[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 40 (Wednesday, March 16, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H1847-H1848]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GENERAL PETRAEUS AND ``THE CHARLIE SHEEN COUNTERINSURGENCY STRATEGY''
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Madam Speaker, the American people are rapidly losing
confidence in the Nation's Afghanistan policy. Public opposition has
reached an all-time high. According to the new ABC News/Washington Post
poll, nearly two-thirds of Americans, or 64 percent, say this war isn't
worth fighting. I wonder if any of the programs that my Republican
colleagues want to cut have sunk to that level of nonsupport. And yet
this charade goes on.
The July drawdown, the date we should be leaving Afghanistan, is
rapidly approaching; and there are precious few signs of preparations
for a massive military redeployment. In fact, top officials have been
``walking back'' the July 2011 commitment from almost the moment the
President made it.
General Petraeus has returned to Capitol Hill this week to pat us on
the head and tell us the same things he's told us before. During
testimony he gave last year, he offered up this--I call it a doozy--
describing the July deadline as ``the point at which a process begins
to transition security tasks to Afghan forces at a rate to be
determined by conditions at the time.'' With all due respect to the
general, Madam Speaker, that's an awful lot of weasel words.
His testimony in the Senate yesterday didn't inspire much confidence
either. He continues to offer the same bland and tone-deaf talking
points--a lot of vague reassurances about progress we've supposedly
made, while being sure to say that challenges remain so he can continue
justifying a substantial troop presence. He's over here on the House
side today. I hope my colleagues on the Armed Services Committee will
hold his feet to the fire, demanding the clarity and candor that the
American people deserve.
With everyone hanging on General Petraeus' every word, even though he
is the symbol of a discredited and unpopular policy, I thought some of
us should speak for the overwhelming majority opinion--for that 64
percent. So yesterday, the Congressional Progressive Caucus Peace and
Security Task Force held a briefing with a fascinating group of
panelists. We heard from Robert Pape, the suicide terrorism scholar,
who posed an interesting analogy--if suicide bombings are the lung
cancer of terrorism, then foreign occupation is the smoking habit, the
lethal but preventable addiction that's feeding the illness.
Matthew Hoh, the former marine captain and State Department official,
noted that we're laying off police officers here at home while building
up a corrupt and ineffective police force in Afghanistan. And Rolling
Stone contributing editor Michael Hastings, who recently broke the
story about the Army using psyops propaganda on U.S. Senators, was also
there; and he made this observation. He said General Petraeus is giving
us ``the Charlie Sheen counterinsurgency strategy, which is to give
exclusive interviews to every major network and keep saying you're
winning and hope the public actually agrees with you.''
Madam Speaker, it was a compelling briefing. I hope all of us in the
112th Congress will listen to people like Professor Pape, Mr. Hoh, and
Mr. Hastings. But, most of all, I hope we'll listen to the American
people, who are angry,
[[Page H1848]]
disillusioned, and pleading with us to bring our troops home. They want
us to do that so there will be no more deaths like Staff Sergeant Mark
Wells, the young man from Congressman Poe's district.
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