[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 17 (Thursday, February 2, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H378]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOW MANY MORE GROUNDHOG DAYS IN AFGHANISTAN?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, it's Groundhog Day. Phil saw his shadow
this morning, and winter will last 6 more weeks.
But what comes to mind for me is that old Bill Murray movie called
``Groundhog Day,'' where he wakes up and the same thing happens day
after day after day. We're living our own version of ``Groundhog Day''
right now, because every morning, for the last 3,700-plus mornings, the
American people have woken to a Nation at war.
{time} 1010
Every morning, we've woken up to the same scenario--thousands and
thousands of our fellow Americans in harm's way, occupying a foreign
nation as part of a reckless policy that is costing us at least $10
billion a month.
There was some encouraging news, however, just yesterday as Secretary
of Defense Panetta said that our combat role in Afghanistan would be
over as soon as the middle of next year, which is a year earlier than
we've been talking about. That would be a long overdue but welcome
development, a belated recognition that this war is doing more harm
than good in every way we're involved.
I'll believe it when I see it, though. The goalposts have been moved
too many times to put much confidence in a single statement. What I've
heard so far is a little too vague to take to the bank, especially
since Secretary Panetta maintains that some troops would still remain
through 2014 in an advisory role and that the commander on the ground,
just this morning, is reported on the news as sounding less than
enthusiastic in his response.
What I'd like to hear, perhaps in conjunction with Secretary Clinton
and the head of USAID, is that, as our military role recedes, we will
use all the civilian tools at our disposal to improve the lives of the
Afghan people, because the real challenge and the best way to advance
our national security interests is to eliminate the crushing poverty
and to address the overwhelming humanitarian need in Afghanistan.
That is what's at the heart of my SMART Security proposal. Instead of
military force, instead of unmanned, amoral drones that don't know the
difference between killing an insurgent and killing a child, how about
we send American compassion to Afghanistan? How about we send our very
best experts in education, health care, energy, agriculture, legal
reform, government transparency, and whatever else we have to offer
that they may want to learn from?
Even if Secretary Panetta sticks to this timetable, under the best
case scenario, we have another 500 or so mornings and perhaps another
Groundhog Day ahead of us, at least 500 more days of the same old, same
old--Americans dying on a mission that is not making America safer or
Afghanistan freer.
The time has come. In fact, it came a long time ago. Let's make
tomorrow different from the thousands of days that preceded it. Let's
end the war in Afghanistan now and finally bring our troops home.
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