[Pages S821-S833]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
EXECUTIVE SESSION
______
NOMINATION OF CHARLES TIMOTHY HAGEL TO BE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the
Senate will proceed to executive session to consider the following
nomination, which the clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Department of Defense, Nomination of Charles Timothy Hagel,
of Nebraska, to be Secretary.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the
motion to proceed to the motion to reconsider the vote by which cloture
was not invoked on the nomination is agreed to and the motion to
reconsider is agreed to.
Under the previous order, the time until 12 noon will be equally
divided in the usual form.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Michigan.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I believe the business before the Senate
now is the vote on the reconsideration of the motion to end debate on
the Hagel nomination. Is that correct?
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator is correct.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, I believe it is now time for us to vote on
the Hagel nomination.
Mr. INHOFE. Excuse me. Would the Senator from Michigan yield for a
question?
Mr. LEVIN. Of course.
MR. INHOFE. It is my understanding that we have equally divided our
time between now and noon. That is about 1 hour 40 minutes. I ask
unanimous consent, on the Republican side, that I be given the first 10
minutes and the last 15 minutes of our Republican time.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, it is now time for us to vote up or down on
the nomination, for many reasons.
The nomination has been before us for an adequate length of time for
us to get the information our colleagues have asked for, but also there
is the looming fact of sequestration. We need to have a Secretary of
Defense who is not only in office but whose leadership is not in limbo
but is there. Our troops need it. Their families need it. Our country
needs it.
As of today we have 66,000 military personnel in harm's way in
Afghanistan. The President of Afghanistan has just directed the United
States to remove its special operations forces from a key Afghan
province. Our military faces key decisions about the pace of the
drawdown between now and the end of 2014, the size and composition of a
residual force, and the terms and conditions for the ongoing presence
in Afghanistan of the United States and our coalition partners after
2014.
At the same time we face new and growing threats elsewhere, including
the ongoing threat posed by Iran's nuclear weapons program and the
increasingly destructive civil war in Syria, with the risk that that
conflict could result in the loss of control over that country's
substantial stockpile of chemical weapons. There is also the growing
instability in other countries affected by the Arab spring; the growth
of al-Qaida affiliates in ungoverned regions, including parts of Yemen,
Somalia, north Africa; and the continued unpredictable behavior of the
nuclear-armed regime in North Korea.
We face these challenges at a time when the Department of Defense
budget is under unique pressure as a result of cuts previously agreed
upon by Congress, the budgeting by continuing resolution, and the
impending threat of a sequester. These across-the-board cuts will
affect Defense and just about every other agency we have. Those cuts
are going to be disastrous in many ways. I hope we can still find ways
to avoid them, but as of right now the threat of a sequester is a real
one. It is within a few days.
The Department of Defense has already instituted civilian hiring
freezes, reduced or eliminated temporary and term employees, deferred
facilities maintenance, and begun canceling or postponing the
maintenance of ships, aircraft, and ground vehicles. In the next few
days, the Department will begin to implement additional actions,
including furloughs for most civilian employees, cutbacks in flying
hours, steaming hours and other military training, and cancellation of
contracts. And those contracts, when they are cancelled, have major
costs to the Treasury. Those are not savings, except in the short term,
perhaps. But in
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the long term, we not only lose the equipment and the product of the
contracts, but we also have these cancellation costs which will hit the
Treasury.
The result of these looming cuts is truly devastating and it is
serious. For example, the Army informs us that if sequestration
continues through the end of the fiscal year, two-thirds of its brigade
combat teams will fall below acceptable readiness levels. The Air Force
says it will not be able to support requirements outside of Afghanistan
and will experience significant degradation in its airdrop and
refueling capabilities. The Navy says the Nimitz and the George H.W.
Bush carrier strike groups will not be ready for scheduled deployments
later this year, resulting in an indefinite extension of the Truman and
Eisenhower deployments, with the resulting impact on morale and
retention.
Hundreds of Department of Defense investment programs, acquisition
programs, and research and development projects may become unexecutable
because we have insufficient funds to enter needed contracts. By the
end of the summer, the Department of Defense says it will be unable to
pay its TRICARE bills and will be in a position of having to deny that
critical health care service to military members, families, and
retirees.
Our men and women in uniform need a Secretary of Defense to lead them
through these difficult challenges. They need a Secretary of Defense to
defend their interests in the budget battles we know are about to come.
They need a Secretary of Defense to speak out and ensure that Congress
and the country understand the consequences of sequester and, if the
sequester cannot be avoided, to help them avoid the worst of those
consequences and to end the impacts as quickly as possible. Now, as
much as anytime in the recent past, is not a time when we can afford to
leave the Department of Defense with leadership that is in limbo.
Information has been requested, appropriately, by colleagues about
the nominee. Information has been provided to the best of the nominee's
ability. This information falls into two categories: requests for
Senator Hagel's speeches and requests for additional financial
disclosure.
With regard to the speeches, Senator Hagel and his team have
conducted an exhaustive review and have provided us with all of the
speeches available to them--not only the prepared statements requested
in our committee questionnaire but also transcripts and even videos of
speeches he has been able to obtain from outside sources. Before the
recess, I placed in the Record links to several other speeches that had
surfaced on the Internet.
In recent days, Senator Hagel has received additional requests for
speeches in the exclusive control of the Washington Speakers Bureau and
for access to his senatorial archives at the University of Nebraska.
On the first point, the Washington Speakers Bureau has informed
Senator Hagel and the Department of Defense that all speeches given
under its auspices are ``private, off the record, and not recorded''--
except in rare cases where a customer requests that a recording be kept
for archival purposes only. Further, the Department of Defense informs
us that the Washington Speakers Bureau will not provide any recordings
of speeches that were given by Senator Hagel or even confirm which of
its clients may have recorded speeches. Since neither Senator Hagel nor
the Department of Defense has access to these speeches, they cannot be
provided to the Senate.
On the second point, the University of Nebraska holds title to
Senator Hagel's archives. The University has publicly stated that once
the archives are processed and indexed according to the standards of
the Society of American Archivists, they will be open to the public.
Until that time, the archives will not be open to the public. Again,
since neither Senator Hagel nor DOD has access to these materials, they
cannot provide them to us. It is also worth noting that these archives
cover the period of Senator Hagel's service in the Senate. Senator
Hagel has an extensive record of speeches and votes during this period
that are readily accessible to the Senate and the public through the
Congressional Record and other official documents.
With regard to financial disclosure, Senator Hagel has complied with
the same disclosure requirements and conflict of interest rules that
have applied to at least the last eight Secretaries of Defense and to
hundreds of other nominees for senior DOD positions over the course of
the last five administrations.
Despite his compliance with the same disclosure rules that apply to
everybody else, we have heard innuendos that Senator Hagel is trying to
hide something. Senator Hagel serves with a number of distinguished
individuals on the Board of Advisors of a private equity firm. We had
one Senator suggest, without any evidence, that ``it is, at a minimum,
relevant to know'' if the fees that Senator Hagel received for his
service on this Board ``came directly from Saudi Arabia, [or] . . .
from North Korea.'' Another Senator suggested that we should postpone a
vote on the nomination because ``FOX News is going to run a story
tomorrow regarding some speeches . . . which were made and paid for by
foreign governments
. . . [that] may not be friendly to us.'' This story apparently died
before it was aired, because it was apparently based on a hoax.
These are unfair innuendos and they have been answered even though
they are unfair.
Senator Hagel has an extensive record of service to his country. As a
young man, he enlisted in the Army and served with distinction in
Vietnam. He served as the head of the USO, and as the Deputy
Administrator of the VA during the Reagan Administration. He was a
businessman. Many of us served with him during his two terms in the
Senate. Since he left the Senate, he has continued to serve, as co-
chairman of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, a
member of the Defense Policy Board, and a member of the Energy
Department's Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future.
Senator Hagel has been endorsed by five former Secretaries of
Defense, three former Secretaries of State, and six former National
Security Advisors, who served under both Democratic and Republican
Presidents. He has been endorsed by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the
Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, AMVETS, Vietnam Veterans of
America, and the American Legion. He has received the support of the
Military Officers Association of America, the Foreign Area Officers
Association, and the Non Commissioned Officers Association.
Last month, Senator Hagel was endorsed in a letter signed by six
former U.S. Ambassadors to Israel, along with dozens of other retired
senior diplomats. The letter stated:
We support, strongly and without qualification, President
Obama's nomination of Chuck Hagel to be the next Secretary of
Defense. Most of us have known the Senator for a decade or
more and consistently have found him to be one of the best
informed leaders in the U.S. Congress on national security
issues.
Senator Hagel's political courage has impressed us all. He
has stood and argued publicly for what he believes is best
for the United States. Time and again, he has chosen to take
the path of standing up for our nation, rather than the path
of political expediency. He has always supported the pillars
of American foreign policy: a strong military; a robust
Atlantic partnership; a commitment to the security of Israel,
as a friend and ally; a determination to stop the
proliferation of nuclear weapons; and the defense of human
rights as a core principle of America's role in the world. .
. .
We urge speedy confirmation of this outstanding American
patriot to be the next Secretary of Defense.
If confirmed, Senator Hagel would be the first former enlisted man,
and the first veteran of the Vietnam War, to serve as Secretary of
Defense. This background gives Senator Hagel an invaluable perspective
not only with respect to the difficult decisions and recommendations
that a Secretary of Defense must make regarding the use of force and
the commitment of U.S. troops overseas, but also with respect to the
day-to-day decisions a Secretary must make to ensure that our men and
women in uniform and their families receive the support and assistance
that they need and deserve. It would be a positive message for our
soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines in harm's way around the world
to know that one of their own holds the highest office in the
Department of Defense.
The President needs to have a Secretary of Defense in whom he has
trust, who will give him independent advice,
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a person of integrity and one who has a personal understanding of the
consequences of decisions relative to the use of military force.
Senator Hagel certainly has those critically important qualifications
and he is well-qualified to lead the Department of Defense.
The vote which is coming at noon is a vote to invoke cloture to end
the debate so we can finally, later on today, hopefully, but at some
future hour, finally vote on this important nomination and end the
situation where this nominee is in limbo and the leadership of the
Department of Defense is uncertain and in limbo as well. The time has
come to vote on the nomination of Senator Hagel, and to do that we must
end debate and invoke cloture.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, first of all, I agree with a lot of what
the distinguished chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee has
said. Certainly Senator Hagel has had a brilliant military career. I
sometimes look at my time in the Army and his time in the Army and mine
is very unimpressive. That is not what the issue is.
I do think it is interesting in the debate we have had on the floor,
all the time from the Democrats has been talking about his military
record. Nobody disagrees with that. That is a fact. But there are some
things that have to come out because they are very significant.
First of all, what we are going to vote on at noon is the vote. There
is not any other vote. The vote after that is merely a simple majority
and that would be automatic. Those who are expressing where they are on
the Hagel nomination must be reflected in the vote that takes place
now, the cloture vote at noon today. Our time is equally divided.
Leadership time did take up some of that so we are a little bit scarce
on time. First, let me make it real clear this is the one vote that
makes a difference. If they are able to get 60 votes for the Hagel
nomination, it is history. It is over.
I do wish to say a couple things for clarification before others on
our side start speaking. One is about the whole idea of a 60-vote
threshold. I have been listening to some of the pundits on television.
One of my favorites--I will not mention her by name, but she is kind of
the leader of the far left on television. I was watching her a couple
days ago and she was talking about how this is something that never
happened before, we have never had a 60-vote margin on a Cabinet-level
position.
This is not true. It happens all the time. It is normal. This is how
significant this confirmation vote is. It is not something that would
make it go for a long period of time. Actually, I have lists. Later on,
if there is time, I am going to go over some of these. Kathleen
Sebelius, for example, that was a 60-vote margin; John Bryson for
Secretary of Commerce, 60-vote margin.
Here is an interesting one. Back when President Bush, who was a
Republican, was President, he nominated Stephen Johnson to be the EPA
Administrator. He was a Republican. The President was a Republican.
Stephen Johnson was a Democrat. Of course the other side was saying,
no, we are going to demand to have cloture, and they finally did get 61
votes on that; Dirk Kempthorne, same thing, Secretary of the Interior.
This idea that this is the first time is just not right. I would
appreciate it if people would be a little more honest when they are
looking at that issue.
They also have said we are in the middle of the wars, which we are. I
am the ranking member on the Armed Services Committee. No one is more
sensitive to it, no one spends more time talking to the troops than I
do, and we do need to have confirmed a Secretary of Defense. Leon
Panetta has said he will serve until such time as one is confirmed. But
if we go ahead and if this should for some reason not be able to come
up with 60 votes, I suggest they go ahead and nominate someone else and
we will run it through. I would even help them.
I called Leon Panetta not too long ago--I guess I should not say this
on the floor--and asked: Why don't you agree to serve again? He has, of
course, family reasons, and I certainly understand he was unable to do
it. Michele Flournoy, I commented, would be one. I don't agree with her
philosophically on a lot of things, but I think she is one who would
not be controversial. Ash Carter--we have a number who could be
confirmed in a matter of minutes, and I would be right there with them
in order to help that take place.
I do wish to say something about advice and consent. Sometimes people
do not understand it. I had someone go back and research this. It
started back in 1787. At the Constitutional Convention they talked
about it. Back then they used the term ``approbation or rejection of
the Senate.'' It means the same thing. This has been going on for a
long period of time. Certainly, in the Federalist Papers, Hamilton
talked about it as long as he talked about any other subject. So
``approbation or rejection of the Senate'' is the rejection language
that was used at that time that is advice and consent today.
Where are we today? Certainly, the distinguished chairman of the
Armed Services Committee, from whom we just heard, is one of the
strongest supporters of advice and consent who has said: ``It is
shocking and sad to me that the Senate may vote on this nominee''--it
doesn't matter, it could be any nominee--``while Senators are being
denied critical, relevant information.''
The leader of the Senate has also said many times, he said ``raising
the impression that the nominee and the White House have something to
hide.''
This is exactly what now is going on in reverse. It goes on and on
with different ones who have stated over and over again the
significance of the role that the Senate has in advice and consent.
John Kerry said: What the Senate has to decide is whether it is going
to stand for the rights of the committees, the rights of advice and
consent. The Senators ought to respect the fact that both the chairman
and ranking members had requests and those requests had not been
fulfilled.
That is exactly what happened. We have one of the new Senators for
whom I have a great deal of respect, Senator Cruz. I was talking to him
last night. I said: You ought to come down and let them know why it is
you are not speaking on this. He said: Look, what else can I do? I have
requested over and over and over again for information on our nominee
for Secretary of Defense and I have been denied. I have been
stonewalled. What else can I say?
I said--maybe it sounded a little extreme the other day when I said I
would walk through fire for the ability of our members on the committee
to get all the information they are entitled to. Senator Cruz has not
received that information. That is something that I think is very
critical.
What I want to do, in the short time I have left over--by the way, I
ask unanimous consent, if following me, if Senator Coats could be
acknowledged for 5 minutes.
Mr. DURBIN. Reserving the right to object, I have been waiting to
speak on this subject.
Mr. INHOFE. After the remarks of the Senator from Illinois, I have no
objection.
Mr. LEVIN. I have no objection after the Senator from Illinois is
recognized.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. INHOFE. The problem I had is not with information I had. I didn't
need any additional information. I didn't request additional
information. Many of the members on the Republican side of our
committee did not receive the information they asked for. That was the
case with Senator Cruz.
I had a different reason. My reason is that while I think so highly
of Senator Hagel and the work he did while he was in the Vietnam war--
he was, in fact, a hero--I have to also look at nominees and ask what
their philosophy is. Senator Hagel was one of only two who voted
against sanctions for Iran. He was one of only four who voted against
an effort to designate the Iran Revolutionary Guard a terrorist group,
and one of only four who refused to sign a letter of solidarity with
Israel.
The Global Zero movement advocates a nuke-free world. That sounds so
good, and it is something President Obama has talked about. He
wistfully looks to the day when we have a nuke-free world. That sounded
good back in the days of the Cold War. I look wistfully
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back at the days of the Cold War. Back then we had two superpowers.
They were predictable. We knew what they had. Mutual assured
destruction meant something to them. Mutually assured destruction
doesn't mean much to some people in the Middle East, and I think we all
understand that. So Global Zero sounds good until we realize that we
have countries such as Iran--even our nonclassified intelligence says
it is going to have the nuclear capability and delivery system by 2015.
I am concerned with that.
I was in shock--and, first of all, I have to thank the chairman of
the committee because in the years I served on the Armed Services
Committee, I have never seen this done before--when the chairman agreed
to allow Senator Cruz, a member of the committee, to use a video that
had the Al Jazeera interview where Senator Hagel agreed with Al
Jazeera's position that Israel has committed war crimes, that Israel
has committed sickening slaughter, and that America is the world's
bully. These are things which concern me about the attitude toward
Israel. I understand we can go back and get a lot of people in the past
to sign a letter, but I have to say that is still very much a concern
of mine.
With that, I will yield the floor to my good friend from Illinois.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. I thank the Senator from Oklahoma and the Senator from
Indiana. I rise today to express my support for our former colleague
Chuck Hagel to be America's 24th Secretary of Defense. We hoped Chuck
Hagel would have been named Secretary of Defense 2 weeks ago and could
have led the delegation to Brussels last week to meet with our NATO
partners on the challenges we face in Afghanistan and around the world.
Instead, he was subjected to a rare and historic filibuster by the
other side of the aisle. What a way to give an opportunity to a man of
Chuck Hagel's background to serve our Nation. What we have seen over
the past 2 weeks is the cost of apostasy, the cost of breaking with a
party, or a leadership, and what it means when their name comes up
again for consideration.
There is no question that there are some who bear some negative
feelings toward Chuck Hagel because of his independence and some of his
votes in the past--even his support of President Obama in the last
Presidential election. But this has been taken to a level I never
expected.
Chuck Hagel is no stranger to most of us in the Senate. We served
with him. I served with him on the Intelligence Committee for 4 years.
Not once did I have any question about this man's commitment to America
and its national defense--not once. I watched votes being taken behind
closed doors on some very sensitive issues, and I saw Chuck Hagel
respond in a nonpartisan way to those votes. I believe, as many have
said on the floor, he is an extraordinary individual who has proven
with his life his commitment to this Nation and its defense.
He has big shoes to fill with Secretary Leon Panetta leaving. Leon
Panetta has been an extraordinary public servant and a very close
personal friend of mine for years now. The fact that he received a
unanimous vote to be Secretary of Defense is as solid a tribute as
anyone can expect in this life of public service. I believe Chuck Hagel
is up to this task.
There is an expression that adversity doesn't build character, it
reveals it.
Chuck Hagel enlisted in the Army and served in Vietnam. He received
two Purple Hearts, the Army Commendation Medal, and the Combat
Infantryman Badge for his service. Less well known is how he got there.
Hagel was drafted and immediately volunteered for the Army, but he
lucked out. He was assigned to Europe during the Vietnam war. There
wasn't much of a war going on in Europe, so this brave, future nominee
to head the Department of Defense literally told his commanders: I want
to volunteer to actually go to Vietnam and risk my life.
As he recounted it to me, he said: ``The room just stopped.'' This
wasn't something that many people in Europe saw--in those days an
enlisted man, who received a safe assignment in Europe, would volunteer
to go to war. He convinced his leaders to give him that chance and he
served alongside his brother Tom in the same unit. He said they saved
each other's lives more than once, and thankfully they both came home
safe to Nebraska. That was the first chapter of Chuck Hagel's public
service and his commitment to servicemembers and veterans.
A second chapter came in 1981 when President Ronald Reagan appointed
Chuck Hagel Deputy Administrator of the Veterans' Administration. The
Washington Post speculated at the time of his appointment that Hagel
``might be expected to toe the company line.'' How wrong they were. He
went to work immediately to be an advocate for veterans. He quickly ran
into roadblocks while serving Vietnam vets. At one point the head of
the VA publicly called Vietnam vets ``crybabies.''
After months of unsuccessful attempts to bring attention to the care
of our veterans, as they deserved, including repeatedly raising the
issue to the White House, he did the right thing. As a matter of
principle, he resigned in order to bring the poor treatment of veterans
to light in America.
He went on to start Vanguard Cellular, a very large multimillion-
dollar mobile phone company. He served as president and CEO of the USO,
which brings a smile, a laugh, and some comfort and entertainment to
our servicemembers around the world.
Later, as a U.S. Senator, he shepherded the post-9/11 GI Bill into
law along with fellow veteran Jim Webb. It was a substantial and
overdue update of the law to ensure that we continue to keep our
commitment to veterans. It should not surprise any of us that this
commitment is among the reasons so many organizations back Senator
Hagel's nomination, including the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Iraq
and Afghanistan Veterans of America, the AMVETS, Vietnam Veterans of
America, the American Legion, Military Officers Association of America,
and the Noncommissioned Officers Association. They recognize that a
person of his character is precisely the person we need to head the
Department of Defense.
When I spoke with Senator Hagel in my office a few weeks ago, he
discussed his views on security challenges around the world, including
the challenges to the Pentagon's budget and the Iran nuclear program
and its threat to peace in the world. It included safeguarding our
rock-solid commitments to allies such as Israel.
I am firmly convinced that Senator Hagel shares President Obama's
commitment to addressing these challenges and supporting our allies. He
is committed to the President's Iran strategy and he voted for many
multilateral sanction packages against their nuclear program.
My friend from Oklahoma raised one vote when it comes to Iran, but I
wish to make a record of the fact that Chuck Hagel voted for the Iran
Missile Proliferation Sanctions Act of 1998, the Iran Nonproliferation
Act of 2000, and the Iran Freedom Support Act of 2006.
In his book ``America: Our Next Chapter,'' Chuck Hagel stated that
Iran is a ``state sponsor of terrorism,'' and that it ``provides
material support to Hezbollah and Hamas.'' Chuck Hagel's public
statements and voting record in the Senate demonstrate a strong
commitment to Israel, a commitment that the United States-Israeli
relationship will grow even stronger in the future.
As he said in his book in 2008:
[a]t its core, there will always be a special and historic
bond with Israel exemplified by our continued commitment to
Israel's defense.
He also understands the budget challenges facing the Pentagon. During
his testimony to the Armed Services Committee, he said that
sequestration ``would send a terrible signal to our military and
civilian workforce.''
On this, and many other issues, Senator Hagel continues to
demonstrate a clear-eyed commitment to our core national security
interests and a nuanced, personal understanding of the gravity of the
use of force. This is not just my judgment; 13 former Secretaries of
State and Defense and former National Security Advisors wrote to the
Senate recently, urging Senator Hagel's swift confirmation. The
signatories included senior leaders from both parties across several
decades of Presidential administrations, such as Robert Gates, Colin
Powell, Brent Scowcroft, and William Cohen. These
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men--all of whom have been part of the responsibility of keeping
America safe--believe Chuck Hagel, as Secretary of Defense, will do
exactly that. There are some here who may question that, and this is
their right. But men who have had that responsibility trust Chuck
Hagel, as do I.
Let me quote from their letter:
His approach to national security debates about the use of
American power is marked by a disciplined habit of
thoughtfulness that is sorely needed and these qualities will
serve him well as Secretary of Defense at a time when the
United States must address a range of international security
issues that are unprecedented in scope.
Allow me to conclude by pointing to the 2002 interview Chuck Hagel
gave to the Library of Congress Vietnam History Project. He discussed
how he and his brother Tom would volunteer to ``walk point.'' In other
words, to watch, be out in front watching for ambushes, booby traps,
leading his men safely through the day. He said, ``You know what
happens to a lot of point men, but I always felt a little better if I
was up front than somebody else.''
Forty-five years after first walking point for our servicemen in
Vietnam, I hope Chuck Hagel may be out in front again walking point as
our next Secretary of Defense. We need his wise counsel on matters of
war and peace and his rock-solid commitment to our men and women in
uniform.
Let me conclude by saying that over this past week, in my new
capacity as chairman of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, I
traveled to Africa and the Middle East. While I was there, I met with
some of our great men and women in uniform. It was humbling to see the
sacrifice they are making personally for the safety of the United
States. I visited places where people we don't even know are working on
the job every single day to protect this great Nation. I am confident
that Chuck Hagel, as Secretary of Defense, will keep them in mind and
keep our national security in his heart.
I hope my colleagues on the other side will relent and spare us this
filibuster on Chuck Hagel, and will, in fact, give him an opportunity
to continue to serve this Nation in the capacity of Secretary of
Defense. I look forward to working with him when that happens.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Indiana.
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, normally I would be talking about the
sequester and the Nation's fiscal health, but we are about to vote on a
critical nomination for a very critical position in this government. I
wish to spend a few minutes defining why I came to the decision I have
to oppose the confirmation of Senator Hagel to be Secretary of Defense.
Chuck Hagel is a former colleague. He is someone I respect for his
honorable service to this country, both in uniform and out of uniform.
I respect him as a human being and as a person and, as I said, a
colleague. I also recognize that elections have consequences, and in
most situations the President has the right to choose his own advisers,
but this is no ordinary Cabinet position. This is Secretary of Defense
and one of the most critical positions in this government to protect
the American people and to deal with national security issues.
Based on a number of positions Senator Hagel has taken and a number
of statements he has made throughout his career, I have serious concern
that his nomination and confirmation will send the wrong signal and
could have a very adverse effect on our national security. I will list
those.
First, and the primary reason, goes to the question of Iran and its
relentless pursuit of nuclear weapons capability. As a Senator, Chuck
Hagel repeatedly voted against sanctions legislation. He even opposed
sanctions aimed at the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps who were
killing and maiming our troops in Iraq.
As someone who, as ambassador to Germany, made many trips to
Landstuhl, the first stop for those maimed by improvised explosive
devices supported by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, I saw the
tragic consequences of their action. I could not come to grips with how
it is possible to vote against efforts to try to sanction and punish
those who were injuring and maiming our soldiers. During his recent
testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Senator Hagel
also proclaimed the legitimacy of the current regime in Tehran which
has violently repressed its own citizens. We have seen that played out
before our very eyes. They have rigged recent elections, provided
material support for terrorism and denied the Holocaust.
Regarding U.S. policy in Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons, Senator
Hagel displayed an embarrassing lack of knowledge and confusion
regarding our official policy toward Iran--a well-understood policy.
One of the most critical topics facing our Nation is Iran's threat to
world stability by the possession of nuclear capability and weapons.
Senator Hagel had to be handed a note by an aide, indicating he was not
aware his answer was contrary to even the administration's position.
And his attempt to correct his answer had to be further clarified by
the chairman of the Armed Services Committee. This is central to our
position, to our policy relative to how we deal with Iran. Yet our next
Secretary of Defense stated a position exactly opposite from what that
current policy is.
The second issue of concern to me is that it is widely accepted, I
think in a bipartisan way, that any sound strategy on Iran must be
underpinned by the highly credible threat of U.S. military force if all
other efforts fail; if diplomacy fails, if our ever-ratcheting
sanctions fail as they have to this particular point. They may have had
an impact on the Iranian public, but it has not had an impact on those
leaders who are making the decisions about the pursuit of nuclear
weapons. This has broad bipartisan support: Four U.S. Presidents,
including President Obama, has declared that an Iranian nuclear arms
capability is ``unacceptable.'' Use of military force as the last
option, if all other options fail, is central to our ability to success
in preventing Iran from achieving this capability.
Senator Hagel's previous statements and record contradict all that.
He has publicly stated that military action to stop Iran's weapons
programs is--and I quote his statement: ``Not viable, feasible, or
reasonable.'' Not reasonable? Is it not reasonable to have a policy the
administration has adopted and four U.S. Presidents have endorsed? When
asked about this at the hearing, he again failed to offer, in my
opinion, a coherent response.
Senator Hagel has long called for direct, unconditional talks with
the Iranian regime, not to mention direct talks with Hamas, Hezbollah,
and Syria as well. He has pressed that such talks should proceed
without the backing gained from other more forceful, credible options.
This approach is far too weak, in my opinion, to be effective and
reveals a person less committed to results than this critical moment--
particularly regarding the Iranian intentions--demands. In fact, I fear
a military option will have virtually zero credibility if Senator Hagel
becomes Secretary of Defense because it sends a dangerous message to
the regime in Tehran and undermines our efforts to prevent their
intentions as it seeks to obtain the means necessary to harm both the
United States and the country of Israel.
Lastly, and the third reason I have problems with this nomination, is
that it does not have bipartisan support. Over the last half century,
no Secretary of Defense has been confirmed and taken office with more
than three Senators voting against him. Further, in the history of this
Nation, in this position, none has ever been confirmed with more than
11 opposing votes.
The occupant of this critical office should be someone whose
candidacy is neither controversial nor divisive. It would be
unprecedented for a Secretary of Defense to take office without the
broad base of bipartisan support and confidence needed to serve
effectively in this critical position.
At this critical time in our Nation's history, we need a Secretary of
Defense who commands bipartisan support and is willing to take every
action necessary to defend the United States if the need arises. Based
on the years of public statements and actions taken during his career,
I cannot say Chuck Hagel meets the criteria needed for this position
that is so critical--the position of Secretary of Defense; therefore, I
will oppose his nomination when the vote comes before us.
[[Page S826]]
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Schatz). The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, I know the distinguished Senator from
Delaware, Mr. Carper, wishes to be heard. He is not on the floor now,
so I think it is acceptable to go ahead with another Republican now; is
that correct?
Mr. LEVIN. Yes.
Mr. INHOFE. I recognize the senior Senator from Texas, Mr. Cornyn.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Texas.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, we all know the Chamber is about to hold a
cloture vote on the President's nominee to be the next Secretary of
Defense. If former Senator Chuck Hagel is eventually confirmed, he will
take office with the weakest support of any Defense Secretary in modern
history, which will make him less effective on his job.
I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record a letter
regarding this nomination following my remarks. It is a letter dated
February 21, signed by 15 Senators, to the President asking him to
withdraw the nomination, noting that no Secretary of Defense since that
position has been created has received more than 11 opposing votes. I
am confident this vote will eclipse that former record demonstrating
what the Senator from Indiana was just talking about, and that is a
lack of bipartisan support for this critical position in the
President's Cabinet.
What should we expect from Senator Hagel if he is confirmed as
Secretary of Defense? Well, it is hard to say. Over the last 2 months
he has repudiated many of his past votes and stated positions related
to the Middle East and the Defense Department. During his confirmation
hearings, he actually said the Defense Secretary was not a policymaking
position. I had to scratch my head at that one.
I also had to scratch my head when Senator Hagel described President
Obama's policy toward Iran and its nuclear program as containment. When
he tried to correct himself, he said President Obama does not have a
position on containment, but that is not true either. The U.S.
position--as the distinguished chairman of the Armed Services Committee
reminded Senator Hagel during that hearing, and which reflects a wide
bipartisan consensus--is that we oppose containment and will prevent
Iran from getting nuclear weapons. That is the U.S. policy, one that
people would think the nominee for Secretary of Defense would be aware
of.
Unfortunately, I fear Senator Hagel is actually expressing his own
personal views. I fear he really does think a nuclear Iran could be
contained. He suggested as much in the book he wrote in 2008.
At another point during the hearing, Senator Hagel described the
murderous, terror-sponsoring Iranian theocracy as an ``elected,
legitimate government.'' That comment is a slap in the face to all of
the courageous Iranian democracy activists who have risked their lives
and, in many cases, given their lives to oppose the dictatorship and
promote freedom.
There is simply no way to sugarcoat it. Senator Hagel's performance
before the Senate Armed Services Committee was remarkably inept, and we
should not be installing a Defense Secretary who is obviously not
qualified for the job and who holds dangerously misguided views on some
of the most important issues facing national security policy for our
country. For that matter, Senator Hagel was candid to admit there are
many things about the Department he doesn't really know. He has assured
us he will learn on the job. That doesn't inspire a lot of confidence
in me because I don't think we want a Secretary of Defense who has to
learn on the job.
A moment ago I mentioned Senator Hagel holds dangerously misguided
views about many critical issues. His supporters have called him a
realist. In fact, there is nothing realistic about his world view.
It is not realistic to think that by offering unconditional talks or
establishing a new U.S. diplomatic post in Iran it will change the
character of a regime that has spent the past 34 years waging war
against America and our allies--a regime that was recently discovered
to have been plotting to assassinate a Saudi diplomat by blowing up a
crowded restaurant in Washington, DC. Likewise, it is not realistic to
think that further engagement with Hamas will dissuade it from pursuing
Israel's destruction. A terrorist organization that promotes genocidal
violence is never going to be reformed by dialogue or concessions.
Finally, it is not realistic to think that browbeating Israel will
jumpstart the Middle East peace process. President Obama tried that
approach himself during his first term, and it was a spectacular
failure. We are further from a lasting peace agreement today than we
were in January 2009, and many Israelis, along with many Arabs, believe
the United States is no longer a reliable ally.
When we look around the Middle East, not only do we see a theocratic
dictatorship trying to acquire nuclear weapons, we see a terrible civil
war raging in Syria which is led by a desperate, pro-Iranian regime
with massive stockpiles of chemical weapons that has no reservation
whatsoever at killing tens of thousands of its own civilians. We see
the Muslim Brotherhood attempting to create a new dictatorship in
Egypt. We see rising sectarian violence in Iraq because of our
withdrawal without a status of forces agreement that would stabilize
the country and a democracy earned by the blood and treasure of so many
Americans. We see a substantial al-Qaida presence in countries such as
Libya and Yemen.
President Obama would like to pivot away from the Middle East, but
the region isn't cooperating. Now, more than ever, we need a Secretary
of Defense who understands the disastrous consequences of a nuclear
Iran.
We need a Defense Secretary who understands the importance of a
robust U.S.-Israeli alliance.
We need a Defense Secretary who understands Hamas for what it is: a
genocidal terrorist group sworn to Israel's destruction.
In a larger sense, we need a Secretary of Defense who understands why
U.S. leadership is indispensable to solving our greatest challenges in
the Middle East and beyond.
Senator Hagel is clearly the wrong man for the job. This isn't about
personality, this isn't about politics, but I will be voting against
his confirmation for that reason: because he is clearly the wrong man
for the job.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC, February 21, 2013.
President Barack H. Obama,
The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC.
Dear President Obama: Last Thursday, the Senate voted to
continue its consideration of your nomination of former
Senator Chuck Hagel to serve as our nation's next Secretary
of Defense. While we respect Senator Hagel's honorable
military service, in the interest of national security, we
respectfully request that you withdraw his nomination.
It would be unprecedented for a Secretary of Defense to
take office without the broad base of bipartisan support and
confidence needed to serve effectively in this critical
position. Over the last half-century, no Secretary of Defense
has been confirmed and taken office with more than three
Senators voting against him. Further, in the history of this
position, none has ever been confirmed with more than 11
opposing votes. The occupant of this critical office should
be someone whose candidacy is neither controversial nor
divisive.
In contrast, in 2011, you nominated Leon Panetta, who was
confirmed by the Senate with unanimous support. His Pentagon
tenure has been a huge success, due in part to the high
degree of trust and confidence that Senators on both sides of
the aisle have placed in him. The next Secretary of Defense
should have a similar level of broad-based bipartisan support
and confidence in order to succeed at a time when the
Department of Defense faces monumental challenges, including
Iran's relentless drive to obtain nuclear weapons, a
heightened threat of nuclear attack from North Korea,
potentially deep budget cuts, a strategic pivot to the Asia-
Pacific region, military operations in Afghanistan, the
ongoing Global War on Terror, the continued slaughter of
Syrian civilians at the hands of their own government, and
other aftermath of the Arab Spring.
Likewise, Senator Hagel's performance at his confirmation
hearing was deeply concerning, leading to serious doubts
about his basic competence to meet the substantial demands of
the office. While Senator Hagel's erratic record and myriad
conversions on key national security issues are troubling
enough, his statements regarding Iran were disconcerting.
More than once during the hearing, he proclaimed the
legitimacy of the
[[Page S827]]
current regime in Tehran, which has violently repressed its
own citizens, rigged recent elections, provided material
support for terrorism, and denied the Holocaust.
Regarding U.S. policy on Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons,
Senator Hagel displayed a seeming ambivalence about whether
containment or prevention is the best approach, which gives
us great concern. Any sound strategy on Iran must be
underpinned by the highly credible threat of U.S. military
force, and there is broad bipartisan agreement on that point.
If Senator Hagel becomes Secretary of Defense, the military
option will have near zero credibility. This sends a
dangerous message to the regime in Tehran, as it seeks to
obtain the means necessary to harm both the United States and
Israel.
We have concluded that Senator Hagel is not the right
candidate to hold the office of Secretary of Defense, and we
respectfully request that you withdraw his nomination. Thank
you for your consideration.
Sincerely.
John Cornyn; Lindsey Graham; David Vitter; Mike Lee;
Marco Rubio; Ron Johnson; Tom Coburn; Tim Scott; James
Inhofe; Roger Wicker; Ted Cruz; Patrick Toomey; Daniel
Coats; James E. Risch; John Barrasso.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, it is rare that I disagree with the
Senator from Texas--maybe once or twice in the last half a dozen years.
Seriously, we disagree from time to time, but we do it in a way that we
are not disagreeable with one another.
I support the President's nomination of Chuck Hagel to be our
Secretary of Defense, and I wish to take a couple of minutes to explain
why.
For folks who might be watching this from afar, this body used to
operate very differently than it does today. The President would
nominate people to serve in a cabinet or to serve as judges and there
would be hearings. There would be debate. Sometimes people would
disagree. But, certainly, for Cabinet appointments and for sub-Cabinet
level appointments, for the most part, the President got the team he,
or someday she, asked for. That is the way we have done it as Governors
across the country, and it is the way we still do it. The idea of 4
years of this administration to still be playing a game of executive
branch Swiss cheese--we have so many relatively high level positions,
confirmable positions that are still vacant--is not good, whether it
happens to be a Democratic administration or a Republican
administration.
The President, regardless of what party they are from, needs, for the
most part, to have the team they want to put in place. They have been
elected to lead. Let's give them a chance to lead. If they screw up, we
can hold them accountable.
I had the pleasure of serving with Chuck Hagel for, I guess, my first
8 years as a Senator. I like him and respect him as a fellow Vietnam
veteran. He is a war hero. He was wounded not once but twice. He has
the Purple Hearts and some other decorations to show, to demonstrate
his valor.
He came back, put his life together, built a business, a good-sized
business, ran that business, and he has led some large government
entities, including those that look out for our veterans and others
too.
As to the question of does one have the kind of intimate knowledge of
the Department of Defense we would like for a person to have, he has
had good training. He has had good exposure. He has been there. He has
done that. He has been able to, as an innovator, as an entrepreneur,
start a business, grow a business, run that business, build that
business.
Here he served on the committees of jurisdiction that actually
enabled him to drill down on parts of the Department of Defense and
part of our defense policy and foreign policy that you never have a
chance to when you are over there serving in Southeast Asia or some
other area around the world as a member of our Armed Services.
When I went with Chuck on a codel--I want to say it was maybe in
2005--that is when we actually get to know people around here. We could
be here, be kind of airdropped in on Monday afternoons, vote, and then
by the time Thursday night rolls around, folks here smell the jet fumes
and they are ready to go back to Hawaii or Michigan or Oklahoma or
someplace such as that. We go by train to Delaware. But people are
ready to head for home, and we just do not have the kind of time
together, quality time together, that we used to have when people would
actually stay here for weekends, when we were not focused 24/7 on
fundraising, and we actually had--believe it or not--dinner clubs and
people carpooled to work. Can you imagine that: Democrats and
Republicans carpooling to work here? We just do not have those
opportunities these days. I do not know that we ever will again.
So one of the great opportunities we have to know people is when we
go on codels, these congressional delegation trips. I had the
opportunity to go with Chuck Hagel on a codel he led over one-half
dozen years ago. We went to the Middle East. We went to Israel. We
spent time along Gaza. We went to Jordan. We met with leaders of Saudi
Arabia. I had a chance to actually see him interact up close and
personal with leaders of all those countries, see how he handled
himself, to see his knowledge of the issues, his ability to debate,
discuss those issues with the leaders of three of the most important
nations, allies of ours in the world.
I was proud of the job he did then. I was proud of the leadership he
showed on those occasions. I was proud of his grasp of the issues.
Do you know the other thing I was proud of? He was willing to be
honest and frank with people with whom we need to be honest and frank.
He reminds me of one of the old caveats of leadership, which is that
leadership is having the courage to stay out of step when everybody
else is marching to the wrong tune. Leadership is also the willingness
to speak truth to power, to tell people--sometimes our leaders, whether
they be the President or, frankly, sometimes leaders of other
countries--what they need to hear, maybe not what they want to hear.
Chuck Hagel is that kind of person. I believe he is principled. I
think he is hard working, that he will surround himself with good
people, ethical people, honest people, capable people, bright people.
I think as a former Member here, he understands the importance of the
interaction between us and the Department of Defense, which I hope he
will have the opportunity to lead.
When we passed something called the Chief Financial Officer Act, I
think in 1990 in this Chamber, coauthored, I think, by Bill Roth, my
predecessor, one of the requirements of that legislation was not only
would every major department in our government be required to have a
chief financial officer, but also, in addition, there was a full
expectation that all these departments which were not auditable--could
not be audited--had to become auditable. They had to be capable of
being audited. Then there was the full expectation that once they were
auditable, they would be able to pass an audit fully without
qualification.
Today, there are two departments in the Federal Government that are
not auditable and have not passed an audit in an unqualified manner.
One of them is the Department of Homeland Security. They are getting
real close. They are knocking on the door. I think they will get it
done by next year. I congratulate the Secretary and their team for
doing that.
The other is the Department of Defense. For years and years and years
they would say: Well, manana. We will do that manana, next year or the
year after that. They have not. Why is this important? What you cannot
measure you cannot manage. What we cannot measure we cannot manage. The
Department of Defense is unable to measure well and, as a result, they
do not manage as well as they need to.
We just got a high risk update from the GAO, the General
Accountability Office, 2 weeks ago. High on their list of issues that
need to be addressed is the Department of Defense's need to be able to
pass an unqualified audit so their financials, their accounting systems
and supply systems, their spare parts systems, personnel systems
actually work.
Leon Panetta has done much in the 2 years he has served as Secretary
of Defense to make sure the Department of Defense takes this obligation
seriously. I commend him and I thank him for that. He has been like a
breath of fresh air.
Second, Chuck Hagel has given me his personal commitment that he will
not relent, he will not turn back, but
[[Page S828]]
he will continue on this path of undertaking and be in a position by
the next 3 years to do what the Department of Homeland Security is
about to complete, the benchmark they are about to reach, the milestone
they are about to reach, and the milestone that virtually every other
Department of the Federal Government has reached.
We are looking down the barrel of a gun this Friday--sequestration.
If we are serious about making sure we do not get shot by that gun,
mortally wounded by that gun, along with our economy, we are going to
have to make sure we are doing three things better.
One of those is, we need some additional revenues. We need to have
revenues closer to the level of where revenues were in the 4 years we
had balanced budgets under Bill Clinton, where revenues as a percentage
of GDP, my colleagues will recall, ranged anywhere from 19\1/2\ percent
of GDP to 20\1/2\ percent of GDP--somewhere in that range. Last year,
it was about 15\1/2\, maybe 16 percent of GDP.
With the fiscal cliff deal adopted in this body and signed by the
President back in early January, revenues as a percentage of GDP by the
end of these 10 years will be up to about 18, 18\1/2\ percent. But some
additional revenues are needed, very much in line with what we had when
we actually had four balanced budgets in a row under the Clinton
administration. Remember, those were the first balanced budgets we had
since 1969. So, No. 1, we need some additional revenues--in smart ways.
The second thing we need to do is entitlement program reform. Over
half the money we spend is on entitlements. Is it possible? The
President says we need entitlement reform that saves money, does not
savage old people, poor people, and actually makes sure these programs
are around for future generations. I could not agree more. That is No.
2.
The third thing we need to do is find ways to save money in
everything we do--everything we do--from agriculture to transportation
and everything in between, including defense.
I am told--and I am going to look over here at Senator Levin, the
chairman of the committee, and the ranking member, Senator Inhofe, and
just ask a rhetorical question. I recall hearing not long ago that we
spend more as a nation on defense--I say this as a 23-year veteran
naval flight officer, Active and Reserve Duty, a Vietnam veteran--but I
am told we spend as much money on defense as maybe the next 5, 6, 7
nations combined.
As important as it is for our next Secretary of Defense to have a
good grasp of military issues--foreign issues, intelligence issues, the
ability to manage big operations, to have strong managers under him or
her--as important as that is, it is important for us to spend more
wisely.
A good place to start is the GAO high risk list for high-risk places
where we are wasting money and that we get a good to-do list out of
GAO. It is one I think we ought to take seriously. I know the chairman
of our committee and the ranking member take it seriously. Believe me,
I do too.
One of things we are going to use from our commitment of Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs--on which Senator Levin serves, and
he chairs the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations--we are going to
make sure we hold the feet of the Department of Defense to the fire,
and we need a Secretary of Defense who will do that as well--someone
who is a fiscal hawk, someone who understands the importance of getting
better results for less money in everything we do, including providing
for the defense of our country.
That is not the speech I brought with me to the floor, but it is the
speech that is in my heart.
I just say to my colleagues, if you are on the fence and you are not
sure whether you ought to vote for cloture, someday we are going to
have a Republican President again. Someday we will have a Republican
majority here. There is an old saying: Every dog has its day. Today we
have a Democratic President and we have a Democratic Senate for
confirmations. Someday that will not be the case. I will say to our
Republican friends, just be careful. Just be careful. I say this with
respect: Be careful of the bed we make because someday our friends on
the other side will get to lie in it. Do we want to continue to go on
with this precedent of maybe even denying an up-or-down vote on the
nomination of a Secretary? I do not think so. I do not think that is a
good precedent. An even worse precedent is to have all these sub-
Cabinet-level positions that are vacant and have been vacant, in some
cases, for weeks, months, in some cases for longer. That is a terrible
precedent to have, and we need to stop it. A good time to stop it is
right now.
I am pleased to stand and endorse the nomination of Chuck Hagel. I
think he was a credit to his State, to this body when he served here,
and I think he will be a credit to us if he is confirmed. I urge his
confirmation starting with today's vote for cloture.
Thank you very much.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I too rise in opposition to the nomination
of Chuck Hagel to lead the Department of Defense. Mr. Hagel is probably
going to get his vote, but let me say this to my friend from Delaware.
If a Republican President in the future brings a nomination for Defense
Secretary to this Senate and he does not get as many as 60 votes, I
will ask that Republican President to withdraw that nomination, and I
wish this President would do the same. This could have been an easy
matter. The selection of the Defense Secretary for President Obama's
second term could have been a unifying moment. There were a host of
qualified, able candidates, both Republican and Democrat, who could
have sailed through the process. The President knew controversy was
ahead and decided to name Senator Hagel anyway.
There were signals from the right and from the left that Senator
Hagel would be a divisive and distracting choice. The Washington Post
editorial board gave the President good advice on December 18 by
saying: ``Chuck Hagel is not the right choice for defense secretary.''
The differences surrounding Senator Hagel's nomination during the
last few weeks stand in stark contrast to the unanimous support for
outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta. Mr. Hagel's nomination is
markedly different from the overwhelming confirmation of Senator John
Kerry for Secretary of State.
With so much at stake in the coming days, this should be a time for
consensus and cooperation. A nominee who could draw unequivocal support
would have served our defense priorities better--and those of our
allies.
This confirmation fight occurs against the backdrop of severe across-
the-board cuts to America's defense programs that are set to take
effect this week unless current policy is changed. The Joint Chiefs of
Staff reiterated this disastrous reality at a hearing on February 12.
The generals and admirals who testified are some of the most respected
in the Pentagon. They are some of the most respected in the world. They
made it clear that these cuts, at nearly one-half trillion dollars,
threaten America's military readiness and national security. Based on
their expertise, we are obliged to believe them.
By contrast, Senator Hagel has called the defense budget ``bloated.''
He did not simply say there is some fat we can trim or that there is
room for savings, as we all believe. No, he said it was bloated.
Which is it? Are the Joint Chiefs of Staff correct or is Chuck Hagel
correct? The testimony from Defense officials is clearly at odds with
Mr. Hagel's shortsighted assessment.
Would Senator Hagel defend a robust defense budget in the face of
indiscriminate cuts that could weaken our national security or does he
believe sequestration is the answer to what he calls a bloated defense
budget?
The statement that our national security budget is bloated is only
one of many outlandish pronouncements Senator Hagel has used to grab
attention rather than give an accurate evaluation of the situation at
hand.
Senator Hagel has in fact made a career out of speaking against the
bipartisan mainstream and taking positions on the fringe of public
opinion. Here are a few other examples: Senator Hagel has accused
Israel of ``playing games'' and committing ``sickening slaughter'' when
it was defending itself from Hezbollah terrorists in Lebanon. He has
said that Israel should not keep
[[Page S829]]
the Palestinians ``caged up like animals.''
We never had a Defense Secretary who would have said such a thing.
Senator Hagel has said the ``Jewish lobby intimidates a lot of people
up here'' and forces Congress to do ``dumb things.''
On Iran, Senator Hagel has stated he is both for and against
unilateral sanctions. He wrote to Senator Boxer's office on January 14:
I agree that, with Iran's continued rejection of diplomatic
overtures, further effective sanctions, both multilateral and
unilateral--may be necessary.
A week earlier, Senator Hagel told the Lincoln Journal Star that he
opposed unilateral sanctions because they ``don't work and they just
isolate the United States.''
When speaking about the Iraq war, Senator Hagel has described it as a
``meat grinder,'' a crude characterization that succeeded, once again,
in gaining him some additional headlines.
Perhaps, in an effort to minimize his inconsistent record, Senator
Hagel said during the Armed Services hearing on January 31 that he
``won't be in a policy-making position'' as Defense Secretary. This
comment illustrates either naivety or a disturbing abdication of the
Defense Secretary's responsibilities, which include well-informed
policy decisions that will affect the lives of men and women in
uniform. Of course the Secretary of Defense makes policy.
During the Armed Services hearing, Senator McCain was correct to try
to ascertain what Senator Hagel's feelings are today about the surge in
Iraq. A number of people agreed with Senator Hagel at the time but are
now willing to admit with hindsight that the surge went better than
expected, but not Senator Hagel.
Let's not forget that Senator Hagel did not merely oppose the surge.
It was not enough to say he had misgivings or doubts. He called it the
greatest foreign policy blunder since the Vietnam war. This has been
the extreme, outlandish, rhetorical approach of Chuck Hagel throughout
his career.
People involved in a position of this importance need to be careful
about what they say. When one is being interviewed for a book, they
should choose words wisely. That is why, during the Armed Services
hearing, I asked Senator Hagel about why he told author Aaron David
Miller ``the Jewish lobby intimidates a lot of people up here'' and
that he ``always argued against some of the dumb things they do.''
Let me make this clear. Americans who come to Washington and advocate
for Israel do meaningful work to advance a strong, sovereign, and
democratic Israel, America's closest ally in the Middle East. Mr. Hagel
did not defend his comments at the hearing. Instead, he blamed his
statements on a poor choice of words.
Congressional actions, such as tough Iran sanctions and greater
military cooperation with Israel, are not the products of intimidation.
To suggest otherwise challenges the bipartisan judgment of the men and
women elected to serve in this Chamber.
When questioned by Senator Graham during the hearing, Senator Hagel
could not name one person in Congress who had been intimidated or one
dumb thing that Congress had done because of the pro-Israel lobby. One
or two troubling statements might not be disqualifying when taken
alone, but all of the positions taken together paint what I believe is
an accurate picture of this nominee. Our troops and allies need to rely
on the words of the Secretary of Defense. Changing viewpoints for the
purpose of political expediency or to make headlines is not the
hallmark of a steadfast leader.
Weeks after the process began, two conclusions emerged from the
totality of the information that has come to light about Senator Hagel:
Either we should disregard everything he has said and stood for as
merely hyperbole---- The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has
expired.
Mr. WICKER. May I ask unanimous consent for 1 additional minute?
Mr. INHOFE. I yield 2 additional minutes to the Senator from
Mississippi.
Mr. WICKER. I thank the gentleman.
Let's say everything the Senator has said is merely hyperbole or this
is a nominee with a very unsettling and naive world view. You can't
have it both ways. Either he means what he said over his career or it
has all been theater.
The President is entitled to make his nomination, but the Senate must
uphold its important constitutional duty to provide advice and consent
on this nomination.
Early on, many friends on the Democratic side of the aisle voiced
their very real concerns. Let me ask, Has Chuck Hagel truly answered
those concerns? Which Chuck Hagel are we being asked to confirm: the
one who shoots from the hip and means what he says or the one who is
now willing to say anything to be confirmed?
We need a Secretary of Defense who can stand before the world and
articulate that America is opposed to a nuclear Iran and rejects a
policy of containment. We need a Secretary of Defense who can stand
before the world and be clear that the Iranian Government is not a
legitimately constituted government. We need a Secretary of Defense who
has broad, bipartisan support. Sadly, that Secretary is not Chuck
Hagel.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, may I inquire how much time remains on both
sides?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan has 11\1/2\ minutes
remaining, and the Senator from Oklahoma has 11 minutes.
The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, it is my understanding we each have about
11 minutes. I will take my time and request to be acknowledged when I
have 2 minutes remaining.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair will do so.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, this has been a good debate. We have
repeated a lot of things that have been said before. There are just
some things I think are worth repeating.
I need to say over and over again, as often as I can, that nobody is
impugning the integrity of former Senator Hagel. Everyone is very
complimentary of the great service he has performed in military
service. That is not the issue. That has nothing to do with it.
The thing that is important is the fact that they have said
continuously, over and over again, this is a filibuster. They have said
this is the first time that there has been a filibuster on a Cabinet
nominee. That is just not true. This happens all the time. In fact, in
recent history there have been six demands for cloture on the
Democratic side as opposed to only one on the Republican side. This is
not a filibuster.
Rather than take my word for it, take our Vice President Joe Biden's
word for it when he said this is not a filibuster. He was talking about
a controversial appointee. A letter was sent by him to his colleagues
arguing that opposing cloture was not a filibuster. He said: ``It is a
vote to protect the Senate's constitutional power to advise and consent
to nominations.''
This is worth repeating. Vice President Joe Biden said it is not a
filibuster. ``It is a vote to protect the Senate's constitutional power
to advise and consent to nominations.''
This expresses the frustration of our new Senator from Texas, Senator
Cruz, who finally just gave up. He said: You know, I have been wanting
to exercise my constitutional rights all of this time. Senator Cruz
said, I have said it over and over again, and I have requested over and
over again the information to which I am entitled and to which I have a
constitutional right.
I am in a position to quote--I have already done it several times
from this podium--our distinguished chairman, who also agrees we need
to have those rights. Certainly, we have quoted Senator Kerry and
others talking about the fact that requiring this information is simply
something so ingrained in our system. This is not just Jim Inhofe and
Alexander Hamilton talking, this is everybody throughout this country's
history.
This is one of the things that people should consider: This is not a
filibuster, and we have not received the information to which we are
entitled. It is not just Senator Cruz, it is others too. It doesn't
happen to be me because I am opposing this nominee for many of the same
reasons that the previous speakers, Senator Cornyn and Senator Wicker
from Mississippi, have stated.
I know we are close to running out of time. I think the senior
Senator from
[[Page S830]]
Texas, Mr. Cornyn, brought out and has probably talked more--and has in
the last month--about the concerns he has regarding the Middle East,
with the attitude of former Senator Hagel to the various Middle Eastern
countries and how Hezbollah, Hamas, all of those work into it.
In the case of Iran, I am and have been concerned about the attitude
of Mr. Hagel in terms of this group called Global Zero movement that
wants to do away with nukes, even if it is unilateral.
This isn't the way it used to be in the old days. As I said a minute
ago, I look wistfully upon those days because it is not that way
anymore. Our unclassified intelligence says Iran is going to have
nuclear capability and a delivery system by 2015. Why would we want to
bring down our nuclear capability in an environment like that? We also
know and have watched recently what North Korea has done, all of them
trading with China, Syria, and these other countries. It is not like it
was in the old days.
I need to mention this also because three of the previous speakers
spoke about Iran, their concern about the statements that have been
made in support of Iran by Mr. Hagel. If you look at some of the quotes
that come from Iran, you need to remind people those guys are bad guys
over there. One of their statements from their ministry was that people
of the Middle East--the Muslim region and North Africa, people from
these regions--hate America from the bottom of their hearts. Then they
go after, of course, Israel. They said Iran's warriors are ready and
willing to wipe Israel off the map. The Zionists will receive a
crushing response from the Islamic Republic's armed forces, which will
lead to their annihilation.
This is the Islamist Revolutionary Guard, the same group which was to
be declared a terrorist group when he was then-Senator Hagel, and he
was only one of four Members of the entire Senate who objected to
designating the Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist group. This quote is
the one that received my attention the most, and it has directly to do
with Israel. Iran said:
They launched the myth of the Holocaust. They lied, they
put on a show and then they support the Jews.
This is interesting they would have that kind of a strong statement.
I asked my staff this morning if they remembered a movie called
``Schindler's List.'' ``Schindler's List'' was a movie I never saw
until it was on national TV 3 days ago, and I couldn't stop watching
it. I couldn't turn it off. You need to look at the Holocaust from that
perspective. Iran denies it even took place.
You will not find any country or any area we have dealt with in the
past that is more anti-Israel than Iran. I have to say also, if anyone
wants to know some of my feelings, I have made over five speeches more
than 1 hour each on the floor of this Senate about Israel, and they are
entitled to the land. All of these issues are very important--the mere
fact Iran would say the Holocaust didn't exist.
Now, keep in mind--and I know the response to this is that we don't
have any control over who supports him, but it is interesting, though--
that Iran supports Chuck Hagel's nomination to be Secretary of Defense.
I mean, Iran arguably could be considered to be the greatest foe that
is out there for the United States, recognizing the capabilities they
are going to have and the statements they have made about the United
States of America. That is frightening.
So those are the reasons I was concerned initially about this
nomination--and I think it has been said and said very well by the
Senator from Mississippi, who went over all the details--and I think it
is something that has to be looked at and looked at seriously.
The idea that this process of requiring a 60 vote margin is new at a
Cabinet level--I mentioned that a very prominent leftwing television
station was talking about that over and over again, that this has never
happened, there has never been a Cabinet position that has been
filibustered. First of all, it is not filibustering. We know that
because we heard that from John Kerry, Joe Biden, and all the rest of
the people who have been concerned about the fact that there is
something improper about cloture when it comes to nominees. There is
nothing more important than a President nominating someone for these
Cabinet positions, and it is very common that they are questioned by
the opposition, by an opposition party to the President in the Senate.
We are the ones who have that constitutional responsibility.
I remember because I was sitting here when Kathleen Sebelius went
through the same thing. She, obviously, had to finally have a 60-vote
margin. John Bryson, Secretary of Commerce--I remember what he went
through. Also, I recall very well Miguel Estrada. I remember being down
here with Miguel Estrada, and they rejected him seven different times.
They required a 60-vote margin. He always got in the fifties. The
highest he got was 55. But he was rejected.
So what we are saying is that this is not anything unusual. We all
know about Dirk Kempthorne and Steven Johnson. Steven Johnson happened
to be an appointee of Republican President Bush, yet he was a Democrat,
and he was one where finally we were able to get the 60 votes. We got
61 votes. So, again, there is nothing unusual about this.
My only plea is that we consider some of the things that are in the
background of this nominee to be Secretary of Defense, as has been
stated before. The fact that he is one of only two who were against
sanctions in Iran, one of only four who opposed designating the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard as terrorists, one of only four who refused to sign
a letter of solidarity with Israel, and the fact that--and I do applaud
and appreciate the chairman of the committee for allowing Senator Cruz
to show the video of an interview on Al Jazeera--Senator Hagel agreed
with the comment that Israel made war crimes or the statement that
Israel committed sickening slaughters and that America is the world's
bully. These all underscore the fact that Senator Hagel is not the kind
of person we need as Secretary of Defense for the United States of
America.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
Mr. LEVIN. First, on the question of whether this is a filibuster,
under our rules Senators have a right to speak and debate as long as
they want until 60 Senators decide it is time to end debate. That is
the definition, under our rules, of a filibuster. And that is the right
of Senators to engage in. That is not the issue, as to whether it is
right; the issue is whether it is now time to end debate. Under our
rules, in order to bring debate to an end, where Senators insist on
continuing a debate unless 60 Senators vote to end it, this is what
this vote will be about at noon--whether we want to bring this debate
to an end. Why? Well, first of all, we need a Secretary of Defense. But
before we can get a Secretary of Defense, there has to be a vote on the
nomination itself. The vote at noon will be a vote as to whether we
want to bring this debate to an end so that we can, at a later time--
hopefully today--then vote on the nomination itself. That is a majority
vote, not 60 votes. In fact, the final vote on either a nominee or on a
bill is always a majority vote. The 60 votes comes into play when
Senators say: We are not going to end debate. We have a right to talk
as long as we want in the Senate until 60 Senators vote to end it. And
we demand that vote of 60 Senators takes place to see if there are 60
Senators who want to end debate. That is called cloture. That is what
we will be voting on at noon. That is the very definition of a
filibuster, under our rules.
So it is not unusual, as the Senator from Oklahoma says, for there to
be a demand for a cloture vote on positions in the Cabinet. That has
happened before. But what has never happened is that that has been
insisted upon for a nomination to be Secretary of Defense. That is what
is unusual.
It seems to me it is essential now that we get to the vote on the
nomination itself, which will come later on today--again, I hope--and
the only way to do that is if we vote to end the debate on this
nomination, which is what will take place at noon. Whether there will
be 60 votes, we will find out at noon, but hopefully there will be
because this is a position which needs to be filled.
There have been many misstatements about quotes of Senator
[[Page S831]]
Hagel. Obviously, not all of the statements that have been attributed
to him are misstatements, but some of them are. Just one of them we
heard earlier this morning was about the fact that he has talked about
the sickening slaughter by the Israelis in the case of Lebanon. So here
is the quote, and it was a full speech. It was on C-SPAN. The quote
is--and this involves the issue of Lebanon--``The sickening slaughter
on both sides must end.'' So what Senator Hagel was bemoaning was the
loss of lives on both sides. I would hope that decent people everywhere
would bemoan the massive loss of lives on both sides that occurred
during those events in Lebanon. I was there, and I saw what happened--
the huge loss of life. So he was bemoaning the sickening slaughter on
both sides and saying it must end and calling on President Bush to call
for an immediate cease-fire. I find nothing reprehensible about such a
call.
This has been a debate which has raised a lot of issues, but, to me,
some of the most compelling arguments have been made by former
Secretaries of Defense and State urging that we approve and confirm
Senator Hagel.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record
letters of support to which I will refer. At an earlier time, they were
made part of the Record, but it is important that they be made a part
of the Record of today's debate and not just previous debates.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
December 20, 2012.
Ambassadors' Open Letter: Senator Hagel Impeccable Choice for
Defense Secretary
We support, most strongly and without qualification,
President Obama's reported intention to nominate Senator
Chuck Hagel to be the next secretary of defense. Each of us
has known the senator over the past twenty years and has
found him invariably one of the best informed leaders in the
U.S. Congress on the issues of U.S. national security.
Senator Hagel's credentials for the job are impeccable. As a
decorated Vietnam veteran, an extremely successful
entrepreneur in the private sector and as a two-term senator,
he brings unusually high qualifications and experiences to
the Department of Defense at this time of budget constraint
and challenges to reshape America's military power while
keeping it strong for the coming decades.
Senator Hagel's political courage has impressed us all. He
has stood and argued publicly for what he believes is best
for the United States. When he was attacked for opposing the
war in Iraq as ``unpatriotic,'' he replied, ``To question
your government is not unpatriotic--to not question your
government is unpatriotic.''
Time and again he chose to take the path of standing up for
our nation over political expediency. He has always supported
the pillars of American foreign policy--such as: a strong
NATO and Atlantic partnership; a commitment to the security
of Israel, as a friend and ally; a determination to stop the
proliferation of nuclear weapons; and the defense of human
rights as a core principle of America's role in the world.
Each of us has had the opportunity to work with Senator
Hagel at one time or another on the issues of the Middle
East. He has invariably demonstrated strong support for
Israel and for a two state solution and has been opposed to
those who would undermine or threaten Israel's security.
We can think of few more qualified, more non-partisan, more
courageous or better equipped to head the Department of
Defense at this critical moment in strengthening America's
role in the world. If he is nominated, we urge the speedy
confirmation of Senator Hagel's appointment.
Sincerely,
Nicholas Burns, former Under Secretary of State for
Political Affairs, Ambassador to NATO and Greece; Ryan
Crocker, former Ambassador to Iraq and Afghanistan;
Edward Djerejian, former Ambassador to Israel and
Syria; William Harrop, former Ambassador to Israel;
Daniel Kurtzer, former Ambassador to Israel and Egypt;
Sam Lewis, former Ambassador to Israel; William H.
Luers, former Ambassador to Venezuela and
Czechoslovakia; Thomas R. Pickering, former Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs, Ambassador to
Israel and Russia; Frank G. Wisner, former Under
Secretary of Defense for Policy, Ambassador to Egypt
and India.
____
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC, January 24, 2013.
Re Support Senator Hagel's Nomination
Dear Colleague: I wanted to share the attached letter from
thirteen former Secretaries of Defense, Secretaries of State,
and National Security Advisors in support of Senator Hagel's
nomination for Secretary of Defense.
These eminent national security experts advised Presidents
Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Clinton, and George W. Bush on a
host of international matters.
I hope that you will take a moment to review their letter
as you consider Senator Hagel's nomination.
Sincerely,
Jack Reed,
U.S. Senator.
____
January 24, 2013.
To Members of the U.S. Senate: We, as former Secretaries of
State, Defense, and National Security Advisors, are writing
to express our strong endorsement of Chuck Hagel to be the
next Secretary of Defense.
Chuck Hagel has an impeccable record of public service that
reflects leadership, integrity, and a keen reading of global
dynamics. From his time as Deputy Veterans Administrator
managing a quarter of a million employees during the Reagan
presidency, to turning around the financially troubled World
USO, to shepherding the post-9/11 GI Bill into law as a
United States Senator, and most recently through his service
on the Defense Policy Board at the Pentagon and as co-
Chairman of the President's Intelligence Advisory Board,
Chuck Hagel is uniquely qualified to meet the challenges
facing the Department of Defense and our men and women in
uniform. As President Obama noted in announcing the
nomination, this twice-wounded combat veteran ``is a champion
of our troops and our veterans and our military families''
and would have the distinction of being the first person of
enlisted rank and the first Vietnam veteran to serve as
Secretary of Defense.
His approach to national security and debates about the use
of American power is marked by a disciplined habit of
thoughtfulness that is sorely needed and these qualities will
serve him well as Secretary of Defense at a time when the
United States must address a range of international issues
that are unprecedented in scope. Our extensive experience
working with Senator Hagel over the years has left us
confident that he has the necessary background to succeed in
the job of leading the largest federal agency.
Hagel has declared that we ``knew we needed the world's
best military not because we wanted war but because we wanted
to prevent war.'' For those of us honored to have served as
members of a president's national security team, Senator
Hagel clearly understands the essence and the burdens of
leadership required of this high office. We hope this
Committee and the U.S. Senate will promptly and favorably act
on his nomination.
Sincerely,
Hon. Madeleine Albright, former Secretary of State; Hon.
Samuel Berger, former National Security Advisor; Hon.
Harold Brown, former Secretary of Defense; Hon.
Zbigniew Brzezinski, former National Security Advisor;
Hon. William Cohen, former Secretary of Defense; Hon.
Robert Gates, former Secretary of Defense; Hon. James
Jones, former National Security Advisor; Hon. Melvin
Laird, former Secretary of Defense; Hon. Robert
McFarlane, former National Security Advisor; Hon.
William Perry, former Secretary of Defense; Hon. Colin
Powell, former Secretary of State and National Security
Advisor; Hon. George Shultz, former Secretary of State;
Hon. Brent Scowcroft, former National Security Advisor.
____
Non Commissioned Officers Association of the United
States of America,
Alexandria, VA, January 22, 2013.
Hon. Carl Levin, Chairman,
Hon. James M. Inhofe, Ranking Member,
Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate, Russell Senate
Office Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Chairman Levin and Ranking Member Inhofe: The Non
Commissioned Officers Association of the USA (NCOA) strongly
supports the appointment of The Honorable Chuck Hagel to be
Secretary of Defense.
The association's membership is comprised of current and
former enlisted members of the active duty military, Guard
and Reserve Components to include all elements of the United
States Coast Guard. The members of NCOA share a common
experience with Senator Hagel who personally experienced the
rigors of military service to include combat in the Vietnam
War.
His military service including being twice wounded in
action has instilled the values of service and personal
sacrifice and for which he knows well the human cost of war.
He has been an advocate for Soldiers, Marines, Sailors,
Airmen, and Coasties to ensure the training and equipage of
America's 21st Century Military Force to coincide with a
solid revised Defense posture to meet conventional and
unconventional world challenges.
Senator Hagel has also championed personnel issues relating
to combat dwell time, force protection, transition issues
including electronic medical issues, preparation for future
employment and training, veterans benefits including
enhancements to Post 9/11 educational benefits. He also
recognizes the value and sacrifice of families of the men and
women who serve in this nation's Uniformed Services.
The NCOA has no hesitation in asking that Senator Hagel
receive an expeditious hearing that confirms his confirmation
to be the next Secretary of Defense. This Association
recognizes the challenges that will be faced as Secretary of
Defense and believe Senator
[[Page S832]]
Hagel is well qualified to lead the Department of Defense.
Sincerely,
Richard C. Schneider,
Executive Director for Government Affairs.
____
AMVETS,
Lanham, Md, January 8, 2013.
AMVETS NATIONAL COMMANDER APPROVES DEFENSE SECRETARY
NOMINATION
This afternoon, AMVETS National Commander Cleve Geer
endorsed President Barack Obama's nomination of Chuck Hagel
as the next Secretary of Defense. Obama announced the
nomination yesterday, Jan. 7, 2013.
``AMVETS fully supports President Obama's nomination of
Chuck Hagel for the future Secretary of Defense,'' said Geer.
``As a veterans service organization, AMVETS' main mission is
to serve as an advocate for veterans, their families and the
community in which they live. I am confident that former Sen.
Hagel will utilize his experience and understanding of
America's military to lead this nation's troops and the
Department of Defense.''
If confirmed by the Senate, Hagel will be the first
infantryman to serve as the Secretary of Defense. He will
replace current Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, who has
been in this position since 2011. Hagel's experience ranges
from serving in the Army during the Vietnam War to
representing Nebraska as a senator.
About AMVETS:
A leader since 1944 in preserving the freedoms secured by
America's armed forces, AMVETS provides support for veterans
and the active military in procuring their earned
entitlements, as well as community service and legislative
reform that enhances the quality of life for this nation's
citizens and veterans alike. AMVETS is one of the largest
congressionally-chartered veterans' service organizations in
the United States, and includes members from each branch of
the military, including the National Guard and Reserves.
To learn more, visit: www.amvets.org.
____
Chuck Hagel Would Make an Outstanding Secretary of Defense
January 16, 2013.
Hon. Carl Levin,
Chairman,
Hon. James M. Inhofe,
Ranking Member, Committee on Armed Services, U.S. Senate,
Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Chairman Levin and Ranking Member Inhofe: While some
of our organizations cannot recommend whom the President
should appoint to his cabinet, we believe that Senator Chuck
Hagel would make an outstanding Secretary of Defense, and is
uniquely qualified to lead the men and women of America's
Armed Forces.
Chuck Hagel is a true patriot who volunteered to fight in
the war of his generation when he could easily have opted for
a safe assignment. Twice wounded in the service of our
nation, this combat veteran knows first-hand what it means to
wear the uniform, what it means when the nation sends its
young people to war, and the price that our Soldiers,
Sailors, Airmen and Marines sometimes pay in our defense.
He has fought with and for our troops his entire adult
life: as a 21-year-old infantry sergeant in Vietnam; as the
deputy head of the VA who pushed for Agent Orange Benefits
and for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial; as the President of
the USO; and as a U.S. Senator who coauthored the Post-9/11
GI Bill. As Secretary of Defense he will be a strong advocate
of preparing servicemen and women for a smooth transition
from the military to the VA system, including making jobs and
training, and efficient electronic records a top priority.
His door would always be open to veterans' service
organizations.
Chuck Hagel knows that, while military force in defense of
the nation is unfortunately sometimes necessary, decisions
concerning war and peace, life and death, never should be
undertaken lightly. This is the least that we can ask of our
leaders.
The President has said that ``in Chuck Hagel our troops see
a decorated combat veteran of character and strength. They
see one of their own. Chuck is a champion of our troops and
our veterans and our military families.'' ``Chuck knows that
war is not an abstraction. He understands that sending young
Americans to fight and bleed in the dirt and mud, that's
something we only do when it's absolutely necessary.'' As
veterans, we could not agree more. As the nation commemorates
the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War, it is fitting and
proper that the next Secretary of Defense should be a wounded
and decorated veteran of that conflict--the first Vietnam
veteran and the first enlisted man to hold this post.
Sincerely,
Stewart M. Hickey,
Executive Director.
Mr. LEVIN. The first letter is a letter of 11 Ambassadors, including
four former Ambassadors to Israel, in which these Ambassadors say that
Senator Hagel ``has always supported the pillars of American foreign
policy--such as a strong NATO and Atlantic partnership; a commitment to
the security of Israel, as a friend and ally . . . ''
The second letter is from 13 former Secretaries of Defense, State,
and National Security Advisers, including a number of Republicans who
served in Republican administrations. Part of their letter reads as
follows:
His approach to national security and debates about the use
of American power is marked by a disciplined habit of
thoughtfulness that is sorely needed.
It also says:
Our extensive experience working with Senator Hagel over
the years has left us confident that he has the necessary
background to succeed in the job of leading the Department of
Defense.
These, again, are 13 former Secretaries of Defense.
Then there is a series of letters that came in from veterans
organizations. These are elegant pleas for Senator Hagel to be
confirmed.
This is from the Non Commissioned Officers Association of the United
States:
Senator Hagel has championed personnel issues relating to
combat dwell time, force protection, transition issues
including electronic medical issues, preparation for future
employment and training . . . He also recognizes the value
and sacrifice of families of the men and women who serve in
this Nation's Uniformed Services.
This is from AMVETS:
AMVETS fully supports President Obama's nomination of Chuck
Hagel for the future Secretary of Defense. As a veterans
service organization, AMVETS' main mission is to serve as an
advocate for veterans, their families and the community in
which they live. I am confident that former Senator Hagel
will utilize his experience and understanding of America's
military to lead this nation's troops and the Department of
Defense.
In terms of Israel and in terms of Iran, I wish to read a couple of
statements of Senator Hagel and about Senator Hagel--first in terms of
his statements about Iran. In his 2008 book, he said:
At its core, there will always be a special and historic
bond with Israel, exemplified by our continued commitment to
Israel's defense.
And this is a statement made by an Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister
whose name is Danny Ayalon. This is what he said just recently:
Senator Hagel believes in the natural partnership between
Israel and the United States. Senator Hagel is proud of the
volume of defense relations between Israel and the United
States, which are so important for both countries. Hagel is a
true American Patriot and the support America gives Israel is
in America's interest, so I am optimistic.
Relative to Iran, this is what Senator Hagel has said about Iran:
Iran poses a significant threat to the United States, our
allies and partners, and our interests in the region and
globally. Iran continues to pursue an illicit nuclear program
that threatens to provoke a regional arms race and undermine
the global nonproliferation regime. Iran is one of the main
state sponsors of terrorism and could spark conflict,
including against U.S. personnel and interests.
He has also said that he is ``fully committed to President Obama's
goal of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon,'' and he has
said that ``all options must be on the table to achieve that goal.'' He
specifically said that his policy will be that of the President's
policy--one of prevention and not containment.
Relative to sequestration--and we are facing sequestration--Senator
Hagel has said the following, which is also what Secretary Panetta has
said.
Sequestration, if allowed to occur, would damage our
readiness, our people and our military families. It would
result in the grounding of aircraft and returning ships to
port, reducing the Department's global presence and ability
to rapidly respond to contingencies. Vital training would be
reduced by half of current plans and the Department would be
unable to reset equipment from Afghanistan in a timely
manner. The Department would reduce training and maintenance
for nondeploying units and would be forced to reduce
procurement of vital weapon systems and suffer the subsequent
schedule delays and price increases. Civilian employees would
be furloughed. All these effects negatively impact long-term
readiness as well. It would send a terrible signal to our
military and our civilian workforce, to those we hope to
recruit, and to both our allies and adversaries around the
world.
Mr. President, we must end this uncertainty about this position. It
is time for us to end this debate, and that is what we will be voting
on now. Later on there will be a vote on whether to confirm Senator
Hagel. The vote now is whether to bring this debate to an end. I hope
we will do so and get on to the nomination vote.
[[Page S833]]
I yield the floor, as I think it is noon and time for a vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, let me just say everything has been said,
not everyone has said it. However, I would like to make sure everyone
understands the actual statements were made by the former Senator Hagel
in terms of the relationship of our country with Israel and Iran prior
to the time he was nominated because many of those statements were
changed at that time.
I encourage a ``no'' vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. All time has expired.
Cloture Motion
Under the previous order, the clerk will report the motion to invoke
cloture.
The bill clerk read as follows:
Cloture Motion
We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the
provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate,
hereby move to bring to a close debate on the nomination of
Charles Timothy Hagel, of Nebraska, to be Secretary of
Defense.
Harry Reid, Patrick J. Leahy, Sheldon Whitehouse, Barbara
Boxer, Al Franken, Christopher A. Coons, Jack Reed,
Carl Levin, Kirsten E. Gillibrand, Claire McCaskill,
Robert P. Casey, Jr., Richard Blumenthal, Tom Harkin,
Dianne Feinstein, Bill Nelson, Jeanne Shaheen, Sherrod
Brown.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. By unanimous consent, the mandatory quorum
call has been waived.
The question is, Is it the sense of the Senate that debate on the
nomination of Charles Timothy Hagel, of Nebraska, to be Secretary of
Defense shall be brought to a close on reconsideration?
The yeas and nays are mandatory under the rule.
The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from New Jersey (Mr.
Lautenberg) and the Senator from Colorado (Mr. Udall) are necessarily
absent.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Heitkamp). Are there any oher Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 71, nays 27, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 23 Ex.]
YEAS--71
Alexander
Ayotte
Baldwin
Baucus
Begich
Bennet
Blumenthal
Blunt
Boxer
Brown
Burr
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Chambliss
Coburn
Cochran
Collins
Coons
Corker
Cowan
Donnelly
Durbin
Feinstein
Flake
Franken
Gillibrand
Graham
Hagan
Harkin
Hatch
Heinrich
Heitkamp
Hirono
Johanns
Johnson (SD)
Kaine
King
Klobuchar
Landrieu
Leahy
Levin
Manchin
McCain
McCaskill
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Murkowski
Murphy
Murray
Nelson
Pryor
Reed
Reid
Rockefeller
Sanders
Schatz
Schumer
Sessions
Shaheen
Shelby
Stabenow
Tester
Thune
Udall (NM)
Warner
Warren
Whitehouse
Wyden
NAYS--27
Barrasso
Boozman
Coats
Cornyn
Crapo
Cruz
Enzi
Fischer
Grassley
Heller
Hoeven
Inhofe
Isakson
Johnson (WI)
Kirk
Lee
McConnell
Moran
Paul
Portman
Risch
Roberts
Rubio
Scott
Toomey
Vitter
Wicker
NOT VOTING--2
Lautenberg
Udall (CO)
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 71 and the nays are
27. Upon reconsideration, three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and
sworn having voted in the affirmative, the motion is agreed to.
The majority leader.
Mr. REID. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that following the
recess for the weekly party conferences, the time until 4:30 p.m. be
equally divided in the usual form and that at 4:30 p.m. all postcloture
time be yielded back and the Senate proceed to vote on the nomination
of Chuck Hagel, without intervening action or debate; the motion to
reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table, with no
intervening action or debate; that no further motions be in order; that
President Obama be immediately notified of the Senate's action, and the
Senate then resume legislative session.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________