[Congressional Bills 107th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 306 Introduced in Senate (IS)]
107th CONGRESS
2d Session
S. RES. 306
Expressing the sense of the Senate concerning the continuous repression
of freedoms within Iran and of individual human rights abuses,
particularly with regard to women.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
July 25, 2002
Mr. Brownback (for himself, Mr. Wyden, Ms. Collins, Mr. Dorgan, Mr.
Grassley, Mr. Conrad, Mr. Smith of New Hampshire, and Mrs. Boxer)
submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the Committee
on Foreign Relations
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the Senate concerning the continuous repression
of freedoms within Iran and of individual human rights abuses,
particularly with regard to women.
Whereas the people of the United States respect the Iranian people and value the
contributions that Iran's culture has made to world civilization for
over 3 millennia;
Whereas the Iranian people aspire to democracy, civil, political, and religious
rights, and the rule of law, as evidenced by increasingly frequent
antigovernment and anti-Khatami demonstrations within Iran and by
statements of numerous Iranian expatriates and dissidents;
Whereas Iran is an ideological dictatorship presided over by an unelected
Supreme Leader with limitless veto power, an unelected Expediency
Council and Council of Guardians capable of eviscerating any reforms,
and a President elected only after the aforementioned disqualified 234
other candidates for being too liberal, reformist, or secular;
Whereas the United States recognizes the Iranian peoples' concerns that
President Muhammad Khatami's rhetoric has not been matched by his
actions;
Whereas President Khatami clearly lacks the ability and inclination to change
the behavior of the State of Iran either toward the vast majority of
Iranians who seek freedom or toward the international community;
Whereas political repression, newspaper censorship, corruption, vigilante
intimidation, arbitrary imprisonment of students, and public executions
have increased since President Khatami's inauguration in 1997;
Whereas men and women are not equal under the laws of Iran and women are legally
deprived of their basic rights;
Whereas the Iranian government shipped 50-tons of sophisticated weaponry to the
Palestinian Authority despite Chairman Arafat's cease-fire agreement,
consistently seeks to undermine the Middle East peace process, provides
safe-haven to al-Qa'ida and Taliban terrorists, allows transit of arms
for guerrillas seeking to undermine our ally Turkey, provides transit of
terrorists seeking to destabilize the United States-protected safe-haven
in Iraq, and develops weapons of mass destruction;
Whereas since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and despite
rhetorical protestations to the contrary, the Government of Iran has
actively and repeatedly sought to undermine the United States war on
terror;
Whereas there is a broad-based movement for change in Iran that represents all
sectors of Iranian society, including youth, women, student bodies,
military personnel, and even religious figures, that is pro-democratic,
believes in secular government, and is yearning to live in freedom;
Whereas following the tragedies of September 11, 2001, tens of thousands of
Iranians filled the streets spontaneously and in solidarity with the
United States and the victims of the terrorist attacks; and
Whereas the people of Iran deserve the support of the American people: Now,
therefore, be it
Resolved, That it is the sense of the Senate that--
(1) legitimizing the regime in Iran stifles the growth of
the genuine democratic forces in Iran and does not serve the
national security interest of the United States;
(2) positive gestures of the United States toward Iran
should be directed toward the people of Iran, and not political
figures whose survival depends upon preservation of the current
regime; and
(3) it should be the policy of the United States to seek a
genuine democratic government in Iran that will restore freedom
to the Iranian people, abandon terrorism, and live in peace and
security with the international community.
<all>