[Congressional Record Volume 142, Number 117 (Friday, August 2, 1996)]
[Senate]
[Pages S9479-S9480]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, I rise to speak on behalf of the 1997
defense authorization bill. I am privileged to serve on the committee
with the distinguished chairman, Mr. Thurmond, of South Carolina, and
the distinguished ranking member, Mr. Nunn, of Georgia, and I wish to
compliment them, together with their senior staffs, for putting
together an excellent bill and conference report. It is my hope and
expectation that conference report will be voted on favorably by this
body very shortly.
Mr. President, as we deliberate this bill, let us put ourselves in
any of 10 places beyond the shores of this country where men and women
of the Armed Forces are standing guard, or actually in some instances
basically looking down the rifle bore of a potential enemy, but
standing guard and taking those risks in the cause of freedom.
It is for that reason I so fervently hope this body turns to the
defense authorization conference report and passes it this afternoon
such that it can go on to the President from the Senate and the House
and receive the President's signature and be enacted into law.
This conference report goes a long way towards ensuring that our
Armed Forces will remain capable of meeting the many challenges that
lie ahead. Let me dwell on that for a moment--challenges that lie
ahead. Today, we have the finest equipment for the men and women of the
Armed Forces, but it takes basically 10 years, 10 years from the
drawing board until the next generation of weapons systems are
delivered by the American industrial base. And we are proud to have in
this country the finest industrial base in the world. But it will take
them 10 years from drawing board to delivery to the men and women of
the Armed Forces.
Our actions today ensure that those young men and women today barely
in their early teens will have that equipment when they, hopefully,
volunteer to assume their role on the ramparts not only of this country
but across the world to achieve freedom.
To achieve this goal the conferees had to add $11.2 billion to the
Clinton administration budget request. We concentrated those additional
funds on just that, providing the research and the development, from
the drawing board to providing the funds for the production lines all
across the America for airplanes and ships and missiles, trucks, tents,
and the like for our men and women of the Armed Forces 10 years hence.
Earlier today I had the opportunity to talk by phone to Secretary of
Defense Perry. We discussed his mission to Saudi Arabia. Deep in the
hearts of every person in this Chamber is the sadness for the loss of
life due to terrorism--make it clear, Mr. President, terrorism--when
those barracks were maliciously partially destroyed by a truck bomb.
The Secretary advised members of the committee that he is taking
steps to ensure greater security for those troops, and, indeed, that
requires moving from their present quarters to places elsewhere in
Saudi Arabia. But that is what this money is for.
I must point out, however, that even with the funding added by the
conferees, this year will mark the 12th straight year of declining
defense budgets. The funding level in the fiscal year 1997 conference
report represents a real decline of $7.4 billion from last year's bill.
Just 12 months ago this Chamber acted on that piece of legislation and
already there has been that significant depreciation in the spending
level for the Department of Defense. To all of our critics I say that
we have not increased defense spending. This bill merely lessens the
rate of decline.
As I stated, U.S. troops are currently deployed in 10 separate
military operations overseas. Despite the end of the cold war, we are
calling on the men and women of the Armed Forces at an ever increasing
rate to endure more and more separation from families. What a joy for
Members of this Chamber to go home in the evening and join their wives
and their children, and for millions and millions of other Americans
wherever they may live. But so often the man or the woman in uniform is
deployed beyond our shores and separated from that which he or she
regards most precious in life--their family. They do that, as
volunteers, so that we can have the exercise of free speech and all the
other many blessings that this country enjoys.
Despite the end of the cold war, we are calling on these men and
women, again, to take more and more deployments abroad. It is our
responsibility, then, to provide our troops with adequate resources so
they can effectively and, I underscore, Mr. President, safely--not only
effectively, but safely--perform their missions. We must not now,
tomorrow, or ever send them into harm's way without the best possible
equipment.
The conference report which passed the House last night and is
currently waiting Senate action provides for our troops, not only by
adding desperately needed funding for the procurement, which I have
addressed in the R&D, but also by funding vital quality-of-life
initiatives such as the 3-percent pay raise for our troops, enhanced
military medical benefits, and almost $500 million of budget requests
for construction of improved quality-of-life housing, both for families
and single troops.
Just remembering back in my own lifetime, having had the privilege to
serve in uniform, the pay raise is particularly very important,
particularly
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when you are beyond the shores and your family is back here in the
United States. That pay raise means the difference in their quality of
life. I cannot tell you the emotional stress on a military person,
separated from his or her family, beyond the seas, when they hear that
pay raise could well be in jeopardy should this body, this afternoon or
tomorrow, not pass this legislation. We owe a duty to those who
volunteer to see that they are adequately compensated. I hope we will
do that.
In addition, this conference report adds almost $1 billion over the
budget request to provide defenses for our troops and our Nation
against the very real threat that is in the R&D report, the real
threat, particularly to forward-deployed troops, against missile
attack. Those of us who visited the gulf operations during the gulf war
saw firsthand the damage by the crudest type of ballistic missile, the
Scud missile, that Saddam Hussein relentlessly fired upon our troops
and those of our allies, and relentlessly fired upon Tel Aviv. Many of
us here saw firsthand the devastation of those crude weapons.
We had in place our best defense at that time, barely off the drawing
boards, barely off the production lines. We have an obligation to the
men and women of the Armed Forces and, indeed, to all of our citizens
and others deployed abroad to put our greatest strength of research and
development into deterring these systems in the future.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Hutchison). The Senator from New
Hampshire.
Mr. GREGG. Madam President, may I inquire of the Chair what the
regular order is? Are we in morning business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. We are in morning business with Senators
permitted to speak for 5 minutes.
Mr. GREGG. I ask unanimous consent, then, to proceed for 15 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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