I rise in strong opposition to this incredibly dangerous legislation. I hope my colleagues are not fooled by the title of this bill, “Declaring genocide in Darfur, Sudan.” This resolution is no statement of humanitarian concern for what may be happening in a country thousands of miles from the United States. Rather, it could well lead to war against the African country of Sudan. The resolution “urges the Bush Administration to seriously consider multilateral or even unilateral intervention to prevent genocide should the United Nations Security Council fail to act.” We must realize the implications of urging the president to commit the United States to intervene in an ongoing civil war in a foreign land thousands of miles away.
This resolution was never marked-up in the House International Relations Committee, on which I serve. Therefore, members of that committee had no opportunity to amend it or express their views before it was sent to the floor for a vote. Like too many highly controversial bills, it was rushed onto the suspension calendar (by House rules reserved for “non-controversial” legislation) at the last minute. Perhaps there was a concern that if members had more time to consider the bill they would cringe at the resolutions call for U.S. military action in Sudan particularly at a time when our military is stretched to the breaking point. The men and women of the United States Armed Forces risk their lives to protect and defend the United States. Can anyone tell me how sending thousands of American soldiers into harm’s way in Sudan is by any stretch of the imagination in the U.S. national interest or in keeping with the Constitutional function of this countrys military forces? I urge my colleagues in the strongest terms to reject this dangerous resolution.