[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 120 (Tuesday, July 28, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H8527]
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, on July 22, The New York Times published an
article titled ``Afghan Security Forces Struggle Just to Maintain
Stalemate,'' by Joseph Goldstein.
Mr. Goldstein writes that, because of extremely high casualty rates
in the Afghan security forces, there is also a high desertion rate. As
a result, the Afghans are struggling to maintain adequate numbers in
their security forces, meaning, it is becoming extremely difficult for
them to keep the Taliban at bay.
The article is of great concern for those of us who have watched the
fight against the Taliban since 2001. We have lost over 2,355 men and
women in Afghanistan, with 20,000 wounded, and spent over $685 billion.
The history of Afghanistan has shown that no outside military force
has ever changed it, from Alexander the Great, to the British, to the
Russians. Yet, last year the Obama administration signed a 9-year
agreement, committing American money and manpower in Afghanistan that
was not voted on by the Congress.
That is so ironic. We are talking about voting on this agreement with
Iran, but we did not vote to commit our troops and our money to
Afghanistan for 9 more years.
As a member of the Armed Services Committee, I am concerned by Mr.
Goldstein's report. Let me give two quotes from his article about the
ability of the Afghan security forces to keep the Taliban at bay that I
found very, very concerning.
First: ``A spokesman for the Afghan Defense Ministry . . . insisted
that desertions remained rare and that there had been no effort to ban
leaves or to stop rotations away from the front to cut down on the
number of people going absent without leave.''
The second quote: ``But interviews with soldiers and police officers
repeatedly countered the government's claims. One Army major said . . .
`Once the soldiers are taken for their breaks, they are unwilling to
come back and join their duty.' ''
Once again, Mr. Speaker, the Afghan Government is untruthful and
corrupt. Yet, we continue to spend billions of dollars at this losing
cause.
It is not fair to the taxpayers of eastern North Carolina, the
taxpayers of America, or anybody in this country that pays taxes that
we will continue to send money there to build their infrastructure and
rebuild their roads and then to have the Taliban blow them up. It makes
no sense.
I can assure President Ghani, the President of Afghanistan, that the
United States House continues to spend billions of dollars on Afghan
reconstruction so the Taliban can continue to destroy what we send over
there with the taxpayers' money to be built.
We in Congress should stop funding this rathole of a policy in
Afghanistan, which has basically given the Afghan Government a blank
check every year and will for the next 9 years.
History has proven that we will never change this tribal nation, and
we should stop trying. Instead, let's focus on fixing our economy here
in America.
God bless our troops, and God bless America.
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