On March 14, 2014 Rep. Dana Rohrabacher of California asked for and
was granted permission to address the United States House of
Representatives for a few minutes regarding aid to Pakistan.
What he said was absolutely shocking:
“Mr. Speaker, for 2 months, public attention has been riveted on
Ukraine. Today, I suggest it is harmful to our security to just focus on
Ukraine and ignore the battle against radical Islam and the ensuing
threat of China that is far more dangerous to us than which direction
Crimea goes.
Yesterday, Secretary of State John Kerry requested that
Congress approve aid to Pakistan. That is foreign aid to Pakistan. The
administration is requesting $881.8 million for aid to Pakistan. The
Congress and the American people should pay attention to this request.
Since 9/11, the United States has given Pakistan over $25
billion, with over $17 billion of that going to the Pakistani security
services, services that target and kill American soldiers through
helping those elements in that part of the world that kill American
soldiers and terrorize civilian populations.
Our generosity has only emboldened Pakistan’s military
clique–that clique that actually rules the country, that clique that
gave refuge to Osama bin Laden.
Most importantly, Pakistan has not been acting as our
friend–not just that clique, but the government itself of Pakistan; and
we don’t need to be supplementing the countries and supporting the
countries and giving aid to the countries that are hostile to America’s
interests and hateful of our way of life.
It is a charade to believe that our aid is buying Pakistan’s
cooperation in hunting down terrorists, as Secretary Kerry stated
yesterday. Frankly, that is wishful thinking, but that is not facing the
reality of what we confront in South Asia.
A Pakistani commission reported on the bin Laden raid–the raid
that brought bin Laden, the murderer of so many Americans, to
justice–and the Pakistani commission points out negative developments in
U.S.-Pakistan relations in recent years, and it is, in their view, “a
growing American threat” to Pakistani interests.
These are not the sentiments of a regime that wants to work with us. These are not the sentiments of friends.
Remember, when our SEAL teams went to get Osama bin Laden, the
Pakistani Government took the wreckage of one of our helicopters–a
stealth helicopter, cutting-edge technology that was used in that
raid–and gave it to the Communist Chinese.
Of course, the Pakistanis call the Chinese their all-weather
friend, and we are supposedly just their fair-weather friend; yet we
should be giving, according to this administration, over $881 million
more in aid, on top of the billions that we have already given the
Pakistanis.
Indeed, a study by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes
Project found that 81 percent of those surveyed in Pakistan were
favorable to Communist China–Communist China–which represses its own
Muslim population, murders Christians, and is a dictatorship of a
clique–of a crony capitalist clique that controls that country.
When 81 percent of those surveyed in Pakistan are favorable to
that country, while only 11 percent are favorable to the United States,
should we be spending money that we are borrowing from China, in order
to give money to a country that likes China more than it likes the
United States, and we end up giving money to the country and to the
people that don’t like us?
Well, no. We should cut off our aid to Pakistan because it is
not an ally, and any money we send to them only strengthens their
ability to act against us and against our friends in Afghanistan and
elsewhere.
We cannot buy the friendship of the people of Pakistan, nor
can we buy the friendship of the Government of Pakistan. These are
people who feel that their core interests and their values go totally
against what we believe in and who we are, as a country.
At a time of tight budgets, we should reserve our aid for
friends and allies. We should never give assistance to those who target
and kill Americans or even support those elements that do target and
kill Americans. Perhaps we could reexamine our motives and our ability
to provide such assistance throughout the world.
Obviously, we can’t be supporting our enemies like this; but
even with our friends in friendly countries, we are having to borrow
money from China and elsewhere, in order to give money, as aid, to other
countries. That makes no sense to me.
We need to restructure our aid situation. Yes, America does have
a moral obligation to try to help others in need, but perhaps we should
focus on emergency situations and limit our aid to those countries who
have tsunamis or earthquakes or other catastrophes in which much of
their population is in grave danger or is suffering. That type of
foreign aid is something we can be proud of, and we can channel it to
any group of people in the world who are ordinary people who are in
danger. We can then reach out and show our generosity, and perhaps we
will receive some gratitude from people who are in a desperate situation
rather than transferring our money to governments that are often anti,
against, everything America stands for.
How do we know that Pakistan still has a government that
considers–at least a clique that runs their government and that tells
their government–that considers the United States less than a friend,
perhaps an enemy? It is very easy to see.
We should never forget. And the real bellwether for this is
the treatment of Dr. Afridi. As we ponder our policies, let us not
forget Dr. Afridi, the heroic Pakistani doctor who was instrumental in
the effort to capture or kill bin Laden. Dr. Afridi was arrested on May
22, 2011, 3 weeks after the United States raid which brought Osama bin
Laden to justice. He has been in a Pakistani jail ever since. He was
initially held beneath the ISI’s headquarters in Islamabad. There he was
tortured and kept blindfolded for 8 months and handcuffed for a year,
leaving physical damage on this heroic friend of America.
This man is a hero who risked his life to bring to justice the
terrorist monster who organized the 9/11 attack that killed 3,000
Americans. Dr. Afridi risked his life to bring justice, and we leave him
in Pakistan in a dungeon. We abandon him. We leave him to rot in that
dungeon. In May 2012, Dr. Afridi was moved to the Peshawar Central Jail
after being sentenced to 33 years in jail.
Dr. Afridi told FOX News he helped the CIA out of love for the
United States and swore that he would help America again despite the
fact that these people were torturing him. We have not only abandoned
him, but Congress is considering, as I say, giving even more, hundreds
of millions of dollars. In fact, the total amount of aid that they want
to give to Pakistan this year is $1.3 billion in American aid to
Pakistan.
This is an abomination. It is shameful. It is cowardly. It is a
cowardly betrayal of a man who risked his life for us. Who else, who
will stand with us in the future if we treat our friends this way?
America all so often treats our friends in a shabby way,
abandons them at a time, and then our government has the gall to request
that we give aid to those people who are the tormentors of Dr. Afridi.
In fact, these are the men who we know this government in Pakistan is
run by and controlled by a clique of people who hid Osama bin Laden,
gave refuge to the murderer of 3,000 Americans for years, and then, of
course, they claim they didn’t know he was there–there–right next to the
school where they train all of their military officers.
Pakistan is supporting America’s enemies who are attacking
American soldiers in Afghanistan and have targeted and, of course,
brutally murdered other Americans and brutally murdered other people
throughout that region who are hostile to their radical Islamic
terrorist agenda.
Secretary Kerry says that we must give support to placate the
positive elements in Pakistan. It sort of reminds me of when somebody
was saying back before World War II, we better try to get with Hitler
because there are some really bad guys in the Nazi Party, even worse
than Hitler. Give me a break. Hitler was an evil man, and the people in
Pakistan, the clique that runs that country and engages in terrorism is
an evil clique, and we should not be providing them the resources they
need to build their military capabilities.
Well, Pakistan’s fight against militancy is, of course,
against our military. It is very evident because what we have got is
attacks being conducted by what? By people who are stationed, whose
operations they are operating out of areas in Pakistan. And that has
been going on for years. Well, trying to give them money, from the
United States to the Pakistani Government, is not buying us friendship,
and it is not buying future or even current peace.
By the way, the money that we give them that isn’t
being used to attack Americans and friends of ours is being used to
butcher their own people and suppress the opposition within Pakistan to
this brutal regime. They are terrorizing; the Pakistani
Government is terrorizing whole populations of their country like the
Balochis and the Sindhis.
The Balochis and the Sindhis are people that would prefer not
to be under the heel of a Pakistani Government run in Islamabad. The
Baloch people live in an area of South Asia now claimed by Pakistan,
Iran, and Afghanistan. But in Pakistan in particular, they comprise an
important segment of the population, and they live in the least
developed province. Unfortunately, it may be the least developed
province, and it is where the poorest of all Pakistanis reside. All of
that, if you take a look at being the poorest and least developed, but
you also look at one other factor, it is the richest in natural
resources of all the provinces of Pakistan. So what we have is a looting
of Balochistan by that clique that runs the Pakistani Government in a
way that does not, of course, benefit the people of Balochistan.
Until the arrival of the British Empire, the Baloch people had
organized themselves into sort of a confederation of tribal chiefs.
That is where the power was, very similar to Afghanistan’s tribal and
village system. And these people, the Balochi, who recognize themselves
as a national entity, they would like to control their own destiny
again. But the Balochi people have been terrorized and beaten into
submission by the Pakistani military.
We provide the Pakistani military with the weapons and the
resources they need to conduct their terrorism not only against their
neighbors, not only against Christians throughout the world, but against
their own people. The Pakistani military has been unrelenting in its
attacks and targeted terror raids against the Baloch population. Baloch
aspirations for independence have been checked by force and by denying
basic human rights and the unleashed brute force against them by a
basically state terrorist repression of their people by their own
government.
One particularly grotesque method of intimidation of the
Baloch is called “kill and dump.” That is when the body of a man or
woman who has disappeared from a village is later dumped in the middle
of that village. And who do you think is doing this? We are talking
about the Pakistani military authorities who are conducting this type of
terrorism on their own people, even, as we have said, the same people
who gave safe haven to bin Laden who had massacred 3,000 Americans, the
same people who offered their territory as a staging area to launch
attacks into Afghanistan supporting the Taliban.
This abysmal human rights record is the record of the
Pakistani Government, and it is shameful. It is shameful that we are
even considering giving a government like this more American aid, and we
are even going to have to borrow that aid from China to give it to them.
It is even worse, of course, because American foreign and
military aid contributes to the security forces which, of course, are
killing the Baloch. We are not just giving foreign aid; we are giving
military aid as well. The Baloch people have a right to
self-determination and not to live under the control of Islamabad if
that is what they choose. At the very least, no military aid should be
given to Pakistan to be used against its own people, whether they be
Baloch or Sindhi or any other minority.
I have already proposed legislation, H.R. 1790, to end all aid
to Pakistan, and have also offered amendments to both the Defense and
State Department authorization bills to end this aid, but what needs to
be seriously discussed is not just ending aid. We need to seriously
discuss a fundamental shift in America’s policy towards South Asia, a
strategy. We have had the same strategy since the cold war, but those
policies that we established during the cold war no longer make sense.
In the 1960s, China fought battles in both India and the
Soviet Union. The India-Soviet alignment at that point alienated the
United States during the cold war, and what resulted was clearly an
adversarial relationship with India.
When the Soviets invaded Afghanistan in 1979, the U.S. and
Pakistan worked together to support the Afghan insurgents who were then
battling against Soviet occupation troops. Yes, during the cold war,
Pakistan was an ally, but the cold war is over. And even then when we
fought with them, when they helped us support the mujahideen fight
against the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, they channeled our money,
they channeled the lion’s share of our support to radical Islamist
terrorists who should never have had any support from the United States.
Much of it went to a fellow named Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. This man is
horrendous. He has a horrendous record. Even then they knew that, when
this man was in college, he would throw acid into the faces of young
women who refused to wear burkas. And we were giving our aid to Pakistan
who gave it to a man like that?
Well, the cold war is over, and there is no reason for us to
give them aid that they can pass on to terrorists any more. Yes, the
cold war is over, and since the Soviet Union’s collapse in the early
1990s, basic elements of American security have fundamentally changed.
The Pakistani-China friendship since that time has deepened.
And who is our adversary today? It is no longer–Russia gets in the news,
but who is really our threat? Radical Islam and an emerging China that
is much more aggressive than the Russians could conceive of being.
It is ever more intense and is now clearer that an alliance
with India against Pakistan is in the interest of the United States
because Pakistan is clearly moving in the direction of becoming a
self-declared enemy of the United States even as we give them military
and other types of aid. Pakistan’s gut hostility towards India and its
shaping of its now ever-increasing alliance with China puts them not
only as an enemy to India, but as an adversary at the very least, an
adversary to the United States.
Pakistan is in partnership with terrorist groups like the
Taliban, and that is very clear to people who are active in that part of
the world. We should not be treating this enemy as a friend. In fact,
we should reach out to India and try to reestablish, just to
establish–perhaps not reestablish, but to establish a positive
relationship that will lead to a stronger stance for peace and stability
in that part of the world as we offset the terrorist support that is
coming from Pakistan.
We should not be treating an enemy country like
Pakistan as a friend. It will not make them our friend. It will,
instead, make them disdain us. They will disdain our giving people money
who are our enemies. They will look at it as we are cowardly; and it is
an example of such cowardice. We are giving billions to a military and a
government that is controlled by a military clique that despises us and
is cooperating with those who would destroy us. Not one cent to
Pakistan. The money going to Pakistan is going contrary to our
interests, to our security, and to the stability of South Asia. Let us
double our efforts to work with India and other countries in South and
Central Asia that truly desire to be America’s friends.
And nowhere, of course, is our hesitancy to do that, to reach
out and to try to support our friends, nowhere is that hesitancy more
evident than now and what we are doing with Egypt. I would call the
attention of the American people to what is going on in Egypt. In terms
of the long run, it is far more important to American security and the
stability of the world and world peace what is going on in Egypt right
now than what is happening in the Crimea right now.
The Egyptian army is the most potent force standing between
radical Islam and its objective to terrorize and subjugate whole
populations throughout the Middle East and thus put themselves into a
position of facing down and defeating Western civilization.
We are talking about radical Islamists who believe in what
they believe in. Just as in the cold war, the communists believed in
that gobbledygook. But the fact is, radical Islam sees that, and they
see Western civilization as the enemy, and the United States as the
foundation of Western civilization, and they see any government that is
trying to be democratic as their adversary and enemy.
It is clear the Egyptian people understood that when they
rejected the radical overtures of the former regime that was in power in
Egypt. They rose up against that government, the Morsi government, and
right now whether or not Egypt is a sucked into a turmoil and whether
radical Islam takes over that country, it is now in the hands of a very
few leaders of that country who are we shunning. It is clear that our
reluctance to back the stance of Egypt is emboldening the radical
Islamic terrorist elements who now will target Egypt because we are
hesitant to get behind General al-Sisi and the Egyptian military, who,
by the way, are committed to bringing back democratic elections and
having democratic elections and a democratic process as compared to the
regime that they will be replacing, which was dedicated to establishing
an Islamic caliphate and was in the process of trimming back the
democratic capabilities of the Egyptian people.
How ironic is it that if Egypt falls, there will be chaos and
radical Islamic expansionism in that part of world, and how important it
is for us not to have that for world stability and our own national
security. How ironic is it that we are holding back, but Russia, under
Mr. Putin, just last month provided, maybe 2 months ago, went over to
Egypt and provided $2 billion worth of military aid to help them defeat
radical Islam. Russia’s proposed arms deal with Egypt and its
endorsement of Egypt’s military ruler, General al-Sisi, and his efforts
to run for President is a signal to the Arab leaders that, unlike the
United States, Russia will back those courageous enough to take on the
radical Islamic threat to human freedom and human progress.
The Egyptian people were saved from Islamic extremist rule.
They were saved by a small group of people who we are putting roadblocks
in the way of General al-Sisi. We actually convinced the Egyptian
military to be dependent on the United States over the years, and now,
when they are in a crisis, we are refraining from selling them the
helicopters and the spare parts they need to thwart the radical Islamic
terrorists who threaten a battle in the Sinai desert. If we let the
Egyptian military down and we send that signal, we abandon them, as we
have abandoned Dr. Alfridi. No one in the world will ever trust us
again. There will be a major expansion of radical Islamic terrorist
regimes, and the world we know will be far less stable and far less
secure. Our country, and other democratic countries in the world, will
be in dramatic danger.
The Egyptian people were saved from Islamic extremist rule by a
very courageous group of people. We can’t let them hang out on a branch
by themselves. And yes, the United States and the rest of the world
were saved by the actions of a small group of people who stood up as
Morsi and the former government was cutting away the freedom of those
people and establishing this radical Islamic caliphate. Well, a small
group of courageous people stood up to side with the people who had gone
into the streets to oppose that and said, No, we are not going to let
this government superimpose this type of regime. It is contrary to the
will of the Egyptian people. And they have, I might add, put Egypt back
on a course towards free elections.
Egypt, of course, is one of the most strategic countries. Yet,
as I say, we don’t hear our administration, this administration, coming
here to plead the case about giving aid to those brave people in Egypt
who are fighting radical Islamic terrorism. Instead, they are requesting
hundred of millions of dollars, yes, over a billion dollars in aid to
Pakistan, which is aiding radical Islamic terrorists and siding with
China.
Well, if you think that none of this makes sense, you are
right, it doesn’t, but it is up to us, the American people, to hold our
own government accountable, to make sure that we do not give aid to our
enemies and to make sure that our government is doing things that make
sense. We should be sticking with our friends and opposing our enemies.
How much more common sense does it take, although our government has not
been operating that way. It is up to us, the American people, to make
sure that we do not give aid to Pakistan and we support those people who
would have Western democratic government in Egypt, and to support the
people like the Baloch and the Sindhis, who are struggling under the
oppression of radical Islamic terrorist regimes, to try to find their
own way and have their own government and have their own democratic
system
With that, Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time”, said Rep.ROHRABACHER.
http://groundreport.com/we-should-not-be-treating-an-enemy-country-like-pakistan-as-a-friend-says-rep-rohrabacher/#.UySkVFwSLnU.facebook
Source: http://thomas.loc.gov/
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