Pro-abortion Senators Want
Abortions in Military Medical Facilities
Part Three of Four
WASHINGTON -- Pro-abortion
senators have launched an effort to repeal a longstanding law
that prohibits performance of elective abortions at U.S.
military medical facilities. Pro-life lawmakers in both houses
of Congress have vowed to fight the change.
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Pro-abortion Senator
Roland Burris |
In 1996, the
Republican-controlled Congress added a provision to a defense
authorization bill that prohibits performance of abortions in
U.S. military medical facilities anywhere in the world, except
to save the life of the mother, or in cases of rape or incest.
President Clinton signed that broad defense policy bill into
law, although he expressed objections to the pro-life provision.
On May 27, during
consideration of a new defense authorization bill (S. 3280) in
the Senate Armed Services Committee, pro-abortion Senator Roland
Burris (D-Il.) offered an amendment to repeal the 1996 ban,
which was adopted on a 15 to 12 vote, with the support of
committee Chairman Senator Carl Levin (D-Mi.).
"It is critical that we
provide the highest quality care for our service members while
they are serving our nation overseas, and that includes allowing
women and their families the right to choose [abortion] at
facilities operated under the Department of Defense," Burris
said.
If Burris's amendment were
enacted, it would result in elective abortions being performed
in Defense Department facilities both overseas and in the United
States. Those seeking the abortions would be required to pay a
fee, because a separate provision of law prohibits the use of
Department of Defense funds to pay directly for abortions no
matter where they are performed, unless necessary to save the
life of the mother.
In remarks on the Senate
floor on May 28, pro-life Senator Roger Wicker (R-Ms.) said that
the Burris amendment would enable military installations "to be
used for abortions performed late term, abortions performed for
purposes of sex selection, abortions performed for any reason,
abortions at will. That will be the requirement for our military
installations and the medical facilities on those installations
-- again, another piece of social engineering, another vast and
serious and consequential departure from long-standing
Department of Defense policy."
Wicker indicated he would
force the full Senate to vote on the Burris language when the
Senate takes up the bill sometime this summer.
If the defense bill passes
the Senate with the Burris provision included, it must still be
reconciled with a different version of the defense authorization
legislation (H.R. 5136) that was passed by the House of
Representatives on May 28, which makes no changes to the current
pro-life laws.
The House-Senate
conference committee that writes the final bill will be
co-chaired by House Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike
Skelton (D-Mo.), who opposes repeal of the pro-life law.
Pro-abortion forces have
failed in past attempts to repeal the pro-life law. In 2006, the
House rejected an amendment to allow overseas military
facilities to perform elective abortions, by a vote of 237 to
191.
In a June 10 statement,
Congressman Chris Smith (R-NJ), chairman of the House Pro-life
Caucus, vowed to fight the Burris Amendment. "Our military
facilities should be a place of hope and healing, not
intentional destruction of innocent human life," he said. "This
amendment [if enacted] will mean that as many as 260 military
medical facilities worldwide [would] be in the abortion
business."
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to
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Part Four
Part One
Part Two |