Recent Press Releases



‘We cannot, we must not, close this session without providing the funding these troops need’



Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks Thursday on the Senate floor regarding the Democrats’ ‘conscious decision’ to leave war on terror funding out of the Defense Appropriations Bill:



“Republicans and Democrats have been debating all year long about the troops. This hasn’t been a debate about who wants to bring them home—all of us do. It’s been a debate about who do you trust to decide when those troops come home, about who has the authority and judgment to make decisions about how to protect our national security interests in the Persian Gulf.



“Republicans think it should be the commander in chief in consultation with his commanders on the ground. We don’t think our foreign policy should be drafted by people like MoveOn.Org and CodePink.



“However, on one thing we’ve almost all agreed: when you’ve got forces in the field, you fund them. Once they’re over there, you don’t leave them guessing about whether they’re going to eat or be clothed or have the equipment they need to do their jobs. And you don’t leave their replacement units wondering whether they’ll be trained or equipped.



“In the heat of the first Iraq debate we passed by a strong bipartisan vote of 82-16 the Gregg Resolution expressing the sense of the Congress that no funds should be cut off or even reduced for troops in the field which would result in undermining their safety or their ability to complete their mission.



“We passed by an overwhelming 96-2 vote the Murray Resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that no action should be taken to undermine the safety of the Armed Forces of the United States or impact their ability to complete their missions.



“And we’ve repeatedly rejected the Feingold Amendment — as recently as yesterday — that would cut off funds for the troops after a date certain next June, regardless of whether they’ve completed their mission.



“Under the Feingold Amendment, which forbids U.S. troops from fighting anyone but Al Qaeda and its affiliates, we’d have to deploy a brigade of lawyers to interview the enemy, and we’d lose the ability to gather the kind of intelligence from Iraqis themselves — intelligence that’s been an invaluable component of the Petraeus Plan so far.



“The Iraqi people are talking to us now because they feel safer having U.S. troops around. Pulling those troops out of the neighborhoods and replacing them with snipers in helicopters would cut us off from the very people who are helping us find our targets in the first place.



“This Senate has argued for months about Iraq. But on this one point almost all of us have agreed again and again and again: you don’t cut funds to troops who are already in the field. Yet now it seems that even that’s about to change.



“All last year the Democrats complained that the President was hiding his spending requests for the war by leaving them out of the Defense spending bill and putting them into supplemental instead. So earlier this year, he responded to those criticisms in good faith by making his request in concert with the DOD Appropriations bill: he said we’d need about $150 billion for 2008.



“The Majority has been sitting on this request for eight months, and now they’ve made a conscious decision to leave it out of the Defense spending bill altogether. Some of them are arguing that the Defense Department has the legal authority to sustain the war on its own. That’s right. But what the Defense Department can’t do is plan ahead without a future spending commitment from Congress.



“They can’t plan for training, equipping, feeding or protecting our troops until they know the money will be there beyond the immediate future. And they can’t plan to be ready for any other operations that might arise outside of the current conflicts. This is no way to run a Defense Department. It’s no way to treat the troops. And it’s entirely inconsistent with the expressions of support for the troops that we registered with the Gregg and Murray Resolutions, and which we’ve reaffirmed repeatedly, including yesterday, by rejecting the Feingold Amendment.



“All summer, America and its allies waited for General David Petraeus to come to the Hill and tell us about our prospects in Iraq. We were encouraged when he told us the military objectives of his strategy were, in large, measure, being met. And we were proud when he told us that in the face of tough enemies and the brutal summer heat, Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces had achieved real progress toward achieving their goals — in large part because they’d dealt what he described as a ‘significant blow’ to Al Qaeda.



“General Petraeus recommended that as a result of these early successes, we could begin to draw down our troops beginning this year. That drawdown has already begun. Last month the Marine Expeditionary Unit that was deployed as part of the surge left Iraq after a job well done.



“A combat brigade team will leave in mid-December, with four others and two surge Marine battalions to follow during the first half of next year. This was General Petraeus’s cautious but expert plan for building on the successes we’ve made in Iraq, the President accepted that plan, and a majority of Americans, including a majority of Democrats, if we’re to believe the polls, think it’s a good one.



“We have a new strategy in Iraq, according to the general in charge, it’s working, and we owe it to the men and women in the field to first of all keep to a commitment we’ve already made to fund them while they’re carrying that strategy out. We cannot, we must not, close this session without providing the funding these troops need.



“We also owe it to them to bring them home in a way that reflects the best judgment of their commanders. General Petraeus gave us a rare and valuable glimpse into the minds of our soldiers and Marines when he testified on Capitol Hill last month. Here’s what he said:



None of us want to stay in Iraq forever. We all want to come home. We all have days of frustration and all the rest of that. But what we want to do is come home the right way, having added to the heritage of our services, accomplished the mission that our country has laid out for us.



“And then he gave us an idea of the caliber of men and women who are serving this country in Iraq. Talking more about the commitment they have to their task, he said:



I think that that's a very important factor in what our soldiers are doing, in addition to the fact that, frankly, they also just respect the individuals with whom they are carrying out this important mission, the men and women on their right and left who share very important values, among them selfless service and devotion to duty. And that, indeed, is a huge factor in why many of us continue to serve and to stay in uniform, because the privilege of serving with such individuals is truly enormous.



“The Defense Department is currently revising its spending request for the current fiscal year. But that’s no reason to deny the funds it’s already said it needs to get it through the spring. The fact that we’re waiting on a request for more is not an excuse to deliver nothing.



“The men and women who are serving our country deserve better. Let’s not pass up the chance to acknowledge, to acknowledge their ‘selfless service and devotion to duty’ by giving them exactly what they need — before we conclude this session of Congress.”



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‘It’s simple: there is no defense without a strong border first’



Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell made the following statement on the Senate floor Wednesday regarding the Senator Graham’s border security amendment to the Defense Appropriations Bill:



“I’m extremely pleased the Senate is about to adopt Senator Graham’s border security amendment to this bill, and I’m proud to be a co-sponsor.



“We got the message earlier this year: Americans want a strong and secure border.



“Now we’ll be sending them a $3 billion down-payment on it.



“The border is our first line of defense; the Graham Amendment is intended to make sure we don’t lose sight of that, and our adoption of it proves that we haven’t.



“Thanks to this amendment, we’ll soon have thousands more agents patrolling the border, three hundred miles of vehicle barriers, and 105 ground-based radar cameras.



“We’ll finish hundreds of miles of fencing that we already promised to build.



“And we’ll have the funds to remove and detain potentially dangerous illegal immigrants for overstaying their visas, and illegally re-entering the country.



“To Republicans, it’s simple: there is no defense without a strong border first. And I think most Americans agree.



“I hope the amendment will be adopted overwhelmingly.”



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Washington, DC – U.S. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks (as prepared) Wednesday before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. The committee held a hearing on Burma.

“Chairwoman Boxer, Ranking Member Murkowski: Thank you for inviting me to make a statement today about the situation in Burma. “Democratic reform in Burma is an issue that I have taken a great interest in for many years. I am pleased that the issue today enjoys strong bipartisan support in Congress. This was reflected in the Sense of the Senate that passed this Monday, condemning the regime for its barbaric behavior.

“The Burmese junta’s recent attacks against peaceful protestors were despicable and an affront to free people everywhere. However, simply because the ruthlessness of the Burmese regime is slipping off of the front pages does not mean that the heavy hand of that government has been lifted.

“Just this morning, the Associated Press reported that Burmese soldiers were driving through the streets of Rangoon looking to round up protestors who had previously escaped their clutches.

“There are some encouraging signs, however. News reports indicate that the European Union is nearing agreement on ratcheting up sanctions against the Burmese regime.

“Ultimately, the United Nations Security Council will need to take meaningful action on sanctions for the junta to be pressured into changing its behavior and embracing peaceful reconciliation. And that means that China will need to be persuaded of the need to take the regime to task.

“It also means that India will need to join its fellow democracies and play a more constructive role in pushing for democratic reform within Burma. As both China and India mature into their respective roles as economic, regional and global powers in this century, more will be expected of them in both word and deed. The cause of reform in Burma is just such an area. “I think hearings such as this are crucial to keep public attention focused on the repression in Burma and to make it more difficult for China and India to evade their responsibilities as global stakeholders. And I very much appreciate the committee’s efforts in this vein. “Thank you.”

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