This week, the House and Senate approved conflicting versions of the FY2004 supplemental spending bill for Iraq and Afghanistan.
House Action
On October 17, the House approved, 303-125, the FY2004 emergency supplemental spending bill for Iraq and Afghanistan (H.R. 3289).
As approved by the House Appropriations Committee on October 9 (see The Source, 10/10/03), H.R. 3289 would allocate an additional $86.9 billion in FY2004 for certain programs under the Department of Defense, Department of State, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund. The total is approximately $104 million less than the Senate bill (S. 1689) and $139 million less than the President’s request.
Under the bill, $64.7 billion would be provided for the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, $18.6 billion would be provided for relief and reconstruction in Iraq, and $1.2 billion would be provided for relief and reconstruction in Afghanistan.
Of the amount allocated for relief and reconstruction in Iraq, H.R. 3289 would provide $793 million for health care programs, including $493 million to refurbish and modernize medical clinics, primary health care services, and hospitals, and $300 million to repair and procure medical equipment for Iraq’s medical facilities. The measure does not include the President’s request of $150 million for a new children’s hospital in Basra.
H.R. 3289 also would provide $190 million for migration and refugee assistance and $15 million to investigate human rights violations and other atrocities committed by the former regime in Iraq.
In addition, the bill would earmark $90 million for education, $10 million for civic education and youth programs, and $10 million for women’s leadership programs.
Of the amount allocated for relief and reconstruction in Afghanistan, H.R. 3289 would provide $95 million for schools and education. Report language indicates that the committee “has promoted Afghan education, especially for girls, for many years during the period of Soviet and Taliban control.” The education funding will “support more extensive teacher training and special efforts to accelerate learning and jump-start schooling opportunities for the 10- to 30-year-old Afghan whose education was interrupted or prevented by 23 years of war.”
H.R. 3289 also would provide $49 million to construct 90 rural health care clinics, which would enable “more than 3 million additional rural Afghans [to] gain access to a basic health delivery system.”
During consideration of the bill, the House approved An amendment by Rep. Juanita Millender-McDonald (D-CA) that would transfer $50 million from the Defense-Wide Operations and Management account to the family advocacy program to be used to enhance the domestic violence victim advocate program, and provide additional family counseling and shelter services. The amendment was adopted by voice vote.
The House rejected the following amendments:
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Prior to final passage, Rep. Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (D-MI) offered a motion to recommit requiring that 50 percent of the amount provided for relief and reconstruction in Iraq be transformed from grants into loans. The motion was defeated, 191-235.
Senate Action
Later the same day, the Senate approved, 87-12, its version of the FY2004 emergency supplemental spending bill for Iraq and Afghanistan (S. 1689), which it began debating on October 1 (see The Source, 10/3/03).
S. 1689 would allocate an additional $87.004 billion in FY2004 for certain programs under the Department of Defense, Department of State, USAID, and the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund. The total is approximately $36 million less than the President’s request.
Under the measure, $66.56 billion would be provided to prosecute the war in Iraq and Afghanistan, and $21.444 billion would be provided to help secure the transition to democracy in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
The committee report accompanying S. 1689 states that the committee “strongly supports programs and activities to promote freedom, democratic institutions, and the rule of law in Iraq and provides that not less than $100 million shall be available for democracy building activities in that country in support of the development and ratification of a constitution, national elections and women’s development programs.”
In addition, the committee “recognizes that conflict and decades of neglect devastated Iraq’s health infrastructure, resulting in a lack of medical equipment and supplies, and health professionals with expertise in pediatric medical specialties,” and “is concerned that children with critical health problems cannot obtain life-saving treatments in Iraq.” For these reasons, the committee supports “activities that can have an immediate impact in addressing the needs of these children, such as the Emergency Health Services for the Children of Iraq program sponsored jointly by Kurdish Human Rights Watch and Vanderbilt University Children’s Hospital.”
During consideration of S. 1689, the Senate adopted, 51-47, an amendment by Sen. Evan Bayh (D-IN) that would allocate $10.3 billion as a grant to Iraq, including $5.1 billion to rebuild Iraq’s security services and $5.2 billion for immediate reconstruction costs. The President would be required to notify Congress if any single obligation in Iraq amounts to $250 million or more. The remaining $10 billion would be provided to Iraq as a loan. The loan would be converted to a grant if creditors forgive 90 percent of all bilateral debt incurred by the former Iraqi regime. Finally, the amendment would express the sense of the Senate that each country that is owed bilateral debt by Iraq should forgive such debt and provide reconstruction aid beginning at the Madrid Donor Conference on October 23, 2003.
The Senate approved the following amendments by voice vote:
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The Senate considered motions to table the following amendments:
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