| Senator
Ensign understands that policies made in the United
States deeply affect people and relationships all over
the world. While the Global War on Terror has dramatically
altered the international landscape, there are several
specific areas in which Senator Ensign has focused on
making a difference. |
| United
Nations Reform |
|
One
priority for Senator Ensign is to reform the United
Nations and hold the organization accountable for
the tremendous injustices it has committed. The United
Nations is clearly broken. There are three glaring
examples of why the United Nations is in need of reform:
|
| It
is now been three years since we first learned of the
Oil-for-Food
scandal in which Saddam Hussein, corrupt U.N. officials,
and corrupt well-connected countries cheated the Oil-for-Food
humanitarian program and stole millions of dollars intended
for starving and ill Iraqi citizens. Senator Ensign
led the effort for a United States government investigation
into the scandal and called for withholding a portion
of America’s dues to the United Nations until
the organization provides full cooperation with the
investigation into the Oil-for-Food scandal. |
|
The
United Nations coddles human rights abusers. At its
inception the U.N. Human Rights Council promised to
deliver more robust action against true human rights
abusers than its predecessor, the U.N. Commission
on Human Rights. However, its first act was to allow
countries complicit in human rights abuses, namely
Iran, to be eligible for membership. Following this
announcement the United States rightly stood firm
on its principles and declined to participate. During
this debate last year, Senator Ensign offered an amendment
to deny funding to the Council if human rights violators
remained eligible for membership. Unfortunately, the
amendment failed on a 50-50 vote.
It
is now the second year of the Council and, given its
record, the United States again stood firm and announced
its decision not to participate and lend legitimacy
to a body that failed to target the true systematic
abusers of human rights. The Council plans to make
Israel the only country on its permanent investigation
of human rights abuses agenda. During debate of the
Senate Budget Resolution, Senator Ensign again offered
an amendment that would have denied funding to the
Council; however, it was blocked from receiving a
vote. |
| The
United Nations fails to maintain budget discipline.
Senator Ensign introduced amendments
to withhold portions of our U.N. dues until the Secretary
of State certified that the United Nations had maintained
a no-growth budget and had an independent Inspector
General. |
|
The United Nations
fails to give the United States credit for all that
we do to support U. N. missions in addition to contributing
through dues. That is why in 2005, the Senate passed
Senator Ensign’s amendment to require an annual
report on the costs incurred by the Department
of Defense in implementing or supporting resolutions
of the U.N. Security Council. |
|
|
Israel
For more than 50 years, Israel has been a loyal ally
and beacon of democracy in a volatile region where
such friendships are rare. Senator Ensign understands
the strength and value of that relationship. Israel
and the United States are bound together
by shared values, such as democracy and freedom. We
are also joined by shared threats including terrorism,
the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction by
rogue regimes, and the spread of Islamic radicalism.
It is in the vital interest of America to support
a free and prosperous Israel. No other country in
that region supports our nation’s interests
as consistently as Israel, and we are safer because
of this ally and friend.
Senator
Ensign has been a strong supporter of Israel throughout
his time in public office. He has consistently voted
to ensure that Israel receives the financial aid necessary
to advance economic development and military security.
He believes Israel is the best judge of its security
needs and should be able to respond as it sees fit
without pressure from the United States. Israel should
be able to take steps such as building a security
fence and unilateral withdrawal to ensure its homeland
security and prevent further attacks. He also endorses
Israel’s right to respond to attacks against
its citizens by going after the terrorists where they
hide—as the United States itself has done.
|
Senator
Ensign has taken the lead on important measures which promote
the vital interests of the United States and Israel: |
|
Coauthored
a letter
with Senator Bill Nelson (D-NE) to Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice urging the Secretary to continue
to hold firm and insist on the three basic obligations
outlined by the Quartet that the Palestinian Authority
must meet before receiving direct aid: recognition
of Israel’s right to exist; a renunciation of
violence and terror; and acceptance of previous Israeli
– Palestinian agreements. This letter had the
support of 79 senators. |
| Cosponsor
of the Iran
Counter-Proliferation Act of 2007. The
Iran Counter-Proliferation Act outlines Iran’s
long pursuit of a secret nuclear weapons program and
its continued defiance of U.N. Security Council mandates.
This legislation urges the Administration to pursue
measures in the international financial sector to
restrict financing in Iran and encourages foreign
state-owned entities to cease investment in Iran’s
Energy Sector. Also, it forbids any action that would
extend preferential trade treatment to Iran or that
would lead to Iranian accession to the WTO. |
| Sponsored
the bipartisan Israeli-Palestinian
Peace Enhancement Act which codifies
President Bush’s June 24, 2002, Rose Garden
speech. It expresses the Senate's expectation that
the Palestinian Authority must meet certain conditions
before a Palestinian state is recognized, including
a leadership not compromised by terrorism, a firm
commitment to peace with Israel, the dismantling of
terrorist infrastructures in the West Bank and Gaza,
sustained security cooperation with Israel, and an
end to anti-Israel incitement. It provides concrete,
positive incentives for the Palestinians to achieve
the reforms and a negotiated peace with Israel by
authorizing significant U.S. assistance to build the
new state when it comes into being and has been recognized
by the United States and Israel—conditions that
can only occur in the absence of terrorism. |
| Sponsored
a Senate
resolution which passed to condemn Syria’s
interference in the sovereignty, territorial integrity,
and political independence of Lebanon. |
| Authored
a bipartisan
letter to President Bush to press for
the adoption of a common G-8 strategy to confront
Iran’s nuclear threat, including the use of
multilateral economic sanctions. Undersecretary of
State John Bolton distributed the letter at the 2004
G-8 Summit. |
| Responsible
for the removal of a provision in the NASA Authorization
Act that would have undermined ILSA. |
| Original
cosigner of a letter
expressing concern over Hamas participation in the
Palestinian legislative elections. |
| Cosponsor
of a resolution
urging the EU to classify Hezbollah as a terrorist
organization. |
|
|
Cuba
Senator Ensign believes that it is a travesty
that, more than a decade after the Cold War ended,
a brutal communist dictator is still oppressing people
90 miles from our shores. Cuba is one of five remaining
countries certified by the Department of State as
not cooperating fully with the efforts of the United
States to combat terrorism—a situation that
represents significant human and security concerns.
He understands that our challenge, our mission, is
to help the Cuban people to join the 21st Century
as a free nation.
It
is for these reasons that Senator Ensign is a strong
supporter of the trade embargo. He recognizes that
in Cuba you cannot do business with individual Cubans–you
can only do business with Castro. Under these conditions,
American travel, trade, and investment would do nothing
to promote democracy and entrepreneurship. It would
only help Castro prop up Cuba's teetering economy
and perpetuate his dictatorship, directly subsidizing
the oppression of the Cuban people.
Senator
Ensign is also a strong supporter of the travel regulations.
Under Cuba’s totalitarian regime, a system of
tourist apartheid has been implemented whereby ordinary
Cubans are denied equal access to hotels, beaches,
restaurants, clinics, and hospitals set aside for
tourists. Meanwhile, tourists are put in hotels and
enclaves that are literally walled off from the rest
of Cuba, and every employee of those hotels must be
hired through the Cuban government. Thus, the money
spent at these hotels goes directly to feed Castro's
government.
During
Senator Ensign’s time in the Senate, he has
pursued a three-pronged strategy to aid the Cuban
people and undermine Castro. First, he has highlighted
the plight of the pro-democracy opposition and political
prisoners in Cuba in order to stress moral clarity
and assure them that the United States stands by their
side. Second, he has worked to strengthen civil society
in Cuba in order to provide a counterbalance to the
Castro regime and prepare for an eventual transition
to democracy. Finally, he has prevented and defeated,
at times single-handedly, efforts to undermine the
travel and trade embargo.
|
| His
legislative record speaks and will continue to speak
for itself: |
| Sponsor
of the bipartisan Cuba
Transition Act of 2006
to support multilateral efforts to plan for a
Cuba transition; to provide funds to assist the Cuban
people and independent nongovernmental organizations
in Cuba to build civil society; and to establish a
fund, called the Fund for Free Cuba, to provide assistance
to a future transition government in Cuba (as defined
by Helms-Burton). |
| Sponsor
of a successful Senate resolution
that called upon the Organization of American States
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, the European
Union, and human rights activists throughout the world
to take certain actions in regard to the violations
of human rights in Cuba. |
| Sponsor
of a successful Senate amendment
to the Foreign Operations Appropriations Act of 2004,
which increased financial and infrastructure aid to
the Cuban people and support for democracy-building
efforts. |
| Architect
of the Senate strategy to block amendments seeking
to lift the travel ban to Cuba. |
| Architect
of the Senate strategy to block amendments seeking
to provide direct and indirect financing mechanisms
to the Castro regime for agricultural sales. |
| Helped
in the defection of the Havana Nights Dance Troupe
to Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2004. |
|
|
Press
Releases:
| February
19, 2008 |
|
ENSIGN
STATEMENT ON FIDEL CASTRO'S RESIGNATION |
| October
23, 2007 |
|
ENSIGN:
LET'S BE RESPONSIBLE WITH SOCIAL SECURITY DOLLARS |
| August
9, 2007 |
|
ENSIGN:
AMERICA COMPETES ACT LAYS FOUNDATION BY INVESTING IN FUTURE
GENERATIONS |
| May
9, 2007 |
|
ENSIGN:
AMERICA NEEDS REAL ENERGY SOLUTIONS |
| March
14 2007 |
|
SENATORS
DURBIN AND ENSIGN INTRODUCE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION |
|
Additional
Information:
| May
8, 2008 |
|
Ensign
EXTRA Join Me In Celebrating Israel's 60th Anniversary
|
| October
20, 2004 |
|
ARMENIAN
NATIONAL COMMITTEE OF AMERICA PRAISES REPUBLICAN SENATOR JOHN
ENSIGN OF NEVADA |
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MORE FOREIGN RELATIONS NEWS>>>
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