Global Security
Issues Influence Economic Future
In an alarming turn, Pakistan effectively conceded an area in its northwest
region to the Taliban on Monday by agreeing to impose Sharia religious law on
its residents. The truce suspends an effort by the Pakistani government to fight
the insurgents and creates a Taliban sanctuary.
Since the terrorist attacks on our country on 9/11, I have taken an active
interest in the Middle East and it continues to be an essential front for global
security challenges. During the President’s Day Work Period, I traveled to
Jordan with several of my colleagues, including U.S. Sens. Richard Lugar
(R-Ill.) and John Kerry (D-Mass.), who head the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Howard Berman (D-Calif.),
to meet with King Abdullah II of Jordan, a close U.S. ally, and top policy
experts from the region.
This bi-partisan, bi-cameral meeting was one of the most instructive, timely and
beneficial sessions that I have participated in during my 14 years in Congress.
These complex global security issues affect the people we represent and the
great challenges in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan determine not only the
security of the entire world, but also our economic future.
We are truly in the middle of a global recession that has been dramatically
affected by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Our brave troops have been spread thin
through these long and difficult struggles. But the geopolitical situation in
Pakistan is so fragile that the biggest security challenge of our generation may
be in the mountainous region that lies between Afghanistan and Pakistan known as
the federally authorized tribal area (FATA).
As a Member of the 111th Congress, my first priority is to help lead our nation
toward security and prosperity at this time of great concern and trepidation.
The reality of the world we operate in today is that our nation must do a better
job of deciding where and how we intervene in the world, outlining our
objectives in each case with a clear understanding of how success will be
defined and measured, what it will take to succeed and what is required to exit.
Many Members of Congress spent the week selling the benefits, or lack thereof,
in the recently enacted “stimulus bill” that passed Congress on a very sharp –
near total – partisan divide. The temptation for many in Washington is to think
that if our nation borrows enough money and spends it on social programs that we
will somehow recover economically.
Along the path to security, prudence would call for fiscal responsibility at
home so that the greatest nation in history will remain strong enough
economically to lead the world out of this downturn with attention to freedom,
human rights, global security and our national sovereignty.
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