[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 187 (Wednesday, December 7, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8196-H8197]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SMART: MORE SECURITY AT A FRACTION OF THE COST
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, the violence rages on in Afghanistan.
Earlier this week, suicide bombers struck in three different cities, in
each case targeting Shiite worshipers who are observing a religious
holiday.
The death toll is at least 63, according to a news report; and a
Pakistani extremist group has claimed responsibility for the attacks.
One eyewitness told The New York Times: ``We saw 30 or 40 people on the
ground missing arms or legs.'' Another said the Kabul
[[Page H8197]]
blast was timed to wreak the maximum havoc, as the bomber detonated at
the moment that the crowd was largest, when one group was going into a
mosque and another was exiting.
In the 10 years of this war, it's the first attack specifically
against Shiites, adding a sectarian angle and religious tension that
hadn't previously been prevalent in the Afghanistan conflict.
Mr. Speaker, how can we call our occupation of Afghanistan a success
when, after 10 years of attacks like this and making a young woman like
BiBi who was talked about on the other side of the aisle earlier this
morning, make her victimization and her terrorization commonplace. When
this is commonplace, we cannot be having success in Afghanistan.
The truth is our continued military presence is aggravating the
violence, not containing it, and certainly not stopping it. I'm not
saying that Afghanistan will be magically transformed when the last of
our troops leaves; but our best hope for peace, for security and
stability there is a swift end to this war.
But here's another important thing, Mr. Speaker. If we do this right
and have an end to the war that is meaningful, it would mean the
beginning of an even more robust engagement with Afghanistan, an
engagement based on the principles of SMART Security, in other words, a
peaceful partnership based on mutual respect, assistance to
strengthening Afghanistan's democratic infrastructure, not with
military force, but with civilian support.
SMART Security would empower the Afghan people investing in their
hopes and dreams, instead of bringing further violence to their
country. Military redeployment out of Afghanistan can't and won't mean
a complete withdrawal from Afghanistan.
So I hope that every single one of my colleagues who has eagerly
rubber-stamped war spending year after year, even while complaining
about the United States budget deficits, will show the same enthusiasm
and the same support for a humanitarian surge in Afghanistan.
I have to shake my head, Mr. Speaker, every time I hear someone say
we can't afford such generous foreign aid. Talk about penny wise and
pound foolish. Last fiscal year we spent roughly $2.5 billion on
development assistance in Afghanistan. Mr. Speaker, we go through that
much war spending in Afghanistan every single week. The bottom line is
that smart investments provide more security at a fraction of the cost,
pennies on the dollar compared to waging war.
Allowing extreme poverty and widespread unemployment to prevail
throughout Afghanistan imperils our national security as much as
anything else. Where there's hopelessness, that's where insurgents get
a foothold. Nothing breeds terrorism like hardship, deprivation, and
despair.
{time} 1100
Mr. Speaker, because it's the right thing to do and because it's the
best way to protect America, let's bring our troops home and make the
transition to SMART Security. And let's do it now.
____________________