[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 103 (Tuesday, July 13, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H5521-H5522]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BANKROLLING THE ENEMY?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Woolsey) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, a gentleman from my district, Will Bennett
of Santa Rosa, recently wrote a letter to the editor of the Santa Rosa
Press Democrat and made an excellent point. He noted that Afghan
President Hamid Karzai had said of the Taliban, ``They are not the
enemy. They are the sons of this land.'' As Mr. Bennett points out,
then who is the enemy? ``Is this a pretend war,'' he asks.
How can we possibly win a war in which our chief ally doesn't share
our vision of who is the enemy? But then you realize that maybe the
U.S. approach to the Taliban is closer to Karzai's than we'd be
comfortable admitting. Because in certain respects we're treating them
more like a vendor than like an enemy. It turns out our own contracting
practices in Afghanistan may actually be putting money in the hands of
the very Taliban insurgents we're trying to drive from the country--the
very people who are killing our troops, the very organization that
provided safe haven for al Qaeda to plot 9/11.
My distinguished colleague from Massachusetts (Mr. Tierney) and his
Government Oversight Subcommittee recently completed a shocking report
based on a 6-month investigation, which provides the details. At a
cost, Madam Speaker, of more than $2 billion, the Pentagon outsources
the responsibility for shipping supplies to U.S. troops. And the
contractor, unburdened by any meaningful government oversight, has been
paying off a shadowy cabal of warlords, strongmen, and corrupt
officials in order to guarantee security on Afghan roads.
The evidence is strong that the highway warlords are, in turn, paying
protection money to the Taliban, who control many of the routes. Mr.
Tierney
[[Page H5522]]
calls this, ``Warlord, Inc.: Extortion and Corruption Along the U.S.
Supply Chain in Afghanistan.'' And perhaps most disturbing of all,
Madam Speaker, is the Department of Defense apparently has long been
aware of this and hasn't done a thing about it.
As Mr. Tierney points out, at a time when communities here at home
are crying out for investment in schools, hospitals, and other
infrastructure, it's galling to think that American taxpayer dollars
are supporting the kind of thuggery in Afghanistan that is quite
possibly endangering our troops. It's bad enough, Madam Speaker, that
the American people are being asked to pay for our failed war. Now it
appears that they're being asked to pay for the wrong side.
Madam Speaker, we simply cannot sustain a counterterrorism strategy
that has us doing business, however indirectly, with the terrorists
themselves. It's illogical and it's unconscionable. This is just one
more piece of evidence that this war is failing the American people,
undermining instead of advancing our national security objectives. It's
time for a radical change in our policy. It's time to bring our troops
home.
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