the war
will be terminated -- as this amendment proposes -- Congress can ensure
that our troops are safely redeployed without harming our troops
For those who don’t believe this can be done, let me cite an
example from not too long ago. In October 1993, Congress enacted an
amendment sponsored by the senior Senator from West Virginia cutting
off funding for military operations in Somalia effective March 31,
1994, with limited exceptions. 76 Senators voted for that amendment.
Many of them are still in this body, including Senators Levin, Cochran,
Domenici, Hutchison, Lugar, McConnell, Specter, Stevens and Warner.
Did those Senators jeopardize the safety and security of U.S. troops
in Somalia? By cutting off funds for a military mission, were they
indifferent to the well-being of our brave men and women in uniform?
Of course not, Mr. President. All of these members recognized that
Congress had the power and the responsibility to bring our military
operations in Somalia to a close, by establishing a date after which
funds would be terminated.
That same day, several Senators supported an even stronger effort
to end funding for Somalia operations. The amendment offered by Senator
McCain would have simply eliminated funding to keep U.S. troops in
Somalia. Funds would only have been provided to withdraw U.S. troops.
I was one of 38 Senators who opposed a measure to table the McCain
amendment. I can assure my colleagues that none of those 38 Senators
was indifferent to the safety of our troops. We knew that the McCain
amendment was an appropriate, safe, responsible way to use our power
of the purse to bring an ill-conceived military mission to a close
without in any way harming our troops. As Senator Hatch said at the
time, “The McCain amendment provides the President with the
flexibility needed to bring our forces home with honor and without
endangering the safety of American troops.”
Mr. President, the same is true today of the Feingold-Reid amendment.
While Feingold-Reid is not the only amendment we are considering,
it is the only amendment that would bring this war to a close. I regret
to say that the Levin-Reid amendment accomplishes very little, once
the President gets through certifying and waiving whatever he needs
to certify and waive to keep his policies in place.
Levin-Reid would ensure that Congress receives more reports on Iraqi
progress in meeting benchmarks. Mr. President, we don’t need
reports to tell us that the President’s policy isn’t working.
And we don’t need reports to show us that our continued military
presence in Iraq is a mistake, one that the American people overwhelmingly
oppose. It’s long past time for benchmarks, let alone benchmarks
that aren’t tied to meaningful consequences. Feingold-Reid will
move us toward ending the war. Levin-Reid will move us backward.
As long as the President's Iraq policy goes unchecked, our courageous
troops will continue to put their lives on the line unnecessarily,
our constituents will continue to pour billions of their dollars into
this war, our military readiness will continue to erode, and our ability
to confront and defeat al Qaeda will be jeopardized. I urge my colleagues
to support Feingold-Reid and oppose Levin-Reid.
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