Obama 2010-11-20 Weekly Address

知识 奥巴马每周演讲-Obama's Weekly Address 第44期 2019-07-12 创建 播放:1317

介绍: Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
November 20, 2010

Today, I'd like to speak with you about an issue that is fundamental to America's national security: the need for the Senate to approve the New START Treaty this year.

This Treaty is rooted in a practice that dates back to R...

介绍: Remarks of President Barack Obama
Weekly Address
The White House
November 20, 2010

Today, I'd like to speak with you about an issue that is fundamental to America's national security: the need for the Senate to approve the New START Treaty this year.

This Treaty is rooted in a practice that dates back to Ronald Reagan. The idea is simple as the two nations with over 90 percent of the world's nuclear weapons, the United States and Russia have a responsibility to work together to reduce our arsenals. And to ensure that our national security is protected, the United States has an interest in tracking Russia's nuclear arsenal through a verification effort that puts U.S. inspectors on the ground. As President Reagan said when he signed a nuclear arms treaty with the Soviet Union in 1987, 'Trust, but verify.'

That is precisely what the New START Treaty does. After nearly a full year of negotiations, we completed an agreement earlier this year that cuts by a third the number of long-range nuclear weapons and delivery vehicles that the United States and Russia can deploy, while ensuring that America retains a strong nuclear deterrent, and can put inspectors back on the ground in Russia.

The Treaty also helped us reset our relations with Russia, which led to concrete benefits. For instance, Russia has been indispensable to our efforts to enforce strong sanctions on Iran, to secure loose nuclear material from terrorists, and to equip our troops in Afghanistan.

All of this will be put to risk if the Senate does not pass the New START Treaty.

Without ratification this year, the United States will have no inspectors on the ground, and no ability to verify Russian nuclear activities. So those who would block this treaty are breaking President Reagan's rule they want to trust, but not verify.

Without ratification, we put at risk the coalition that we have built to put pressure on Iran, and the transit route through Russia that we use to equip our troops in Afghanistan. And without ratification, we risk undoing decades of American leadership on nuclear security, and decades of bipartisanship on this issue. Our security and our position in the world are at stake.

Indeed, since the Reagan years, every President has pursued a negotiated, verified, arms reduction treaty. And every time that these treaties have been reviewed by the Senate, they have passed with over 85 votes. Bipartisan support for New START could not be stronger. It has been endorsed by Republicans from the Reagan Administration and both Bush Administrations including Colin Powell, George Shultz, Jim Baker, and Henry Kissinger. And it was approved by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee by a strong bipartisan vote of 14-4.

Over the last several months, several questions have been asked about New START, and we have answered every single one. Some have asked whether it will limit our missile defense it will not. Some, including Senator Jon Kyl, have asked that we modernize our nuclear infrastructure for the 21st century we are doing so, and plan to invest at least $85 billion in that effort over the next ten years a significant increase from the Bush Administration.

Finally, some make no argument against the Treaty they just ask for more time. But remember this: it has already been 11 months since we've had inspectors in Russia, and every day that goes by without ratification is a day that we lose confidence in our understanding of Russia's nuclear weapons. If the Senate doesn't act this year after six months, 18 hearings, and nearly a thousand questions answered it would have to start over from scratch in January.

The choice is clear: a failure to ratify New START would be a dangerous gamble with America's national security, setting back our understanding of Russia's nuclear weapons, as well as our leadership in the world. That is not what the American people sent us to Washington to do.

There is enough gridlock, enough bickering. If there is one issue that should unite us as Republicans and Democrats it should be our national security.

Some things are bigger than politics. As Republican Di(敏感)ck Lugar said the other day, 'Every Senator has an obligation in the national security interest to take a stand, to do his or her duty.'

Senator Lugar is right. And if the Senate passes this treaty, it will not be an achievement for Democrats or Republicans it will be a win for America.

Thanks.

  • 音乐开放平台
  • 云村交易所
  • X StudioAI歌手
  • 用户认证
  • AI 免费写歌
  • 云推歌
  • 赞赏

廉正举报 不良信息举报邮箱: 51jubao@service.netease.com

互联网宗教信息服务许可证:浙(2022)0000120 增值电信业务经营许可证:浙B2-20150198 粤B2-20090191-18  浙ICP备15006616号-4  工业和信息化部备案管理系统网站

网易公司版权所有©1997-2025杭州乐读科技有限公司运营:浙网文[2024] 0900-042号 浙公网安备 33010802013307号 算法服务公示信息