[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 90 (Wednesday, June 22, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H4372-H4373]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOT SIZABLE, SWIFT OR SIGNIFICANT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, tonight the President of the United States
has an opportunity to show the bold leadership that the American people
are crying out for regarding Afghanistan. Tonight he will announce how
many troops will be redeployed out of Afghanistan. This must not be, as
early reports are indicating, a token withdrawal, bringing only as few
as 5,000 troops home now and 5,000 troops home by the end of the year,
because that number falls tragically and painfully short of what the
national security and moral decency demands.
There are many interpretations, Mr. Speaker, of ``sizable, swift or
significant'' as the requests have been for him in his drawdown, but
none of those interpretations go so low as 5,000 now and 5,000 by the
end of the year. ``Sizable, swift or significant'' is not what 5,000
troops would accomplish. Ten thousand troops doesn't even bring us to
where we were before the surge.
That is not a new way forward in Afghanistan. We were promised a new
way forward in Afghanistan, and it is going to take 18 months just to
get even that much done. How many times are we going to move the
goalposts? Anything less than a major shift in Afghanistan policy will
be a huge disappointment to the Americans who are paying for it in
blood and treasure.
Clear, strong majorities of our country believe it is time we finally
end this awful foreign policy blunder. This is not a partisan stance.
You just heard Congressman Walter Jones from North Carolina. This is
common sense. Several Republicans in this body oppose this war. Even
some of the Republicans running for President have expressed concern
about continuing the military occupation much longer.
It is simply not acceptable to ask for more patience and more time
for this strategy to work. You mean 10 years isn't enough? How many
families were missing a seat at the table on Father's Day this weekend
because we kept giving this dreadful policy one more chance?
Afghanistan casualties are on the rise, Mr. Speaker, with 2011 on
pace to be the deadliest year yet and 43 percent of fatalities having
occurred since the surge began a year and a half ago. How many more
people have to die, Mr. Speaker, both U.S. servicemembers and Afghan
citizens, before we say enough? How many more lives have to be
destroyed? How many more young Americans have to leave limbs behind in
Afghanistan? How many more have to come home ravaged by post-traumatic
stress? And how many more billions in taxpayer money do we have to
waste for the privilege of having our people killed and our global
credibility destroyed? For pennies on the dollar, we could fight
terrorism the right way, with a civilian surge that emphasizes
humanitarian and political aid and reconciliation.
Mr. Speaker, it continues to pain me that we have to scratch and claw
for every single dollar of Federal investment in the American people.
One
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child nutrition program last week was held out there as an example of
what we don't need--but we do. Also we are scratching to support health
care, education, even support for veterans, but we still continue to
waste $10 billion a month in Afghanistan. In the time I take to give
this speech, roughly $1 million will fly out of the Treasury to pay for
this war.
Mr. Speaker, I implore the President to listen to the American
people. Tonight is a moment where he can make history. End the war.
Bring our troops home.
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