[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 72 (Thursday, April 27, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H2904]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESS SHOULD VOTE ON CONTINUING POLICY IN AFGHANISTAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Jones) for 5 minutes.
Mr. JONES. Mr. Speaker, last week was another reminder of the chaos
in Afghanistan. Tragically, 200 Afghan soldiers were killed by the
Taliban; but, unfortunately, that is no surprise.
After 16 years in Afghanistan, absolutely nothing has changed. If
anything, it has gotten worse. The American taxpayer, United States
military, and the marines in my district are frustrated with the 16
years of continued chaos. That is why Mr. Garamendi and I have
introduced H.R. 1666 and have been joined by seven of our colleagues.
Our bill asks that Congress be able to debate and vote on whether we
should or should not continue our current policy in Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, I bring this poster on the floor as a reminder. Let me
say to you today and my fellow colleagues that we have spent over 800
billion taxpayer dollars, over 2,200 American servicemembers have died,
and over 20,000 of our troops have been severely wounded. The waste,
fraud, and abuse is just as bad, if not worse, today than at the very
beginning of 2002.
Now, some 300 additional marines, mainly from Camp Lejeune in my
district, have been deployed to Afghanistan this spring, and we have
had no discussion of that on the floor of the House. Mr. Speaker, I am
calling on Paul Ryan as Speaker of the House to permit a new debate on
our future involvement in Afghanistan and whether or not our young men
and women should be sent to war, as there are more than 300 Members of
the House of Representatives that were not here in 2001 that have never
had a debate or a vote on Afghanistan and the policy of Afghanistan.
It is time that the Congress interject itself. It is our
constitutional responsibility to send our young men and women to die
for this country, and yet we do not ever have a debate. That is why the
bill that Mr. Garamendi and I have put in, H.R. 1666, will simply say
that the House will have a debate on whether we should or should not be
in Afghanistan.
Mr. Speaker, I don't know why that is asking too much because it is
our constitutional duty. Nothing that we vote on in this House of
Representatives is as sacred as sending a young man or woman to die for
this country.
{time} 1030
I have sent a letter to Paul Ryan as recently as yesterday asking him
to please give us the ability that we have taken the oath to debate
war. And the Speaker of the House can order the committees of
jurisdiction to send an authorization of military force to the floor of
the House for debate.
Mr. Speaker, for all of our men and women in uniform, all of the
families of our men and women in uniform who have died for this
country, please, Congress, let's join together, Republican and
Democrat, and let's debate the future of Afghanistan.
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