[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 111 (Tuesday, July 30, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H5097]
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, last week, as we debated the Defense
appropriations bill for the upcoming year, my good friend, Jim
McGovern, a Democrat from Massachusetts, joined me in a measure that
would guarantee that Congress would vote on funding the Enduring
Strategic Partisanship Agreement with Afghanistan. This agreement with
Afghanistan is a 10-year agreement that will start after 2014. It has
been negotiated and will soon be signed by President Obama and
President Karzai.
During the debate, I quoted the former Commandant of the Marine Corps
with regard to this agreement. I called him and asked him what he
thought about the agreement. He sent me a paragraph back. I used one
sentence that I will use again today, Mr. Speaker:
Simply put, I am not in favor of this agreement signed. It
basically keeps the United States in Afghanistan to prop up a
corrupt regime. It continues to place our troops at risk.
The amendment failed. I want to thank the 76 Republicans who joined
me in that vote, along with 100 Democrats, but it failed.
The problem is we really have no oversight in Afghanistan. It is a
joke at best. The joke is, though, it is not really a joke because of
the young men and women who are dying in Afghanistan, even today. The
waste, fraud, and abuse in Afghanistan goes unchecked. We sent
inspectors general over there. They do their best, but it is a no-win
situation in Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll just last
week, only 28 percent of the American people believe the war in
Afghanistan has been worth fighting. I believe that that number would
be even lower if they knew that we are going to sign a 10-year
agreement with Afghanistan after 2014. If they were polled on that, I
believe that the 28 percent would go down to about 8 percent.
The American people are just finding out that we have this 10-year
agreement with Afghanistan where we keep spending billions of dollars
per month and have a presence of at least 10,000 to 15,000 military.
During this same week last week, a poll was done of Congress, and 12
percent of the American people approve of Congress. If it gets much
lower, we will be right at zero. And I'm not sure the American people
will be wrong if they give us a zero, quite frankly, especially when I
look at the fact that we continue to spend money in Afghanistan; we
continue to cut programs right here in America for our young, our old,
and our infrastructure.
The American people are frustrated and fed up because they don't
think we in Congress are listening to them. When it comes back to
Afghanistan and the fact that we would allow a 10-year agreement to go
on with a corrupt leader in Afghanistan, it makes no sense to the
American people; it makes no sense to many of us in Congress in both
parties.
Mr. Speaker, during that debate, I made the statement on the floor 10
minutes after 11 p.m. that night that probably no one on the floor--and
in fairness to that statement, there were only about 10 or 12 people on
the floor--that they probably did not realize, but from March 1 until
July 1 we had lost 78 of our soldiers and marines in Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, that is why I brought this poster down today. It is a
family. It happens to be the Army. They are prepared to walk behind a
caisson, probably at Arlington, to bury an American hero. The sad part
about it, Mr. Speaker, is there's a wife, I'm assuming--it looks like
probably the wife. She has sunglasses on and a black dress. She's
holding the hand of her little girl, who appears to be 6, 7, maybe 8.
The little girl is holding her mother's hand and the little girl has
her finger in her mouth.
How many more families in this country have to go through a sadness
and a tragedy like this family while we sit here in Congress and we
never debate the war? We debate the funding that we did last week. It
was a 10-minute debate--5 for my amendment and 5 against. Mr. McGovern
and I had 5 minutes. Yet we do not debate the policy that continues to
send troops, continues to send money, and all we do is continue to let
this war go on and on and on.
Mr. Speaker, it's not fair to the families who have loved ones in the
military. Again, I will continue to come to the floor one time a week
and rail about the policy in Afghanistan. It is a failed policy.
History has said no nation has ever changed Afghanistan, and we are not
going to change Afghanistan no matter how much money we spend or how
much blood we spend. It is not fair to our military.
Mr. Speaker, I will close by asking God to please bless our men and
women in uniform, to please bless the families of our men and women in
uniform. I will ask God in His loving arms to hold the families who
have given a child dying for freedom in Afghanistan and Iraq.
I will ask God to bless the House and the Senate, that we will do
what is right in the eyes of God for God's people.
I will ask God to please bless the President, that he will do what is
right in the eyes of God for God's people today and God's people
tomorrow.
And three times I will say, God, please, God, please, God, please,
continue to bless America.
____________________