[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 82 (Tuesday, May 24, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H2966]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WASTE, FRAUD, AND ABUSE OF AMERICAN RESOURCES IN AFGHANISTAN NEEDS TO
STOP
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Jones) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JONES. Mr. Speaker, I am again on the floor--I don't know how
many times I have been on the floor--to talk about the waste, fraud,
and abuse in Afghanistan. It just keeps going on and on.
Last week there was a great article--I don't think it was really
great, but a very disturbing article--in The Washington Post, and the
title was ``Afghanistan Paid 11,000 Militants to Lay Down Their Arms.
Now the Money Has Run Out.'' It was the American taxpayer who paid the
militants to stop fighting and killing Americans.
Somewhere along the way this doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me.
We, the American taxpayers, have been paying fringe Taliban fighters
not to fight for years. The article explained that there is little
accountability of how that money is spent and where. We do not even
know if paying fringe Taliban fighters not to fight is working.
Further, committed Taliban fighters get money from other sources and
still get money from the American taxpayer, and they are there to kill
Americans. Somewhere along the way this just makes no sense at all.
Mr. Speaker, I include in the Record my letter to Speaker Ryan about
the great work of John Sopko, Special Inspector General for Afghanistan
Reconstruction.
House of Representatives,
Washington, DC, April 14, 2016.
Hon. Paul D. Ryan,
Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Washington, DC.
Dear Mr. Speaker, During the Easter District Work Period, I
read an Associated Press article about your support for
numerous spending cuts to the FY 2017 budget in order to
secure additional votes. While I support such efforts, it
remains difficult for me to comprehend why congressional
leadership continues to support the waste, fraud, and abuse
in Afghanistan.
After over 14 years, and over $800 billion dollars, the
waste is more obvious today than ever before. I have enclosed
two articles for your review that detail the severity of the
situation. First is a USA Today story regarding Mr. John
Sopko's testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee
that details the mysterious case of ``Schrodinger's goats,''
in which $6 million was spent on nine male goats meant to
start a cashmere industry in Afghanistan, and whose status as
dead or alive cannot be confirmed. Second is an NBC story,
``12 Ways Your Tax Dollars Were Squandered in Afghanistan''
which, unfortunately, is only a small sample of the waste.
Surprisingly, many in the Republican Party question why the
American public is so frustrated with our leadership. A
cursory look at the multitude of reports of the wasted
billions of dollars in Afghanistan should easily rationalize
the American people's frustration. Adding Afghanistan
spending to the chopping block will go a long way toward
gaining the support of the American people and restoring
fiscal sanity to Washington, DC. Nothing is changing in
Afghanistan--it continues to be the graveyard of empires and
with a growing debt surpassing $19 trillion, I believe that
America is heading for the graveyard.
Mr. Speaker, I also encourage you to personally meet with
Mr. John Sopko, the Special Inspector General of Afghanistan
Reconstruction (SIGAR). The valuable work of SIGAR has
uncovered billions of dollars of waste, fraud, and abuse in
Afghanistan, which we must stop.
Thank you for your continued leadership and consideration
of this request. I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Sincerely,
Walter B. Jones,
Member of Congress.
Mr. JONES. Mr. Speaker, in the letter to Mr. Ryan, I ask him, the
Speaker of the House, if he would find 45 minutes in the very busy
schedule that he has to meet with John Sopko. I have been in meetings,
both formal and informal, with John Sopko, and other Members of
Congress have, and his group, known as SIGAR, have given full reports
every year for the past few years to talk about the failure of our
policy in Afghanistan. I don't know why we in Congress continue to fund
Afghanistan. It is nothing but a waste of life and money, and it needs
to stop.
Mr. Speaker, it is true now that we have fewer Americans killed in
Afghanistan, but they still are being killed and wounded. I have a
poster beside me that I have carried down to my district in North
Carolina, as well as here in the House. For every one American that
dies, I write a letter to the family. I have sent over 11,000 letters
to families in this country. I started this when we had the war in
Iraq, on which I failed to vote my conscience. I bought the
misinformation from the Bush administration, and I voted to send our
troops to Iraq.
This picture is of a little girl standing there with her hand holding
her mother's hand, with her finger in her mouth kind of wondering why
her daddy is in a flag-draped coffin. This will continue to go on.
There will be families across this Nation until we pull out of
Afghanistan. Let Afghanistan take care of its own problems. We cannot
buy friendship in Afghanistan.
I close with this, Mr. Speaker. It was said many, many years ago
about Afghanistan that Afghanistan is the graveyard of empires. With
our $19 trillion debt, there will soon be a headstone in Afghanistan
that says: ``USA.'' It is time to get out of Afghanistan.
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