[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 86 (Wednesday, June 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H4193-H4194]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOT AS OWNER OR TENANT: NO MILITARY BASES IN AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, a year and a half ago, we were promised a
new way forward in Afghanistan, a way that would include a significant
military drawdown. The date for the redeployment to begin was July 1,
2011, just 2 weeks away. Then last year, the goalposts were removed and
it was decided that, in fact, our troops would remain in Afghanistan
through 2014.
{time} 1040
But apparently that wasn't enough. Negotiations are now under way
with the Karzai government--negotiations that are happening apparently
in secret and without proper accountability and transparency--for the
construction of military bases in Afghanistan. Officials are being very
careful not to say that these bases would be permanent, but it's clear
that our government could be hammering out the details of an agreement
that would call for a U.S. military presence in Afghanistan for as far
as the eye can see.
I can't understand the logic here, Mr. Speaker. Why can't we grasp
the very idea that the longer we are perceived to be an occupying
power, the more resentment we breed in Afghanistan? The longer we're
there, the more we fuel the insurgency, the more we leave our troops
vulnerable, the more we put our own national security in jeopardy.
Erecting permanent bases would be the biggest favor we could do for the
Taliban.
I salute my good friend and fellow Californian, Congresswoman Barbara
Lee, for her leadership on this issue, and I would urge my colleagues
to consider my legislation that would require the President to
negotiate a Status of Forces Agreement that would clearly prohibit the
establishment of permanent bases.
Mr. Speaker, the outgoing Defense Secretary, Mr. Gates, says we're
seeking joint bases where the United States acts as a tenant as opposed
to an occupying force, but I don't believe for a minute that the
Taliban appreciates the subtlety of that distinction.
As long as there are boots on the ground, and not just boots but
large installations with American trappings and English language street
signs and so forth, the more we embolden the very radical forces we're
trying to defeat.
We're going exactly the wrong direction, Mr. Speaker. At a moment
when the American people are crying out for this military occupation to
end, our leaders look as if they are preparing to extend it into
perpetuity. At a moment when casualties are on the rise, we're
preparing for a long-term presence that will further endanger, not
protect, Americans.
We can't afford permanent war. It's unsustainable. We can't afford
the cost in blood, treasure, lost credibility or dwindling moral
authority. It's time to bring our troops and our contractors
[[Page H4194]]
home and leave no military footprint behind.
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