[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 151 (Thursday, November 29, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H6507]
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. Mr. Speaker, yesterday in the Republican Conference, I
acknowledged that five marines and one soldier from my district, the
Third District of North Carolina, had been killed in Afghanistan by the
Afghans they were training. This, to me, just does not make any sense
at all as to why we stay in Afghanistan.
I also shared with the Conference an email I got from the former
Commandant of the United States Marine Corps, who has actually been my
adviser on Afghanistan for 3 years. I said, Mr. Commandant, why do we
stand by and see our American soldiers, Marines, killed by those people
we're training? I said, Mr. Commandant, how many more have to die,
killed at the hands of the people they're trying to help?
And I read this from the Commandant:
At the end of the day, I am more convinced than ever that
we need to get out of Afghanistan. When our friends turn out
to be our enemy, it is time to pull the plug. The idea that
troops we have trained and equipped now turn that training
and equipment on us is simply unconscionable. Whether we
leave tomorrow or 1,000 tomorrows from now, nothing will
really change. We are now nothing more than a recruiting
poster for every malcontent in the Middle East. We need to
wake up.
I read that yesterday in the Conference, Mr. Speaker. I want my party
and the Democratic party to wake up and get our troops home.
Mr. Speaker, recently on CNN's Reliable Sources with Howard Kurtz, a
well-known journalist, Tom Ricks, made the following statement:
We, as a Nation, seem to care more about the sex lives of
our generals than the real lives of our soldiers.
Mr. Ricks went on to say that probably no one knew who Sergeant
Channing Hicks and Specialist Joseph Richardson were. They were two
Americans killed in Afghanistan the Friday before Ricks was
interviewed. The media will not print those names, but almost everyone
in the country knows Paula Broadwell. That's such a tragedy, Mr.
Speaker, that our troops are dying in Afghanistan, and we're writing
about generals having relationships outside of a marriage. It makes no
sense.
We lost 32 Americans in October and November. I want to know, where
is the outrage here in Congress? Why are we spending money we don't
have? Why are our troops dying, and yet we just seem to go on and on
talking about the fiscal cliff? Well, I know that's important.
Mr. Speaker, it is time for Congress to realize that we are having
young men and women die in Afghanistan for a failed policy that will
not change one thing.
Mr. Speaker, before closing, I make reference to this poster of a
young American in a casket being carried by his colleagues to be
buried. Please, American people, put pressure on Congress to bring our
troops home now and not wait until December 2014.
I ask God to please bless our men and women in uniform, to please
bless the families of those who've lost loved ones in Afghanistan and
Iraq. I ask God to please bless the United States of America. And
please, God, help us get our troops home now and not later.
____________________