Congressional Record: April 19, 2005 (Senate)
Page S3942-S3956

 
                           TEXT OF AMENDMENTS
[...]


  SA 559. Mr. ROBERTS submitted an amendment intended to be proposed to 
amendment SA 437 submitted by Mr. Rockefeller and intended to be 
proposed to the bill H.R. 1268, making emergency supplemental 
appropriations for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2005, to 
establish and rapidly implement regulations for State driver's license 
and identification document security standards, to prevent terrorists 
from abusing the asylum laws of the United States, to unify terrorism-
related grounds for inadmissibility and removal, to ensure expeditious 
construction of the San Diego border fence, and for other purposes; 
which was ordered to lie on the table; as follows:

       In lieu of the matter proposed to be inserted, insert the 
     following:


                            sense of senate

       Sec. __. (a) Findings.--The Senate makes the following 
     findings:
       (1) On September 11, 2001, terrorists hijacked and 
     destroyed four civilian aircraft, crashing two of them into 
     the towers of the World Trade Center in New York, New York, 
     and a third into the Pentagon outside Washington, District of 
     Columbia.
       (2) The valor of the passengers and crew on the fourth 
     aircraft prevented it from also being used as a weapon 
     against the United States.
       (3) The September 11, 2001, attacks stand as the deadliest 
     terrorist attacks ever perpetrated against the United States.
       (4) By targeting symbols of American strength and success, 
     the attacks clearly were intended to assail the principles, 
     values, and freedoms of the United States and the American 
     people, to intimidate the Nation, and to weaken the national 
     resolve.
       (5) On September 14, 2001, Congress, in Public Law 107-40, 
     authorized the use of ``all necessary and appropriate force'' 
     against those responsible for the terrorist attacks.
       (6) The Armed Forces subsequently moved swiftly against Al 
     Qaeda and the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, whom the 
     President and Congress had identified as enemies of the 
     United States.
       (7) In doing so, brave servicemembers and intelligence 
     officers left family and friends in order to defend the 
     Nation.
       (8) More than three years later, many servicemembers and 
     intelligence officers remain abroad, shielding the Nation 
     from further terrorist attacks.
       (9) Terrorists continue to attack United States 
     servicemembers and continue to plan attacks against the 
     United States and its interests.
       (10) Terrorists continue to target civilians and military 
     personnel alike through such insidious and cowardly methods 
     as kidnappings and bombings.
       (11) Intelligence information derived from the 
     interrogation of captured terrorists is essential to the 
     protection of servicemembers deployed around world, to the 
     protection of the homeland, and to the protection of United 
     States interests.
       (12) It is the policy of the President and Congress that 
     the interrogation of terrorists conform to the Constitution, 
     laws, and treaty obligations of the United States.
       (13) In those rare instances in which individuals have been 
     alleged to have violated the Constitution, laws, or treaty 
     obligations of the United States during the course of an 
     interrogation, the departments and agencies of the United 
     States Government, and the inspectors general of each 
     department or agency concerned, have investigated allegations 
     of such violations.
       (14) In the few cases in which officers of the United 
     States intelligence community are determined to have actually 
     violated the Constitution, laws, or treaty obligations of the 
     United States, such officers have been, or should be, 
     punished.
       (15) The Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate was 
     established, among other things, to provide vigorous 
     legislative oversight of the intelligence activities of the 
     United States in order to assure that such activities conform 
     to the Constitution, laws, and treaty obligations of the 
     United States.
       (16) The Select Committee on Intelligence of the Senate was 
     deliberately structured with a unified staff under the joint 
     supervision of the Chairman and the Vice Chairman of the 
     Select Committee through a single staff director in order to 
     avoid, to the maximum extent possible, the politicization of 
     oversight of the intelligence activities of the United 
     States. Because of its unique structure and rules, as 
     currently written, the Select Committee is ideally suited to 
     continue oversight of United States interrogation, detention, 
     and rendition operations.
       (17) The Chairman and Vice Chairman of the Select Committee 
     on Intelligence of the Senate have directed the staff of the 
     Select Committee to continue to exercise the oversight 
     authority of the Select Committee to ensure that intelligence 
     activities of the United States relating to the detention, 
     interrogation, and rendition of terrorists conform to the 
     Constitution, laws, and treaty obligations of the United 
     States.
       (18) As part of its ongoing review, the staff of the Select 
     Committee on Intelligence of the Senate have interviewed 
     individuals and reviewed documents relating to the detention, 
     interrogation, and rendition of terrorists, and have 
     inspected United States detention and interrogation 
     operations and facilities in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
       (19) The staff of the Select Committee on Intelligence of 
     the Senate continue to interview individuals, receive 
     information, and review documents relating to the detention, 
     interrogation, and rendition of terrorists.
       (b) Sense of Senate.--It is the sense of the Senate--
       (1) to recognize that terrorists continue to seek to attack 
     the United States at home and the interests of the United 
     States abroad;
       (2) to stand with the people of the United States in great 
     debt to the members of the Armed Forces and officers of the 
     United States intelligence community serving at home and 
     abroad;
       (3) to remain resolved to pursue all those responsible for 
     the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and their 
     sponsors, until they are discovered and punished; and
       (4) to reaffirm that Congress will--
       (A) honor the memory of those who lost their lives as a 
     result of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks; and
       (B) bravely defend the citizens of the United States in the 
     face of all future challenges.
                                 ______