[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 36 (Tuesday, March 6, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H1155-H1156]
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. Last week, Congresswoman Barbara Lee and I asked for a
classified briefing on Afghanistan. Really, the only thing I can say
about the briefing, because it was classified, is that I will continue
to come to the floor and to say let's bring our troops home from
Afghanistan.
Also last week, we had two Army officers from Fort Bragg, North
Carolina, who were in Afghanistan to train, and they were shot by the
Afghan trainee at point blank range. This brings the
[[Page H1156]]
count to 42 Americans who have been killed in Afghanistan while working
with the Afghans to train them to be police and soldiers. When you
factor in how many coalition troops have been killed, along with the
Americans, it's about 70. It is a totally impossible situation, as well
as the fact that we continue to spend $10 billion a month there.
I have beside me, Madam Speaker, a poster from the Greensboro News-
Record in Greensboro, North Carolina. The headline is ``Get Out,'' and
there is an honor guard bringing a transfer case off the plane. The sad
thing is that the day is on a Sunday in February 2011, and we're now in
March of 2012. We continue to spend money that we cannot even account
for. We send auditors to Afghanistan to try to account for the $10
billion a month that is being given to Mr. Karzai so he can lead
Afghanistan--buy some new roads and camps, I guess--while our troops
are losing their legs, their arms, and their lives in a war that should
be ended now, not later. We will, during the debate on the DOD bill in
May, continue to try to bring amendments to the floor to bring some
sanity to this involvement in Afghanistan.
As I mentioned many times, a former marine commandant has been my
adviser on Afghanistan, and he continues to talk about the fact that we
are wearing out our military, the equipment, our manpower. Yet, there
is a threat growing in the Pacific that we seem not to pay any
attention to.
Recently, Jim McGovern and I and John Garamendi and some others met
with Lieutenant Colonel Danny Davis. He is an active duty reservist who
has been to Afghanistan. He returned just a couple of months ago, and
had been over there for almost 10 months. He has written articles
saying that the Congress in these hearings with the military leadership
is not getting the straight talk that we need to hear. Too many times
they use the words: Well, the training of the Afghans is going pretty
well, but it's fragile, it's real fragile.
{time} 1010
Well, I'd like to say it's real fragile. No, it's even worse than
that. You cannot predict what is going to happen in the country of
Afghanistan. We had two marines from my district, Camp Lejeune, the
Marine base in the Third District that I represent, that were over
there.
About 3 months ago, Sergeant Baldus and Colonel Palmer--Colonel
Palmer being from Cherry Point Marine Air Station and Sergeant Baldus
from Camp Lejeune, also, like these two Army officers--were training in
Afghanistan. They were having dinner with the Afghan trainees, and that
night one of the trainees stood up and shot and killed both of them.
This is not fair to the American soldier, marine, sailor, airman,
Navy, whatever, to continue to be in Afghanistan 11 years after it
started. The money that we're going to cut here in America of the
senior citizens and the children who need programs to have a better
quality of life, we are going to cut their programs, but we are going
to keep spending $10 billion a month in Afghanistan. It makes no sense.
Madam Speaker, before I close, I would like to encourage every Member
of Congress--who has the authority, should they want to implement that
authority--to read the National Intelligence Estimate on Afghanistan
that was published in 2011. It is classified, but every Member of
Congress can take 1 hour--it's about 55 pages, I've read it--and read
it. You need to read it, and then maybe you can help us make better
decisions here on the floor about what in the world are we doing in
Afghanistan spending Uncle Sam's money that he doesn't even have. He
has to borrow his money from the Chinese to pay Karzai.
Where does that make any sense? The American people do not think it
makes any sense.
We did a teletown hall about a month ago, and 66 percent of thousands
of people that were on that call said bring our troops home now. Now, I
realize that's the Third District of North Carolina, the home of Camp
Lejeune, Cherry Point Marine Air Station and New River.
Madam Speaker, I do want to close by asking God to please bless our
men and women in uniform and ask God to continue to bless America.
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