[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 186 (Tuesday, December 6, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8142-H8143]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SMART SECURITY: A BETTER INVESTMENT THAN 10 YEARS OF WAR IN AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
[[Page H8143]]
Ms. WOOLSEY. Madam Speaker, this week, representatives from several
nations will meet in Bonn, Germany, to discuss the future of
Afghanistan. The Bonn Conference comes exactly 10 years after the first
Bonn Conference, which established the Karzai government. So right now
is the perfect moment to assess and reflect on where we are and where
we're going in Afghanistan.
By any measure, Madam Speaker, the war we have been waging in
Afghanistan for the last decade has been a failure. Our hard-earned tax
dollars have been tragically wasted on a policy that has projected the
worst image of America to the rest of the world. It has undermined our
interests and damaged our national security--and let's not forget the
human cost. More than 1,800 American families will sit at their tables
over the holiday season--tables with a person missing. If we want to
eliminate fallen warriors, we must bring them home while they're still
alive.
Hopefully, the Bonn Conference will pivot us to the next phase of our
Afghanistan engagement: from military occupation to constructive
partnership, from waging war in Afghanistan to helping in the spirit of
peace and friendship. Ten years after we supposedly liberated them, the
people of Afghanistan have enormous humanitarian needs. We need to help
them rebuild their infrastructure, strengthen their democracy, and
safeguard the rights of their people, all of which can be done for
pennies on the dollar compared to spending military dollars. In short,
we need the SMART Security approach that I've been advocating for
years.
In Bonn, President Karzai is saying that Afghanistan will require
foreign economic assistance for at least the next 10 years. The
estimated cost of $10 billion a year, which sounds like a lot for that
support, makes you realize, however, that we're spending at least that
much, probably more, every month in Afghanistan. As a nation, we should
eagerly embrace the responsibility to make these relatively modest
investments in nonmilitary aid to Afghanistan. It's the right thing to
do, and in the long run, we'll discover it's a far greater investment
than 10 more years of war.
The past 10 years of war have done little to improve the lives and to
advance the rights, for example, of Afghan women. Many of us are
familiar with the story of the Afghan woman who was raped and then
impregnated by a male relative when she was 19 years old. She was then
sent to jail for the crime of adultery. Her initial sentence was 3
years; then, after a second trial, it was increased to 12 years, but a
judge offered her clemency under one condition--she had to marry the
man who raped her. At long last, Madam Speaker, after a petition drive
organized by the woman's lawyer yielded 6,000 signatures, President
Karzai granted the woman an unconditional pardon--she will be released
from prison without having to spend her life with her attacker.
It's a relief that moral decency prevailed in this one case; but the
fact that this qualifies as a human rights victory in Afghanistan
reveals just how far we have to go. There are many more Afghan women
like her who suffer humiliation every single day, who have no control
over their destinies. The true measure of American leadership is what
we do to help these women and so many other Afghans who want nothing
more than to live a decent life of hope, freedom, and relative comfort.
We won't help by extending a war that has already failed these people
and has violated our most fundamental values. It's time to bring our
troops home and to make the transition to SMART Security now.
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