[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 85 (Tuesday, June 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H4080]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DRAWING DOWN AMERICAN TROOPS FROM AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, it is now mid-June and we are just weeks
away from the July date the President promised for a drawdown of
American troops from Afghanistan. But so far, so far, there appears to
be little movement towards the kind of redeployment that the moment
actually calls for and that the American people are insisting on.
{time} 1010
In fact, Mr. Speaker, Defense Secretary Gates, on his way out the
door, endorsed a ``modest'' drawdown, even though the President has
promised something significant. This is not a moment that calls for
modesty. This is a moment for boldness and true leadership. This is a
moment to break out of the war default posture--the posture that we've
been in for going on 10 years now.
The longer this war goes on, the bloodier it becomes. We were told
last year that fatalities would be unusually high in 2010 as the surge
troops begin penetrating the Taliban strongholds. But it turns out
there's no sign that casualties are tapering off, and we're on pace for
an equally deadly 2011. We lost more troops in March, April, and May of
this year than we did during the same months of 2010.
And let's not forget--because I don't think it's talked about nearly
enough--that it's not just uniformed members of the U.S. military being
put in harm's way by this conflict. The United Nations said over the
weekend that there were more civilian casualties in May than in any
single other month of this war. Needless to say, killing innocent
people is certainly not the way to win the hearts and minds of another
country.
The American people's patience is wearing thin, Mr. Speaker; and
there are many Members of this body--a fair number in the Republican
majority--who cannot support this Afghanistan policy either. I for one
am tired of being told that the strategy is working and it just needs
more time to succeed. How many military families will lose a father or
a mother or a son or a daughter in the time it takes for this strategy
to go nowhere? How many troops will be physically and psychologically
damaged beyond repair?
Mr. Speaker, I think nearly a decade--longer than any war in American
history--is more than enough time to admit that the strategy does not
work. We don't need simply a token drawdown. We need a fundamental
change in policy and a complete reorientation of our thinking about
national security. We need to finally end this war and bring our troops
home.
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