December 13, 2006 On December 6,
2006,
Hispanic News called for the
appointment of Rep. Silvestre Reyes
as Chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee be Rescinded.
In a surprise conflict in the debate
over Iraq, Rep. Silvestre Reyes, the
soon-to-be chairman of the House
Intelligence Committee, said he
wants to see an increase of 20,000
to 30,000 U.S. troops as part of a
stepped up effort to dismantle the
militias. Reyes said, "Such ideas
proposed by the Baker Hamilton
report are not likely to
substantially change my own views on
the subject. This is my position.
Speaker designate Nancy Pelosi chose
Reyes as the new head of the
intelligence panel primarily because
Pelosi wanted somebody who would be
more aggressive in standing up to
the Bush policy on the war in Iraq.
It certainly did not hurt Reyes is
Hispanic and Hispanics played a
significant role in changing the
Congress from Republican to
Democrat. This could become a prime
factor in 2008.
Mr. Reyes has served on the House
Intelligence Committee since 2001
and has been briefed countless times
on Iraq, Israel, Jordon, Lebanon,
Syria, al-Qaeda, Hezbollah, Kurds,
Sunni and Shiites along with travel
to Iraq five times, Afghanistan
three times and recent trips to
Lebanon and Israel.
Mr. Reyes has considerable
experience as a member of the House
Intelligence Committee plus Reyes
was an early opponent of the Iraq
war and voted against the October
2002 resolution authorizing
President Bush to invade that
country. That dovish record was the
basis for the Reyes appointment.
As the incoming Democratic chairman
of the House intelligence committee,
Reyes was asked last week by
national security editor Jeff Stein,
a reporter with Congressional
Quarterly, whether al-Qaeda was
Sunni or Shiite. "Predominantly --
probably Shiite," Reyes replied.
Reyes could not describe Hezbollah
and incorrectly described al-Qaeda's
Islamic roots in a recent interview.
From Osama bin Laden down,
al-Qaeda's leadership is
comprehensively Sunni and subscribes
to a form of Sunni Islam known for
not tolerating theological
deviation.
In fact, U.S. officials blame
al-Qaeda's late leader in Iraq, Abu
Musab al-Zarqawi, for the surge in
sectarian violence between Sunnis
and Shiites.
Asked to describe the Lebanese
militant group Hezbollah, according
to a story published online, Reyes
responded "Hezbollah. Uh, Hezbollah"
and then said, "Why do you ask me
these questions at 5 o'clock?"
The Texas congressman later added:
"Speaking only for myself, it's hard
to keep things in perspective and in
the categories."
Reyes calling for 30,000 more troops
be sent to Iraq and now confusion on
who or what is Hezbollah (the Shi'a
Islamist terrorist and political
organization based in Lebanon and
backed by Iran and Syria), it is
utterly incomprehensible after 5
years on the Intelligence Committee;
Mr. Reyes would not know the name of
one of the most noted terrorist
groups in the world. Mr. Reyes is
simply out of touch with world
affairs and does not have the
qualifications required to be the
highest ranked Congressmen in the
House Intelligence Committee.
As alarming as not knowing about
Hezbollah, Mr. Reyes lacks
understanding of the al-Qaida
terrorist network and other Islamist
extremists.
Reyes didn't know that al-Qaida was
a Sunni organization, and couldn't
pin down Hezbollah's Shiite
affiliations, during the interview
The differences between the Sunni
and Shiites are more than semantics.
Islam's 1,400-year-old rift is
playing out in deadly fashion across
Iraq, where ordinary citizens are
caught in a crossfire between
insurgents, terrorists and militias
motivated by politics and religion.
For the past 5 months, the Israel
invasion of Beirut with the conflict
leading to war in Lebanon has been
in the news around the world with
repeated stories of Hezbollah, the
Shi'a Islamist terrorist and
political organization based in
Lebanon and backed by Iran and Syria
that has been in the news since July
12 to the October 1 when Israel
withdrew from Lebanon.
The 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict,
known in Lebanon as the July War and
in Israel as the Second Lebanon War,
was a military conflict in Lebanon
and northern Israel, primarily
between Hezbollah paramilitary
forces and the Israeli military.
The conflict killed over 1,400
people, most of whom were Lebanese
civilians, severely damaged Lebanese
infrastructure, displaced about
900,000 Lebanese and 300,000
Israelis and disrupted normal life
across all of Lebanon and northern
Israel. Even after the ceasefire,
256,000 Lebanese remained internally
displaced, and much of Southern
Lebanon remained uninhabitable due
to unexploded cluster bombs.
On August 11, 2006, the United
Nations Security Council unanimously
approved UN Resolution 1701 in an
effort to end the hostilities. The
resolution, which was approved by
both Lebanese and Israeli
governments the following days,
called for the disarming of
Hezbollah, for Israel to withdraw,
and for the deployment of Lebanese
soldiers and an enlarged United
Nations Interim Force in Lebanon
force in southern Lebanon. The
Lebanese army began deploying in
southern Lebanon on August 17, 2006.
The blockade was lifted on September
8, 2006. On October 1, 2006, most
Israeli troops withdrew from
Lebanon, though the last of the
troops continued to occupy the
border-straddling village of Ghajar
until December 3, 2006.
We commend the Speaker for
acknowledging the importance of
American Hispanic participation at
the chairperson level but Mr. Reyes
is an embarrassment to the Hispanic
community. It is important to
appoint Hispanics but pales to the
welfare of the United States. Astute
intelligence gathering, analysis and
oversight has a significant role in
national security.
The House Intelligence Committee
chairman becomes one of the most
important persons safeguarding our
nation. We need someone capable of
discernment of intelligence
information and the ability to
provide oversight to protect
Americans.
It is not to late to rescind his
appointment from further
embarrassment in the world of global
leadership. America now needs to
change direction. Mr. Reyes will
simply not understand the
intricacies and complexities of
intelligence gathering required at
the macro intelligence level.
Mr. Reyes is no leader. To further
win in 2008 requires substance and
at this point it is clear the
appointment of Mr. Reyes to chair
the House Intelligence Committee was
all show.