[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 64 (Tuesday, May 8, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H2333-H2334]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOW ABOUT WE STOP BEING STUPID?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, the President of the United States traveled
to Afghanistan last week to sign the Strategic Partnership Agreement
with President Karzai, and while this agreement is intended to signal
the beginning of the end of the Afghanistan war, instead it actually
looks like it could lock the United States into a military commitment
for years to come.
The agreement calls for our Armed Forces to be involved beyond 2014
in the ``training, equipping, advising, and sustaining'' of Afghan
security forces so that Afghanistan can combat terrorism and ``secure
and defend itself against internal and external threats.''
The irony in that statement, Mr. Speaker, is rich. When are we going
to realize that the internal threats facing
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Afghanistan gather more strength with every day that American boots are
on the ground? Insurgents are energized and animated. They bolster
their recruitment and increase their numbers because of their
resentment over a U.S. military occupation that is now in its 11th
year--11th year. We will not bring stability to Afghanistan until we
fundamentally alter our bilateral relationship to emphasize peaceful,
civil engagement over military engagement. The good thing about this
Strategic Partnership Agreement, however, is that it does include
provisions relating to democracy promotion, economic development, and
assisting in the reforming of the Afghans' governing institutions.
These programs need to be the centerpiece of our Afghan strategy, along
with major investments in development aid across the board.
The war won't truly wind down until the White House commits--I mean
commits--to spending more on diplomacy and more on development and
reconstruction than they're spending on the military occupation. We
need a dramatic shift in resources--more to rebuild Afghan
infrastructure, more to fight poverty, more to reduce infant and
maternal mortality, more to send children, especially girls, to school.
As long as we maintain a military presence in Afghanistan, as long as
fighting is the focal point of our relationship, we will be preventing
and undermining the important humanitarian work that needs to be done.
Mr. Speaker, investing in the Afghan people is not just the right
thing to do because of our common humanity, it is the smart thing to do
from the standpoint of our national security objectives. That's why I
call my plan SMART Security. It needs to be implemented not just in
Afghanistan, but in other unstable parts of the world where terrorism
poses a grave threat.
Thomas Friedman of The New York Times is on board with the principles
behind SMART Security. In a column last week, he talked about how a $13
million scholarship program for Lebanese students is doing a lot more
to advance our values in that country than $1.3 billion in military aid
to Egypt. He quotes a schoolteacher in Jordan who talks about how the
former is for ``making people'' and how the latter is for ``killing
people.''
What is the point of our engagement, Mr. Speaker, with the rest of
the world--to make people or to kill people? That's a very important
question for us to answer. As Friedman puts it:
So how about we stop being stupid? How about we stop
sending planes and tanks to a country where half the women
and a quarter of the men can't read, and start sending
scholarships instead?
How about we stop being stupid, Mr. Speaker? How about we make the
shift to a SMART Security approach? How about we make that shift now
and begin that shift with bringing our troops home?
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