[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 77 (Wednesday, June 1, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H3810]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AUTHORIZING MORE WARFARE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, last week this body passed the National
Defense Authorization Act. In doing so, yet again, it put a stamp of
approval on a more violent, belligerent, and militaristic defense
policy.
While my friends in the majority continue to posture about Federal
spending, they are eager to authorize billions and billions on military
programs and policies that don't make America safer.
During last week's debate over the Defense bill, they voted down an
amendment that would have brought the Department of Defense funding
levels down to the same 2008 levels they want to impose on domestic
discretionary spending. Obviously, the Republicans believe in a blank
check for the Pentagon, but austerity for everyone else.
They rejected my amendment to eliminate the V-22 Osprey, a
multibillion-dollar aircraft with a performance and safety record so
shoddy that even Dick Cheney tried to eliminate it when he was
Secretary of Defense. They also rejected an amendment that would have
prohibited the use of funds for permanent bases in Iraq and
Afghanistan, despite the fact that an anonymous officer in Afghanistan
was quoted in yesterday's Washington Post as saying, ``We've become
addicted to building.'' That officer added that supplemental
appropriations, with its billions of dollars for construction, ``have
been like crack cocaine for the military.''
It gets worse, Mr. Speaker. The Defense bill includes a radically
expanded authorization for the use of military force. It completely
undermines the War Powers Act, empowering the President, whichever
President, whomever is in that office, to declare war regardless of
whether an attack against the United States is imminent, regardless of
whether our national security has been threatened. The language doesn't
even specify any geographic limitation.
{time} 1010
The Republican majority couldn't even bring themselves to support an
amendment that called simply for a plan within 60 days to transfer
responsibility for Afghanistan's security to Afghanistan--a plan--so we
can begin the process of redevelopment. Just a plan within 60 days. As
our distinguished Democratic leader said here on the floor last week
when we were debating this, who could be against that?
Well, apparently the overwhelming majority of House Republicans could
be against it and are against it and voted against it. Then they topped
it off by voting to eliminate the modest public investment in the U.S.
Institute of Peace, an institute that carries out real, well-respected,
lifesaving work on peaceful conflict resolution around the world.
Last night the majority played a game of chicken with the global
financial credibility of the United States, holding a vote on the debt
ceiling that was designed to fail.
I challenge them: You want meaningful spending cuts as a condition
for a debt ceiling increase? Then stop giving the Pentagon unlimited
use of the taxpayers' ATM card. Stop putting the full faith and credit
of the United States on the line in order to wage more war.
You believe in fiscal discipline, and you think everything should be
on the table? Then let's talk about saving $10 billion a month by
ending the war in Afghanistan, and let's bring our troops home from
Iraq and Afghanistan.
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