[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 73 (Wednesday, May 25, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H3417]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NO BOOTS ON THE GROUND IN LIBYA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, I would like to thank the gentleman from
Puerto Rico for allowing me to speak out of order. Thank you very much.
We recently passed the 2-month mark since the military air campaign
in Libya began. This is significant because the War Powers Act requires
that a President must receive a congressional mandate for any military
action within 60 days. The deadline came and went without any
resolution being brought before this body, which is a signal that our
engagement in Libya is lingering without much accountability or checks,
without a vigorous debate about the consequences of what we are doing
there.
Who knows exactly what our mission is and how we will know when we
have achieved it? What is the end game? What are the metrics or
benchmarks for success?
At the same time, this week we will debate an amendment to the
defense bill that would expand the authorization for use of military
force, empowering the President, any President, to fire bombs and
missiles against any nation or nonstate actor that appears to pose a
threat. And without so much as a check-in or consultation with
Congress.
Mr. Speaker, I have had enough. I have had enough of this state of
permanent warfare. I have five grandchildren, and not one of them knows
what it is like to live in a country that is not at war with someone
and killing someone else's grandchildren. It is time to put the brakes
on. It is time for Congress to draw some clear lines, and Libya is the
perfect place to do so.
I am proud to support the amendment offered today by my friend, the
gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Conyers), that will specifically prohibit
the deployment of ground troops in Libya. We cannot afford any further
expansion of this engagement. We owe it to the American people who are
footing the bill and, of course, to our servicemen and -women who are
already fighting on two fronts.
To keep this mission from mushrooming into a full-blown ground war
and military occupation, we must stop now. We must not put boots on the
ground in Libya, and we must close any loophole that allows any
President to do so.
We still have combat troops in Iraq. We are spending a staggering $10
billion a month on an ongoing war in Afghanistan that has been a
devastating moral and strategic failure. We can't keep doing this, Mr.
Speaker. Our military is at a breaking point. The American people's
patience is wearing thin. Two wars are already more than we can handle.
Let's define the mission in Libya, let's complete it, and let's get
out. Anything less is a replay of Iraq and Afghanistan, where we must
move quickly to bring our troops home.
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