C. David Welch
Assistant Secretary, Near Eastern Affairs Bureau
House Foreign Affairs Committee
Subcommittee on the Middle East and South Asia
“U.S.
Assistance to the Middle East”
Chairman Ackerman, Congressman Pence, and distinguished Members of
the Committee, it is a privilege to appear before you today.
Our Fiscal Year (FY) 2009 budget request reflects the centrality
of the Middle East to United
States foreign policy, our strategic
commitment to our partners’ security, and our enduring interests in the region. This request reflects an integrated approach managed by the office of the Director
of Foreign Assistance between the Department of State and USAID.
In the Middle East, U.S.
assistance provides a key means to address some of our most pressing
and important commitments. Long-term peace,
stability, and economic growth in the region are critical to our national
security. The United States and our regional
partners are involved in a sustained effort to address pivotal issues affecting
the balance between moderates and extremists across the region. Assistance will strengthen and expand U.S.
capacity for engagement by enhancing our ability to jointly pursue solutions to
vital national security issues and combat terrorism and extremism by promoting
freedom, democracy, and access to economic opportunity.
Our concept for the region is
to support peaceful solutions and to strengthen the hand of democratic leaders
against extremists who use violence, repress fundamental freedoms and seek to
undermine our interests and our friends.
Our FY 2009 budget reflects our continued focus on providing security
assistance to our allies to promote our objectives--building well-governed,
democratic states, promoting human rights and reducing poverty requires a foundation
in security.
Our diplomacy is married up with our programmatic
activities across the region in pursuit of our priorities. These priorities begin with a positive
outcome in Iraq. Other key U.S. priorities include sustaining the
security of Israel; advancing a two state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict; countering the Iranian threat; enhancing the defensive capabilities
of our friends in the Gulf; strengthening relations with responsible states in
the region, including Egypt, Jordan, and the Gulf states; and supporting
Lebanese democracy and sovereignty. In
addition, the U.S.
will continue to promote efforts involving political, economic, and educational
reform, which contribute to our long-term efforts in the war against terror.
In Iraq,
we must continue to support increased security and national reconciliation
efforts for Iraq,
promote moderates, and empower the Iraqi Government to take increasing
responsibility for the future of the country.
We have seen important progress in recent months, yet the events of the
last few weeks demonstrate that the situation is fragile and requires our
continued focus and support.
Assistance for Iraq will be used to improve the
capacity of the Government of Iraq to deliver essential services to its
citizens; build strong governance structures; enhance civil society
institutions; expand economic reforms; bolster Iraq’s private sector economy;
implement key measures needed to decrease sectarian and ethnic violence;
strengthen the foundation for rule of law and human rights; and enhance
governance in Iraq’s regions, provinces, and local municipalities. This request includes economic and governance
reform programs that take advantage of recent security gains to help Iraqis
transition to self sufficiency.
With the approach of the sixtieth anniversary of the
State of Israel, our commitment to the security of this key ally is stronger
than ever. This past August, the United States and Israel signed a memorandum of
understanding that will underpin our security relationship through 2018. The arrangement calls for $30 billion to be
provided to Israel
over ten years, understanding that this is subject to the availability and
annual appropriation of foreign assistance funding. This will allow Israel to maintain its qualitative
military edge and to strengthen its ability to defend itself against regional
threats and terrorism.
Israeli-Palestinian peace is a top foreign policy
priority. It is essential to the
long-term security of the State of Israel and a long overdue step that would
improve the future for Israelis and Palestinians alike. We are actively engaged in efforts to support
Israel
and the Palestinians as they negotiate core issues with the goal of reaching a
peace agreement by the end of this year.
Robust foreign assistance in support of the current Palestinian
Authority government, which is firmly committed to peace and has staked its
reputation on its ability to work constructively with Israel toward a two-state
solution, is critical to ensuring that a future Palestinian state will be
democratic, capable of providing law and order, economically viable, and a
source of stability in the region.
U.S. economic support funds (ESF) will support the
Palestinian Authority’s Palestinian Reform and Development Plan and the PA’s
efforts to reform the Palestinian economy, strengthen rule of law, improve
local infrastructure, build institutional capacity, create jobs and promote
initiatives in health and education.
Egypt is a critical regional partner and a key player in
the pursuit of a comprehensive Israeli-Palestinian peace. Our assistance to Egypt
is evolving in response to Egypt’s
improving economic situation. The level
of ESF for Egypt has been gradually reduced to
$200 million, a significant decline since the 1990s. Our economic assistance program currently
focuses on benchmarked policy reform/cash transfer arrangements, specifically,
reforming Egypt’s
financial sector, as well as promoting democracy, human rights and governance,
creating private sector jobs, providing health services, and improving basic
education. A portion of the $200 million
is also dedicated to democracy and governance programs, including working with
Egyptian civil society and NGOs. Our FMF
budget of $1.3 billion strengthens our strategic partnership with Egypt by helping to modernize the Egyptian
military and enabling Egypt
to acquire systems and equipment that are aligned with our shared security
goals.
Funds for Lebanon will support our end-goal of maintaining
a sovereign, stable, democratic, and economically viable Lebanon. Assistance programs will provide the security
services with the ability to maintain law and order, combat a growing terrorist
threat, and implement all provisions of UN Security Council resolutions 1559
and 1701. Lebanon ESF will be used to
establish transparent, credible, and democratic governing institutions,
educational and civil society institutions, economic growth, humanitarian
assistance, and health initiatives.
A key element to security in the region is countering
the Iranian threat. Foreign Military Financing
(FMF) increases to Bahrain and
Oman
will enhance the self-defense capabilities and coordination of our partners in
the Gulf. This assistance will help
strengthen our increased efforts with the Gulf States to support our peace and
security goals in the region.
As we confront the Iranian threat, we note that our
door remains open to friendship with the Iranian people. Our FY 2009 ESF request for Iran reflects
this Administration’s commitment to strengthening Iran’s civil society, providing
greater access to unbiased information, increasing awareness of human rights,
promoting good governance and anti-corruption efforts, and increasing
opportunities for academic, professional, and cultural exchanges.
Our steadfast ally Jordan is providing significant support
to our operations in Iraq
and other shared strategic objectives in the Middle East. Jordan is a moderate leader in the
region. Our security assistance to Jordan
will focus on training and equipping peacekeepers, enhancing military
professionalism, improving counterterrorism capabilities, and strengthening
border security. Our economic assistance
will promote Jordan’s
economic growth, help address the needs of Iraqi refugees in Jordan, support Jordan on its path toward political
reform in the area of democracy and governance.
Economic support funds across
the region will be used to promote reform, democracy and human rights, and
promote democratic leaders in the region.
The Middle East Partnership Initiative is a critical tool that allows us
to look broadly across the region and rapidly respond to indigenous reform
efforts. Funds will be used to redress
the deficits in the region associated with unaccountable, undemocratic
governments, weak educational systems, inadequate government services, and
economies that provide insufficient job opportunities for young people. Funding will also be used to support women’s
empowerment.
Stepping outside of the
Middle East, we see the growing extremist threat in North
Africa and the need to provide support to governments and their
counterterrorism efforts, including addressing the flow of foreign fighters
into other regions. We are seeking funds
for Trans-Sahara Counter-Terrorism Partnership (TSCTP) activities in the Maghreb to support individual country and regional
capabilities to defeat terrorist organizations, disrupt efforts to recruit and
train new terrorist fighters, and counter efforts to establish safe havens for
domestic and outside extremist groups.
Robust assistance levels for
the region remain essential to promote regional peace and stability and to
advance the vital foreign policy interests of the United States. Sustained,
appropriate foreign assistance levels in the region are essential to
confronting the gravest threats to our national security and will strengthen
and expand the capacity of our partners to help us meet important U.S. political,
economic, and security goals.
Equally essential are resources
to ensure the strength of our regional diplomatic presence. During the Cold War, we allocated significant
resources to counter the Soviet threat.
For the most part, this did not entail large diplomatic missions in the Middle East.
Today the need for a strong U.S. diplomatic profile in the Middle
East has increased along with the extent to which the threats to
our national security emanate from the region.
We need to ensure that our posts are appropriately staffed, that our
diplomats are adequately trained, to include training in critical languages,
and that our diplomats in the field have the resources necessary to help
counter the threats they face. This
includes armored vehicles and sufficient security protection, safe facilities
and housing and support for an unprecedented pace of operations. Where appropriate, it includes incentives for
service in unaccompanied and high hardship posts, including support for
separated family members. Maintaining a
robust diplomatic presence is an integral element in countering those who
oppose our interests and the security of our allies in the region. While sometimes the appropriate response to a
diplomatically unwelcoming atmosphere is to reduce our presence, more often
than not it is to ensure that presence remains strong.
During the Cold War, the men
and women of the Department of State and other civilian agencies viewed
themselves as privileged to serve their country abroad in challenging
times. My colleagues serving in the Middle East today bring the same spirit of dedication and
patriotism to their missions. I am proud
to serve with them and on their behalf thank you for your support.