[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 102 (Tuesday, July 10, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H4694]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CIVILIAN AID TO AFGHANISTAN: IF IT'S SO IMPORTANT, WHY AREN'T WE DOING
MORE OF IT?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, there was a very compelling op-ed piece in
The Washington Post last week by U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan, Ryan
Crocker. In it, he paid tribute to the many American civilians who are
risking their lives doing important humanitarian work to bring security
and stability to Afghanistan.
I couldn't agree more with Ambassador Crocker that those men and
women working for or contracting with the State Department or USAID are
doing extraordinary work rebuilding infrastructure, helping children to
go to school, improving infant and maternal health, wiring the Afghan
people to the Internet.
Mr. Speaker, the burning question is this: If this work is so
important, why aren't we doing more of it? The human need in
Afghanistan is far greater than the resources we're devoting to the
effort.
For the last few years, we've had a military surge in Afghanistan, a
surge that's led to more death, more violence, more instability, and
more strength for the extremists and insurgent forces we're trying to
defeat.
What we need, Mr. Speaker, is a civilian surge. We need a great
emphasis on development and diplomacy, on democracy promotion and debt
relief, on peacekeeping and conflict resolution, not just in
Afghanistan, but in impoverished and unstable countries around the
developing world.
All of this is at the heart of the SMART Security proposal that I've
been promoting since 2004 that I introduced during the middle of the
Iraq war. Contrary to the conventional wisdom we've been fed, military
aggression does not advance our national security goals. It undermines
them. It makes us less safe, not more. It emboldens terrorists, instead
of vanquishing them.
We've tried it this way for more than a decade now, Mr. Speaker, and
it simply has not worked. It hasn't fundamentally changed the fortunes
of the Afghan people, and it hasn't driven the Taliban and other
terrorist networks into oblivion.
At an international conference on aid to Afghanistan this past
weekend, Secretary of State Clinton said that the administration would
request Afghanistan aid funding at or near levels provided over the
last decade. But at or near is not enough. It comes to somewhere
between $1 billion to $4 billion a year, which seems like a lot of
money, until you realize that's what we spend on military operations in
Afghanistan roughly every week or so; $10 billion a month waging a
destructive war on Afghanistan that is killing civilians, but only a
few billion dollars a year rebuilding Afghanistan and empowering
civilians.
That just doesn't make sense. Ambassador Crocker has pointed this
out. Our priorities are totally out of whack.
We can't continue on the same current destructive course, Mr.
Speaker. This military occupation is failing America and failing
Afghanistan.
Let's finally end this war. Let's bring our troops safely home and
start investing in civilian aid and other SMART security initiatives,
and let's do it now.
Let's also expand these initiatives to prevent war around the world.
____________________