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Recent Press Releases

McConnell: ‘We Need to Ensure the American People Are Protected’

‘The president should spend his remaining months in office working to defeat ISIL. He should work with us to prepare the next Administration for the threats he’ll leave behind. He should not waste another minute on his myopic Guantanamo crusade.’

June 7, 2016

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today regarding the National Defense Authorization Act:

“The National Defense Authorization Act before us is important for our troops, it’s important for wounded warriors and veterans, and it’s important for national security.

“One way it will help keep Americans safe is by renewing clear prohibitions on President Obama’s ability to move dangerous Guantanamo terrorists into the U.S. — or release them to unstable regions like Libya, Yemen, and Somalia.

“Our country faces the most ‘diverse and complex array of crises’ since World War II, as Henry Kissinger observed last year, but President Obama nonetheless seems focused on pursuing a stale campaign pledge from 2008.

“The president should spend his remaining months in office working to defeat ISIL. He should work with us to prepare the next Administration for the threats he’ll leave behind. He should not waste another minute on his myopic Guantanamo crusade.

“Just about every detainee that could feasibly be released from the secure detention facility has already been released. Some have already returned to the fight as we feared. Some have even taken more innocent American life, according to the Obama Administration. But the bottom line is this.

“The hardcore terrorists who do remain are among the worst of the worst.

“Here’s how President Obama’s own Secretary of Defense put it, ‘[T]here are people in Gitmo who are so dangerous that we cannot transfer them to the custody of another government no matter how much we trust that government. I can’t assure the president that it would be safe to do that.’

“There’s Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the mastermind behind 9/11. He has declared himself the enemy of the United States.

“There’s the 9/11 coordinator who was planning even more strikes when captured. And there’s Bin Laden’s former bodyguard, a terrorist who helped with the bombing of the USS Cole and trained to be a suicide hijacker for what was to be the Southeast Asia portion of the 9/11 attacks.

“These terrorists are among the worst of the worst. They belong at the secure detention facility. Not in facilities here in our communities. Not in unstable countries where they’re liable to rejoin the fight and take more innocent life. And have no doubt, there are detainees who would almost certainly rejoin terrorist organizations if given the opportunity.

“Here’s what the Office of the Director of National Intelligence found in a report this year, ‘Based on trends identified during the past eleven years, we assess that some detainees currently at GTMO will seek to reengage in terrorist or insurgent activities after they are transferred.’

“The next Commander-in-Chief, whether Democrat or Republican, will assume office confronting a complex and varied array of threats. That’s why we must use the remaining months of the Obama Administration as a year of transition to better posture the incoming administration and our country.

“What we should not be doing is making it even more challenging for the next president to meet these threats.

“Releasing hardcore terrorists was a bad idea when Obama was campaigning in 2008, it's an even worse idea today.

“We live in a complex world with complex threats.

“The NDAA before us will renew clear prohibitions against Administration attempts to transfer these terrorists to the U.S. on its way out the door. We don’t need to close a secure detention center; we need to ensure the American people are protected.

“Passing the legislation before us represents an important step in that direction. It will help position our military to confront the challenges of tomorrow. It will help support the men and women serving in harm’s way today.

“I thank the Chairman of the Armed Services Committee for his good work on this important bill. I thank the Ranking Member as well.”

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made the following remarks on the Senate floor today regarding the National Defense Authorization Act:

“After needless and inexplicable delay by colleagues across the aisle, we will begin consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act today and work to pass it this week.

“The NDAA authorizes funds aimed at meeting the combat readiness needs of our armed services, maintaining our national security posture, and supporting defense health care and benefits for service members and their families.

“It’s an important measure we consider each year.

“It’s especially critical today given the myriad threats facing our country.

“The next Commander-in-Chief, regardless of party, will take office facing a number of security challenges — everything from instability in Libya, Syria, and Yemen to a belligerent North Korea to a newly aggressive Russia. It’s imperative to do what we can now to better position our country to confront challenges currently facing us and to better prepare for those yet to come.

“Ensuring military readiness and keeping Americans safe should be a top priority for all of us.

“So I encourage my colleagues to put aside partisan politics and work together to bring this NDAA across the finish line this week.

“We may pass the bill on Friday, we may pass it sooner, but our aim is to pass it this week so let’s all work hard to do so.”

McConnell Honors The Greatest

‘His story was an American story. It’s one that touched people in every corner of the world. It’s one that began in my hometown of Louisville.’

June 6, 2016

WASHINGTON, D.C.U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell delivered the following remarks on the Senate floor today honoring the life and legacy of Muhammad Ali:

“Over the weekend the world learned the sad news of the passing of Muhammad Ali.

“Ali was one of the preeminent athletes of the 20th century.

“His story was an American story.

“It’s one that touched people in every corner of the world.

“It’s one that began in my hometown of Louisville.

“Louisville is where he grew up. Louisville is where he fought his first professional fight. Louisville is where the Muhammad Ali Center stands today.

“It’s a memorial to his legacy and to his life story.

“It’s where mourners now lay flowers in his memory.

“As people around the world honor The Greatest, the spotlight shines bright upon his hometown. I wish to again add my condolences too.

“I wish to again recognize a legend from Louisville who was more than just a boxer — he was an icon known for grace on his feet and power in his fists inside the ring, and a great exuberance for life outside it.”