[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 135 (Tuesday, September 13, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H6102-H6103]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Jones) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JONES. Mr. Speaker, like all my colleagues, I was home during the
August break, accepting opportunities to speak at civic clubs, at town
forums, and I did speak to a couple of military retiree groups.
Every time that I would make the statement that it is time to bring
our troops home from Afghanistan--Mr. Speaker, I'm not an excellent
speaker, I'm not even a good speaker, but I got applause, strong
applause, from every one of those groups that I just named. They agree
with me and many of my colleagues, one being on the floor today, Jim
McGovern from Massachusetts, that it's time to bring an end to our
involvement in Afghanistan.
The amount of loss of lives is just astounding. And I have beside me
a poster that depicts the pain of war. This lady and her little girl
are accepting a folded flag off the coffin of her husband and the
little girl's daddy. And the little girl is looking up like ``I don't
know what's happening.'' The wife is crying.
How many more families have to cry? How many children have to say,
``I don't know my daddy; I didn't know my daddy because I was so young
when he died''?
The President is asking for a jobs program. I think he's doing the
right thing. Yet we're spending $10 billion a month in Afghanistan to
prop up a corrupt leader. It makes no sense. It doesn't make any sense
to the American people, and it makes no sense to many of us in the
House, both Republican and Democrat.
I understand from the newspapers that there's a conversation now
going on between the United States and Afghanistan which would provide
so-called ``strategic partnership agreement'' between the two, America
and Afghanistan, and this means that we could keep approximately 35,000
to 40,000 troops past 2014, 2015. This does not make any sense. I hope
that this is not true, but I'm afraid that it is true.
And something else that bothers me about this conversation is that it
will not be called a treaty because, if it's called a treaty, it has to
come to Congress and be approved by Congress. This, again, takes away
the voice of the American people, especially on this issue of
Afghanistan, when the American people, in large numbers in all the
latest polls, are saying get out, get out, get out.
History has proven that Afghanistan will never be anything more than
what it is today. Great nations have tried in the past to try to create
a national government in Afghanistan, and it never happened. Here we
are going to spend $10 billion a month, $120 billion a year, to rebuild
Afghanistan, and we don't even have the money to rebuild America.
I hope that the Congress will join those of us, again, Mr. McGovern
and myself and many others I could name in the House, that want to
bring our troops home.
It brings me back to an article written by Andrew Bacevich. He was a
Vietnam veteran himself. His son was killed in Iraq. And he wrote an
article in the American Conservative about 2 years ago called ``To Die
for a Mystique,'' talking about Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, I hope that we will continue to bring forward on the
floor of the House the issue of Afghanistan. It's not right to those
families. It's not right to our military. Many of them have had five,
six, seven deployments. They're tired. They're worn out. They've done
their job. Bin Laden is dead. Al Qaeda has been moved out of
Afghanistan. It is time to bring them home and rebuild America and help
our veterans find jobs. I want to thank the President for mentioning
that yesterday. We've got to help our veterans find jobs.
Mr. Speaker, I'm going to close now as I always do because it comes
from my heart. I've signed over 10,374 letters since we went into Iraq.
That was a mistake on my part to give President Bush the authority to
go into a war that never had to be fought.
So I ask God to please bless our men and women in uniform. I ask God
to please bless the families of our men and women in uniform. I ask
God, in His loving arms, to hold the families
[[Page H6103]]
who've given a child dying for freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq.
I ask God to please bless the House and Senate that we will do what
is right in the eyes of God for God's people. I ask God to give wisdom,
strength, and courage to President Obama, that he will do what is right
in the eyes of God for God's people.
And I will say three times, God, please, God, please, God, please
continue to bless America.
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