[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 24, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H123]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SMART SECURITY: TO CREATE AN AMERICA BUILT TO LAST
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, tonight when the President of the United
States addresses our Nation from this Chamber, we will hear some good
news on the national security front. The end of the Iraq war, for
example, is an impressive accomplishment, one that wouldn't have
happened if bold progressives hadn't called for our troops to be
brought home way back in 2005.
I'm also pleased the President's leadership will make it possible for
our military strategic review to call for significant reductions in
defense spending.
But on both of these fronts, ending our current wars and long-range
national security strategy, I'm hoping for proposals that are bigger
and bolder than what we've heard to this point.
Bottom line, Mr. Speaker, we need to end the war in Afghanistan, and
we need to end it now, not 2014. Not at whatever other later date the
military brass decides is appropriate. After nearly 1,900 American
deaths and more than 10 years of bloodshed and mayhem, we owe it to our
troops and to their families, as well as American taxpayers, to bring
them home.
This war is not just a moral disgrace, not just a humanitarian
disaster, Mr. Speaker; it's a strategic failure. We're spending at
least $10 billion every month to prop up a regime in Afghanistan that
is ineffective on its best day and downright corrupt on its worst.
Afghanistan continues to be racked by poverty and violence, and my
belief is that by continuing to have military boots on the ground,
we're encouraging more animosity towards the United States, giving the
Taliban a recruitment tool, and thus, undermining our security.
Mr. Speaker, we need a new security program. We need a new security
paradigm, an entirely fresh way of thinking about how to keep our
Nation safe. Won't we make more friends and win more hearts and minds
if we extend a hand of friendship to the rest of the world instead of
rattling the saber at the first sign of trouble?
Actually, that's the heart of my SMART security platform. Why are we
spending pennies on humanitarian aid for every dollar we're spending on
weapons and warfare? Instead of a military surge, we need a civilian
surge, one that lifts people out of poverty, rebuilds infrastructure,
promotes education, especially for women and girls, and combats
malnutrition and global health problems around the world.
SMART security is a renewed commitment to diplomacy, multilateralism,
and peaceful conflict resolution. It would support a dramatic
downsizing of the military industrial complex. Believe it or not, the
Pentagon consumes 56 percent of discretionary spending with a budget
bigger in real dollars than it was at the height of the Soviet threat.
And with SMART security, we can reverse that.
Tonight I'm told the President will sound the theme of an America
built to last. But no Nation, Mr. Speaker, that exists in a state of
semipermanent warfare can be built to last. I worry about how we can be
built to last when we have enough nuclear warheads to blow the world to
smithereens many times over.
Now is the time, Mr. Speaker. Our common humanity compels us to bring
the troops home from Afghanistan and implement a SMART security agenda.
Now is the time.
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