[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 71 (Wednesday, April 26, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H2853-H2854]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PAKISTAN IS PLAYING THE UNITED STATES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Poe) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POE of Texas. Mr. Speaker, when our forces invaded Afghanistan in
2001, the goal was simple: remove the Taliban government that sheltered
the plotters of the 9/11 attacks on America, and destroy al-Qaida.
Nearly 16 years later, Afghanistan is still a haven for terrorists
who seek to attack and kill Americans. Since then, the Taliban has
waged an insurgency in Afghanistan, destabilizing the country, creating
perfect conditions for terrorists to exploit.
The Taliban and al-Qaida have launched many of their attacks in
Afghanistan from Pakistan. Taliban insurgency is stronger today than at
any other point since 2001. Just last week, a Taliban sneak attack
killed more than 160 Afghan soldiers, prompting the defense minister
and army chief of staff to resign.
But the Taliban don't just stage attacks, they seize territory. The
Special Inspector General for Afghan Reconstruction said in January
that 172 Afghan districts are controlled, influenced, or contested by
the Taliban. Al-Qaida has a long history of loyalty to the Taliban.
Osama bin Laden swore his allegiance to the Taliban's leader, Mullah
Omar, even before 9/11. When bin Laden was killed in Pakistan, Ayman
al-Zawahiri renewed that oath and cemented ties between al-Qaida and
the Taliban. Wherever the Taliban has influence, we can be sure that
al-Qaida is not far behind.
Since 2010, U.S. officials have incorrectly claimed that al-Qaida had
a small presence in the country limited only to 50 to 100 fighters.
Then, in 2015, a shocking U.S. raid in Afghanistan uncovered a massive
al-Qaida training camp, rounding up over 150 al-Qaida terrorists. This
was more fighters found in one raid than the U.S. officials claimed
existed in the entire country. And by the end of last year, U.S.
officials announced that 250 al-Qaida terrorists were killed or
captured in 2016 alone.
Along with al-Qaida in Afghanistan, we have the other terrorist
group, the Haqqani Network. This group is directly linked to al-Qaida
and the Taliban. The Haqqani Network is responsible for more American
deaths in the region than any other terrorist group. The Haqqani
Network attacks inside Afghanistan have been directly traced back to--
you guessed it--Pakistan.
In fact, in 2011, Admiral Mike Mullen, then-chairman of the U.S.
Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified before the Senate: ``The Haqqani
Network acts as a veritable arm of Pakistan's Inter-Services
Intelligence Agency.''
The truth is that Pakistan has ties to about every terrorist group in
Afghanistan. And we know that the Taliban is still based in Pakistan
today. It came as no surprise that when the U.S. drone strike killed
the leader of the Taliban in 2016, he was--that is right--in Pakistan.
The laundry list of evidence of Pakistan support for terrorists goes
on an on. We all remember where al-Qaida leader and America's most
wanted terrorist, Osama bin Laden, was found and killed: in Pakistan.
Afghanistan's representative to the U.N. recently told the Security
Council that Pakistan maintains ties with more than 20 different
terrorist groups.
Mr. Speaker, Pakistan is playing us. Pakistan turns a blind eye to
the terrorist allies, the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani Network
fighters in the area. The Pakistan Taliban fighters ended up becoming
the leaders of the ISIS affiliate in Afghanistan, known as ISIS
Khorasan province. ISIS announced their Afghan affiliate in January
2015, and now has entrenched itself in the eastern part of the country.
For the first time ever, the military dropped its largest non-nuclear
bomb, the Massive Ordnance Air Blast Bomb, earlier this month on ISIS
targets in Afghanistan. It is no surprise that Afghanistan is a hotbed
for terrorist mischief groups, all related to Pakistan. That is what
Pakistan has always wanted: a weak and divided Afghanistan that
threatens the United States.
Mr. Speaker, it is time we reassess our Pakistan policy so that it
matches
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Pakistan's behavior in Afghanistan. We need to call Pakistan out. We
must reduce aid to the two-faced Pakistan Government. We don't need to
pay them to betray us. We must designate Pakistan as a state sponsor of
terrorism, and we must remove their major non-NATO ally status. In the
war on terror, it is crystal clear Pakistan is not on America's side.
And that is just the way it is.
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