[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 17]
[House]
[Pages 24072-24073]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                              THE IRAQ WAR

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the order of the House of 
January 4, 2007, the gentlewoman from Illinois (Ms. Schakowsky) is 
recognized during morning-hour debate for 5 minutes.
  Ms. SCHAKOWSKY. Madam Speaker, today is an important day in that we 
are going to hear the anticipated progress report, so-called, by 
General Petraeus, who will be testifying in a short while before the 
Armed Services and Foreign Affairs Committee of the House of 
Representatives, and the case that is going to be made is that there

[[Page 24073]]

has been just enough progress to warrant staying the course in Iraq.
  On August 6, I was in Iraq. What I learned from that visit that day 
was that in fact that the President's surge has failed and that there 
is no end in sight for the war in Iraq. I learned that first by talking 
with the Deputy Prime Minister of Iraq that day who said that the night 
before that former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi had pulled his people out 
of the Parliament, and the week before the Sunnis had left, and then 
what was remaining of the Parliament was on vacation. And he said that 
there wasn't going to be any political settlement by this September, 
nor would there be by next September, and he didn't say which 
September.
  The point of that is the reason for the surge was promoted by the 
President and by General Petraeus as creating the space for political 
settlements in Iraq, which have not only not happened but we have even 
seen steps backwards. But what is really important today is that people 
examine the so-called evidence that progress has been made, and that is 
why I brought a few charts here.
  The first one says, is there really less violence in Iraq? Let's look 
at what is counted, but, even more importantly, what isn't counted.
  In the evidence that progress has been made, not counted includes 
Shiite on Shiite violence which is happening in the south in the Basra 
area, Sunni on Sunni violence. Car bombings aren't counted. And get 
this one, this isn't a joke. People shot in the front of the head are 
not counted; people shot in the back of the head are counted. I thought 
at first that was just an exaggerated joke. It is true. And, finally, 
the large-scale bombing like the one that killed 500 ethnic Yazidies in 
August is not counted. So clearly these numbers are very clearly cherry 
picked.
  Then, if you look at a fact that is important to many Americans, 
every month in 2007, including the months, of the surge has seen more 
U.S. military casualties than the same month in 2006. In other words, 
more and more of our young men are dying. And while the Parliament was 
on vacation as some commentators said because, after all, it is so hot, 
about 120 degrees, our young men and women were fighting and dying in 
their body armor and helmets and heavy packs and weapons out in that 
120 degree heat, dying at numbers greater than ever.
  And, of course, not included in those numbers has been not only the 
the number of U.S. troops that have died, but the dollars that have 
been spent. These are the dollars that we know about right now. Per 
year, not overall in the war, but per year $120 million; per month $10 
million. Actually, I have heard $12 million is the new number. Per 
week, over $2 million. Per day, $329,000. Per hour, we are doing this 
for 1 hour right now, almost $14 million an hour. And over $228,000, 
almost $229,000 a minute is being spent in Iraq. And yet, the political 
reconciliation which was the goal of expanding the numbers of troops 
that we have in Iraq has not achieved that; that it has actually gone 
backwards. And so right now I think what we are seeing is a dog and 
pony show.
  The good news is that a lot of people, unlike the lead-up to the war 
in the first place, aren't buying it. The front page of U.S.A. Today 
records 60 percent of Americans seek a date for a pullout: Public wary 
of report on Iraq, polls show. And there have been many other reports. 
The Jones report that says it is not working.
  Check the information and be skeptical about the progress. Let's get 
out of Iraq.

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