[Congressional Record Volume 154, Number 52 (Thursday, April 3, 2008)]
[House]
[Pages H1995-H1996]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




          WHERE ARE THE GOOD GOVERNANCE AND DIPLOMACY IN IRAQ?

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the 
gentlewoman from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) is recognized for 5 minutes.
  Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, next week, the chief commander of U.S. 
forces in Iraq will be up here before Congress, General David Petraeus, 
and he will be reporting on the conduct of the war. I can remember 
about a year ago, quite a large delegation from our defense 
subcommittee spent some time with General Petraeus in Iraq; and one 
statement that he made at that time remains in my mind, and I have 
shared it with every audience I have gone before. He said, Victory 
equals one-third military and two-thirds good governance and diplomacy. 
The two-thirds is missing.
  Victory equals one-third military and two-thirds good governance and 
diplomacy and the two-thirds is missing in Iraq. So where does that 
place our soldiers? I have asked myself that every single minute of 
every single day since that discussion. The good governance and the 
diplomacy are nowhere.
  The President of our country says, Well, I'm going to listen to my 
commanders in theater.
  No, no. President Bush is the Commander in Chief. The military is 
doing their job, but they can only do one-third of the job. The other 
two-thirds rests on the top political leadership of this country, and 
they, and I would include every person in this room, and we have not 
done our jobs because the political equation, the good governance and 
diplomacy piece, is totally missing.
  And so more soldiers die, more Iraqis die, and what is the vision? 
What is the vision for ultimate victory and exit of our troops? There 
isn't any. The President said mission was accomplished. No, the mission 
was just begun, but there is no end game.
  Within Iraq, we have a corrupt and incapable state. They have 
billions of dollars in their budget unspent, our money, their money 
from oil. They're not spending it, yet the American people are going to 
be asked to appropriate another $170 billion here? Think about it, my 
friends.
  Within Iraq, we broke the State. In Iraq, 2\1/2\ million people 
thrown out of their homes within the country and another 2\1/2\ million 
fleeing for their lives to Syria, to Jordan. And you know what? They 
will never be citizens of those countries. They're guests. They're 
actually refugees. We saw what happened with the Palestinians post-
World War II. 600,000 of them still a refugee population with no 
homeland. And look at the difficulty that has caused the world.
  So you say, Well, what is the mission? Are we winning the war on 
terrorism? Is America any more secure?
  Well, we are having trouble in Afghanistan. The President had to beg 
NATO for more forces in Afghanistan. We've now got over 40,000 troops 
there. The situation there is not getting any better. And Pakistan, at 
the provincial level, the worst elements are being elected. Maybe that 
isn't the right adjective. But those that are most anti-American are 
being elected. There's trouble between Afghanistan and Pakistan at the 
border in those provinces. We don't have a solution there.
  And Turkey, our closest ally in NATO for years. What is happening 
with elections at the provincial level there, mayors and so forth? The 
most anti-American individuals are being elected. That is true in 
Pakistan at the provincial level.
  So you can say all you want to say about winning this war on 
terrorism, but how do you win a war when the majority of the people 
turn against this country? And you say to our military, You fix it. You 
fix it.
  General Petraeus' testimony up here next week simply isn't enough. We 
need to hear from the President of the United States, not just passing 
the buck to, Well, let the generals tell me what to do. No. What is he 
going to do to accomplish this mission and bring

[[Page H1996]]

our troops home and begin to repair the image of the United States 
across a vast growing region of the world where we are losing friends 
every day from North Africa, from Egypt, all the way through to 
Pakistan and Afghanistan? What are we going to do to correct the damage 
that is producing more terrorists, more anti-Americanism and less 
resolution?
  Don't just place this burden on the backs of our brilliant military. 
They have been asked to do everything this President has sent them to 
do. But as General Petraeus wisely told us a year ago, victory means 
one-third military and two-thirds good governance and diplomacy, and 
the two-thirds is missing and it has been missing and it is missing.
  What can we do? Why didn't the President take two of our exemplary 
ambassadors, people like Zbigniew Brzezinski and James Baker, put them 
on the same airplane, send them over to Iraq, work with the neighboring 
countries of Iraq, give us a date certain in order to begin redeploying 
forces to an over-the-horizon position? Give us a time: 6 months, 1 
year, 1 year and 3 months? Let's have a plan. There is no plan.
  The only plan is to send more troops to keep extending deployments to 
put more burden on our military, to ask our Marines to become civilian 
officials within that country with the civilian workload when they're 
trying to be a strike force. What kind of solution is that? It's asking 
too much of our military. Let's give them the respect they're due but 
ask the person in charge as Commander in Chief to give America the plan 
for victory and ultimate redeployment from that region and building 
back the kind of friendships with adjoining nations that will not give 
our children and grandchildren the burden of fighting terrorism two 
decades or more down the road.

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