[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 121 (Tuesday, September 11, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H5771]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SMART SECURITY: LEADING WITH OUR COMPASSION, NOT OUR MILITARY FIREPOWER
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Woolsey) for 5 minutes.
Ms. WOOLSEY. Mr. Speaker, a few minutes from now, Members of the
House and the Senate will head to the Capitol steps. We're going to the
Capitol steps for a moment of remembrance to honor those who were
killed in the attacks on September 11, 2001--September 11, 2001, a day
that will forever be seared into the memory of American citizens and
the world.
Eleven years later, Mr. Speaker, spouses still grieve; children still
feel the void; parents are still devastated by the loss of their
children. It was a tragedy for individual families and for the entire
Nation. One of the lingering tragedies of that day is that it led to
policy decisions with terrible consequences that we're still living
with today. Over the last decade-plus, violence and mayhem have just
led to more violence and mayhem.
Our continued military occupation of Afghanistan has not brought the
stability. It has not brought security. It has not brought a strong
democracy to that country. Afghanistan remains one of the poorest and
most dangerous places on Earth. The Taliban has not been driven into
oblivion. The terrorist threats continue. And according to a New York
Times article this past weekend, even U.S. commanders are admitting
that the Taliban remains ``resilient'' while al Qaeda is ``evolving''
and ``adapting.''
Mr. Speaker, while we in the House adjourned for the month of August,
there was no recess for our troops. In fact, since we were last in
session, another 60 U.S. servicemembers died in Afghanistan. Countless
more suffered wounds to the body and to the brain. And then there are
the Afghan civilians, many of them children, who are being killed every
single day. How do we tell the families of these children that this is
all for a good and just cause? We can't.
Mr. Speaker, it's time to stop conducting national security policy on
the principles of revenge and retaliation and on the false hope that we
are making it better. The right way to secure and ensure security is to
put America's best foot forward, to lead with our compassion and not
our military power.
That's what my SMART Security platform is all about. It puts
development and diplomacy front and center, and it makes war a last
resort. It is based on a commitment to improving the lives of Afghan
people, alleviating power, creating economic opportunity, rebuilding
infrastructure, improving education, and attacking public health
problems in that area.
We can't do this with the military surge. We can only do it with a
civilian surge--a surge of experts, of aid workers, of technical
experts, from engineers to midwives. Of course, our development
agencies are doing this kind of work, and they're doing the best they
can possibly do, but not nearly the scale that's necessary to make this
possible. Compared to billions of dollars every month that we spend on
the war, we're investing just a tiny fraction of that on humanitarian
work that is so badly needed.
Public opinion has turned dramatically against this war, and yet our
most visible leaders continue to lag behind the people that elected
them. The President of the United States says he will end this war in
2014, which is a good goal, but it is not nearly soon enough. His
opponent, on the other hand, in the most important speech of his life a
few weeks ago, didn't see fit to even mention Afghanistan--not even
once.
So, Mr. Speaker, when we gather on the steps of the Capitol, as I bow
my head, it will be in remembrance of those who died 11 years ago
today, and it will also be with a fervent prayer of hope that we can
honor their memory by finally ending the war in Afghanistan and finally
bringing our troops home.
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