[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 36 (Thursday, March 10, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H1669]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
END THE WAR IN AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Jones) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JONES. Mr. Speaker, yesterday, Dennis Kucinich, Ron Paul, and I,
along with other colleagues, held a press conference to announce House
Concurrent Resolution 28, which would require the President to withdraw
all United States Armed Forces from Afghanistan by the end of 2011.
Last month's USA Today/Gallup poll, 72 percent of Americans favor
congressional action this year to bring our troops home from
Afghanistan.
This week the Rasmussen Report finds that 52 percent of voters want
our troops home from Afghanistan this year. To quote this poll, ``A
majority of voters, for the first time, support an immediate withdrawal
of all U.S. troops from Afghanistan or the creation of a timetable to
bring them all home within a year.''
Fourteen months ago, I asked a retired military general to advise me
on Afghanistan. I have asked him for his thoughts, and I will read some
of them to you. Back in November, I emailed this general and I said,
What do you think about the possibility of being in Afghanistan for 4
more years?
Mr. Speaker, he replied, ``I do not believe that 40 more years would
guarantee 'victory,' whatever that is; so 4 will do nothing. The war is
costing money and lives, all in short supply.''
Mr. Speaker, there is a retired lieutenant colonel in Jacksonville,
North Carolina, which is in my district, who served in the United
States Marine Corps for 31 years. His name is Dennis Adams. He wrote me
a letter, and the last paragraph of the letter I would like to read to
the House.
``I urge you to make contact with all the current and newly elected
men and women to Congress and ask them to end this war and bring our
young men and women home. If any of my comments will assist you in this
effort, you are welcome to use them and my name.''
Mr. Speaker, I want to show the faces. I want to show the faces of
war and the faces of pain.
This is a young man whose name is Phillip Jordan. At the time of his
father's death--his father was a gunnery sergeant--he was 6 years of
age. I wish the people could see the eyes of this young boy, 6 years of
age, with a folded flag under his arm and the coffin that is following
right behind him. This is war. Children feel war as adults feel war.
Mr. Speaker, I also want to show a poster from the honor guard at
Dover walking a transfer case, which most people know is a coffin. It's
the remains of an American hero off the plane. This again is war and
the pain of war.
Mr. Speaker, this is a beautiful, handsome couple. It's a young
marine, his wife, and his child. This young marine had been deployed so
much that he developed PTSD. A year ago, on the main drag at Camp
Lejeune known as McHugh Boulevard, he committed suicide. He stepped out
of the car, he put a gun to his head, and he committed suicide.
Mr. Speaker, I hope that the Congress would join Mr. Kucinich, Mr.
Paul, and others in this House and let's have a debate, and let's vote.
Let's meet our constitutional responsibility, and let's bring our
troops home before we break the military. It is time to bring our
troops home from Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, as I always do, I ask God to please bless our men and
women in uniform. I ask God to please bless the families of our men and
women in uniform. I ask God to love the families who have given a child
dying for freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq, and I ask God to please
bless the House and Senate that we would do what is right in the eyes
of God. I ask God to give wisdom, strength, and courage to President
Obama that he will do what is right in the eyes of God.
And three times I will ask, God please, God please, God please
continue to bless America.
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