Why We Fight
HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES=20
September 8, 2005
Many
reasons have been given for why we fight and our youth must die in
Iraq. The reasons now given for why we must continue this war
bear no resemblance to the reasons given to gain the support of the
American people and the United States Congress prior to our
invasion in March of 2003. Before the war, we were told we faced
an imminent threat to our national security from Saddam Hussein.
This rationale, now proven grossly mistaken, has been changed. Now
we're told we must honor the fallen by "completing the mission."
To do otherwise would demean the sacrifice of those who have died or
been wounded. Any lack of support for "completing the mission" is
said, by the promoters of the war, to be unpatriotic, un-American, and
detrimental to the troops. They insist the only way one can
support the troops is to never waver on the policy of nation building,
no matter how ill-founded that policy may be. The obvious flaw in
this argument is that the mission, of which they so reverently speak,
has changed constantly from the very beginning.
Though most people think this war started in March of 2003, the seeds
were sown many years before. The actual military conflict,
involving U.S. troops against Iraq, began in January 1991. The
prelude to this actually dates back over a hundred years, when the
value of Middle East oil was recognized by the industrialized West.
Our use of troops to eject Saddam Hussein from Kuwait was the beginning
of the current conflict with Muslim fundamentalists who have been, for
the last decade, determined to force the removal of American troops
from all Muslim countries-- especially the entire Arabian Peninsula,
which they consider holy. Though the strategic and historic
reasons for our involvement in the Middle East are complex, the
immediate reasons given in 2002 and 2003 for our invasion of Iraq were
precise. The only problem is they were not based on facts.
The desire by American policymakers to engineer regime change in Iraq
had been smoldering since the first Persian Gulf conflict in
1991. This reflected a dramatic shift in our policy, since in the
1980s we maintained a friendly alliance with Saddam Hussein as we
assisted him in his war against our arch nemesis, the Iranian
Ayatollah. Most Americans ignore that we provided assistance to
this ruthless dictator with biological and chemical weapons
technology. We heard no complaints in the 1980s about his
treatment of the Kurds and Shiites, or the ruthless war he waged
against Iran. Our policy toward Iraq played a major role in
convincing Saddam Hussein he had free reign in the Middle East, and the
results demonstrate the serious shortcomings of our foreign policy of
interventionism that we have followed now for over a hundred years.
In 1998 Congress capitulated to the desires of the Clinton
administration and overwhelmingly passed the Iraq Liberation Act, which
stated quite clearly that our policy was to get rid of Saddam
Hussein. This act made it official: "The policy of the United
States to support efforts to remove the regime headed by Saddam
Hussein." This resolution has been cited on numerous occasions by
neo-conservatives as justification for the pre-emptive, deliberate
invasion of Iraq. When the resolution was debated, I saw it as a
significant step toward a war that would bear no good fruit. No
legitimate national security concerns were cited for this dramatic and
serious shift in policy.
Shortly after the new administration took office in January 2001, this
goal of eliminating Saddam Hussein quickly morphed into a policy of
remaking the entire Middle East, starting with regime change in
Iraq. This aggressive interventionist policy surprised some
people, since the victorious 2000 campaign indicated we should pursue a
foreign policy of humility, no nation building, reduced deployment of
our forces overseas, and a rejection of the notion that we serve as
world policemen. The 9/11 disaster proved a catalyst to push for
invading Iraq and restructuring the entire Middle East. Though
the plan had existed for years, it quickly was recognized that the fear
engendered by the 9/11 attacks could be used to mobilize the American
people and Congress to support this war. Nevertheless, supposedly
legitimate reasons had to be given for the already planned pre-emptive
war, and as we now know the "intelligence had to be fixed to the
policy."
Immediately after 9/11 the American people were led to believe that
Saddam Hussein somehow was responsible for the attacks. The fact
that Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden were enemies, not friends, was
kept from the public by a compliant media and a lazy Congress.
Even today many Americans still are convinced of an alliance between
the two. The truth is Saddam Hussein never permitted al Qaeda
into Iraq out of fear that his secular government would be
challenged. And yet today we find that al Qaeda is now very much
present in Iraq, and causing chaos there.
The administration repeatedly pumped out alarming propaganda that
Saddam Hussein was a threat to us with his weapons of mass destruction,
meaning nuclear, biological, and chemical. Since we helped Saddam
Hussein obtain biological and chemical weapons in the 1980s, we assumed
that he had maintained a large supply-- which of course turned out not
to be true. The people, frightened by 9/11, easily accepted these
fear-mongering charges.
Behind the scenes many were quite aware that Israel's influence on our
foreign policy played a role. She had argued for years, along with the
neo-conservatives, for an Iraqi regime change. This support was
nicely coordinated with the Christian Zionists' enthusiasm for the war.
As these reasons for the war lost credibility and support, other
reasons were found for why we had to fight. As the lone
superpower, we were told we had a greater responsibility to settle the
problems of the world lest someone else gets involved.
Maintaining and expanding our empire is a key element of the
neo-conservative philosophy. This notion that we must fight to
spread American goodness was well received by these neo-Jacobins.
They saw the war as a legitimate moral crusade, arguing that no one
should be allowed to stand in our way! In their minds using force
to spread democracy is legitimate and necessary.
We also were told the war was necessary for national security purposes
because of the threat Saddam Hussein presented, although the evidence
was fabricated. Saddam Hussein's ability to attack us was
non-existent, but the American people were ripe for alarming
predictions by those who wanted this war.
Of course the routine canard for our need to fight, finance, and meddle
around the world ever since the Korean War was repeated incessantly: UN
Resolutions had to be enforced lest the United Nations be
discredited. The odd thing was that on this occasion the United
Nations itself did everything possible to stop our pre-emptive
attack. And as it turned out, Saddam Hussein was a lot closer to
compliance than anyone dreamed. It wasn't long before concern for
the threat of Saddam Hussein became near hysterical, drowning out any
reasoned opposition to the planned war.
The one argument that was not publicly used by those who propagandized
for the war may well be the most important-- oil. Though the
administration in 1990 hinted briefly that we had to eject Saddam
Hussein from Kuwait because of oil, the stated reasons for that
conflict soon transformed into stopping a potential Hitler and
enforcing UN resolutions.
Publicly oil is not talked about very much, but behind the scenes many
acknowledge this is the real reason we fight. This is not only
the
politicians who say this. American consumers have always enjoyed
cheap gasoline and want it kept that way. The real irony is that
the war has reduced Iraqi oil production by one-half million barrels
per day and prices are soaring-- demonstrating another unintended
economic consequence of war.
Oil in the Middle East has been a big issue since the industrial
revolution, when it was realized that the black substance bubbling out
of the ground in places like Iraq had great value. It's
interesting to note that in the early 20th century Germany, fully aware
of oil's
importance, allied itself with the Turkish Ottoman Empire and secured
the earliest rights to drill Iraqi oil. They built the Anatalia
railroad between Baghdad and Basra, and obtained oil and mineral rights
on twenty kilometers on each side of this right-of-way. World War
I changed all this, allowing the French and the British to divide the
oil wealth of the entire Middle East.
The Versailles Treaty created the artificial nation of Iraq, and it
wasn't long before American oil companies were drilling and struggling
to participate in the control of Middle East oil. But it was
never smooth sailing for any occupying force in Iraq. After WWI,
the British
generals upon arriving to secure "their" oil said: "Our armies do
not come into your cities and lands as conquerors or enemies, but as
liberators." Not long afterward a jihad was declared against
Britain and eventually they were forced to leave. The more things
change, the more they stay the same! Too bad we are not better at
studying history.
After World War II the U.S. emerged as the #1 world power, and moved to
assume what some believed was our responsibility to control Middle East
oil in competition with the Soviets. This role prompted us to use
our CIA, along with the help of the British, to oust democratically
elected Mohammed Mosadeh from power in Iran and install the Shah as a
U.S. puppet.
We not only supported Saddam Hussein against Iran, we also supported
Osama bin Laden in the 1980s-- aggravating the situation in the Middle
East and causing unintended consequences. With CIA assistance we
helped develop the educational program to radicalize Islamic youth in
many Arab nations, especially in Saudi Arabia to fight the
Soviets. We even provided a nuclear reactor to Iran in
1967-- which today leads us to threaten another war. All of this
has come back to haunt us. Meddling in the affairs of others has
consequences.
Finally, after years of plotting and maneuvering, the neo-conservative
plan to invade Iraq came before the U.S. House in October 2002 to be
rubber-stamped. Though the plan was hatched years before, and the
official policy of the United States government was to remove Saddam
Hussein ever since 1998, various events delayed the vote until this
time. By October the vote was deemed urgent, so as to embarrass
anyone who opposed it. This would make them politically
vulnerable in the November election. The ploy worked. The
resolution passed easily, and it served the interests of proponents of
war in the November election.
The resolution, HJ RES 114, explicitly cited the Iraqi Liberation Act
of 1998 as one of the reasons we had to go to war. The
authorization granted the President to use force against Iraq cited two
precise reasons:
1. "To defend the national security of
the U.S. against the continuing threat posed by Iraq and"
2. "Enforce all relevant United Nations
Council resolutions regarding Iraq."
Many other reasons were given to stir the emotions of the American
public and the U.S. Congress, reasons that were grossly misleading and
found not to be true. The pretense of a legal justification was a
sham.
The fact that Congress is not permitted under the Constitution to
transfer the war power to a president was ignored. Only Congress can
declare war, if we were inclined to follow the rule of law. To
add insult to injury, HJ RES 114 cited United Nations resolutions as
justifications for the war. Ignoring the Constitution while using
the UN to justify the war showed callous disregard for the restraints
carefully written in the Constitution. The authors deliberately
wanted to make war difficult to enter without legislative debate, and
they
purposely kept the responsibility out of the hands of the executive
branch. Surely they never dreamed an international government
would have influence over our foreign policy or tell us when we should
enter into armed conflict.
The legal maneuvering to permit this war was tragic to watch, but the
notion that Saddam Hussein-- a third world punk without an air force,
navy, and hardly an army or any anti-aircraft weaponry-- was an
outright threat to the United States six thousand miles away, tells you
how hysterical fear can be used to pursue a policy of needless war for
quite different reasons.
Today, though, all the old reasons for going to war have been
discredited, and are no longer used to justify continuing the
war. Now we are told we must "complete the mission," and yet no
one seems to know exactly what the mission is or when it can be
achieved. By contrast, when war is properly declared against a
country we can expect an all-out effort until the country
surrenders. Without a declaration of war as the Constitution
requires, it's left to the President to decide when to start the war
and when the war is over. We had sad experiences with this
process in Korea and especially in Vietnam.
Pursuing this war merely to save face, or to claim it's a way to honor
those who already have died or been wounded, is hardly a reason that
more people should die. We're told that we can't leave until we
have a democratic Iraq. But what if Iraq votes to have a Shiite
theocracy, which it looks like the majority wants as their form of
government-- and women, Christians, and Sunnis are made second-class
citizens? It's a preposterous notion and it points out the severe
shortcomings of a democracy where a majority rules and minorities
suffer.
Thankfully, our founding fathers understood the great dangers of a
democracy. They insisted on a constitutional republic with a weak
central government and an executive branch beholden to the legislative
branch in foreign affairs. The sooner we realize we can't afford
this war the better. We've gotten ourselves into a civil war
within the Islamic community.
But could it be, as it had been for over a hundred years prior to our
invasion, that oil really is the driving issue behind a foreign
presence
in the Middle East? It's rather ironic that the consequence of
our intervention has been skyrocketing oil prices, with Iraqi oil
production
still significantly below pre-war levels.
If democracy is not all it's cracked up to be, and a war for oil is
blatantly immoral and unproductive, the question still remains-- why do
we fight? More precisely, why should we fight? When is
enough killing enough? Why does man so casually accept war, which
brings so much suffering to so many, when so little is achieved?
Why do those who suffer and die so willingly accept the excuses for the
wars that need not be fought? Why do so many defer to those who
are enthused about war, and who claim it's a solution to a problem,
without asking them why they themselves do not fight? It's always
other men and other men's children who must sacrifice life and limb for
the reasons that make no sense, reasons that are said to be our
patriotic duty to fight and die for. How many useless wars have
been fought for lies that deserved no hearing? When will it all
end?
Why We Should Not Fight
Since no logical answers can be given for why we fight, it might be
better to talk about why we should not fight. A case can be made
that
if this war does not end soon it will spread and engulf the entire
region. We've already been warned that war against Iran is an
option that remains on the table for reasons no more reliable than
those given for the pre-emptive strike against Iraq. Let me give
you a few reasons why this war in Iraq should not be fought.
It is not in our national interest. On the contrary, pursuing
this war endangers our security, increases the chances of a domestic
terrorist
attack, weakens our defenses, and motivates our enemies to join
together in opposition to our domineering presence around the
world. Does anyone believe that Russia, China, and Iran will give
us free reign over the entire Middle East and its oil?
Tragically, we're setting the stage for a much bigger conflict.
It's possible that this war could evolve into something much worse than
Vietnam.
This war has never been declared. It's not a constitutional war,
and without a proper beginning there can be no proper ending. The
vagueness instills doubts in all Americans, both supporters and
non-supporters, as to what will be accomplished. Supporters of
the war want total victory, which is not achievable with a vague
mission. Now the majority of Americans are demanding an end to
this dragged-out war that many fear will spread before it's over.
It's virtually impossible to beat a determined guerrilla resistance to
a foreign occupying force. After 30 years the Vietnam guerillas,
following unbelievable suffering, succeeded in forcing all foreign
troops from their homeland. History shows that Iraqi Muslims have
always been determined to resist any foreign power on their soil.
We ignored that history and learned nothing from Vietnam. How
many lives, theirs and ours, are worth losing to prove the tenacity of
guerilla fighters supported by a large number of local citizens?
Those who argue that it's legitimate to protect "our oil" someday must
realize that it's not our oil, no matter how strong and sophisticated
our military is. We know the war so far has played havoc with oil
prices, and the market continues to discount problems in the region for
years to come. No end is in sight regarding the uncertainty of
Middle East oil production caused by this conflict.
So far our policies inadvertently have encouraged the development of an
Islamic state, with Iranian-allied Shiites in charge. This has
led to Iranian support for the insurgents, and has placed Iran in a
position of becoming the true victor in this war as its alliance with
Iraq grows. This could place Iran and its allies in the enviable
position of becoming the oil powerhouse in the region, if not the
world, once it has control over the oil fields near Basra.
This unintended alliance with Iran, plus the benefit to Osama bin
Laden's recruiting efforts, will in the end increase the danger to
Israel by rallying the Arab and Muslim people against us.
One of the original stated justifications for the war has been
accomplished. Since 1998 the stated policy of the United States
government was to bring about regime change and get rid of Saddam
Hussein. This has been done, but instead of peace and stability
we have sown the seeds of chaos. Nevertheless, the goal of
removing Saddam Hussein has been achieved and is a reason to stop the
fighting.
There were no weapons of mass destruction, no biological or chemical or
nuclear weapons, so we can be assured the Iraqis pose no threat to
anyone, certainly not to the United States.
No evidence existed to show an alliance between Iraq and al Qaeda
before the war, and ironically our presence there is now encouraging al
Qaeda and Osama bin Laden to move in to fill the vacuum we
created. The only relationship between Iraq and 9/11 is that our
policy in the Middle East continues to increase the likelihood of
another terrorist attack on our homeland.
We should not fight because it's simply not worth it. What are we
going to get for nearly 2,000 soldier deaths and 20 thousand severe
casualties? Was the $350 billion worth it? This is a cost
that will be passed on to future generations through an expanded
national debt. I'll bet most Americans can think of a lot better
ways to have spent this money. Today's program of guns and butter
will be more damaging to our economy than a similar program was in the
1960s, which gave us the stagflation of the 1970s. The economic
imbalances today are much greater than they were in those decades.
Eventually, we will come to realize that the Wilsonian idealism of
using America's resources to promote democracy around the world through
force is a seriously flawed policy. Wilson pretended to be
spreading democracy worldwide, and yet women in the U.S. at that time
were not allowed to vote. Democracy, where the majority dictates
the rules, cannot protect minorities and individual rights. And
in addition, using force to impose our will on others almost always
backfires. There's no reason that our efforts in the 21st century
to impose a western style government in Iraq will be any more
successful than the British were after World War I. This
especially can't work if democracy is only an excuse for our occupation
and the real reasons are left unrecognized.
It boils down to the fact that we don't really have any sound reasons
for continuing this fight. The original reasons for the war never
existed, and the new reasons aren't credible. We hear only that
we must carry on so those who have already suffered death and injury
didn't do so in vain. If the original reasons for starting the
war were false, simply continuing in the name of those fallen makes no
sense. More loss of life can never justify earlier loss of life
if they died for false reasons. This being the case, it's time to
reassess the policies that have gotten us into this mess.
What does all this mean?
The mess we face in the Middle East and Afghanistan, and the threat of
terrorism within our own borders, are not a result of the policies of
this administration alone. Problems have been building for many
years, and have only gotten much worse with our most recent policy of
forcibly imposing regime change in Iraq. We must recognize that
the stalemate in Korea, the loss in Vietnam, and the quagmire in Iraq
and Afghanistan all result from the same flawed foreign policy of
interventionism that our government has pursued for over 100
years. It would be overly simplistic to say the current
administration alone is responsible for the mess in Iraq.
By rejecting the advice of the Founders and our early presidents, our
leaders have drifted away from the admonitions against entangling
alliances and nation building. Policing the world is not our
calling or our mandate. Besides, the Constitution doesn't permit
it. Undeclared wars have not enhanced our national security.
The consensus on foreign interventionism has been pervasive. Both
major parties have come to accept our role as the world's policeman,
despite periodic campaign rhetoric stating otherwise. The media
in particular, especially in the early stages, propagandize in favor of
war. It's only when the costs become prohibitive and the war
loses popular support that the media criticize the effort.
It isn't only our presidents that deserve the blame when they overstep
their authority and lead the country into inappropriate wars.
Congress deserves equally severe criticism for acquiescing to the
demands of the executive to go needlessly to war. It has been
known throughout history that kings, dictators, and the executive
branch of governments are always overly eager to go to war. This
is precisely why our founders tried desperately to keep decisions about
going to war in the hands of the legislature. But this process
has failed us for the last 65 years. Congress routinely has
rubber stamped the plans of our presidents and even the United Nations
to enter into war through the back door.
Congress at any time can prevent or stop all undue foreign
entanglements pursued by the executive branch merely by refusing to
finance them. The current Iraq war, now going on for 15 years,
spans the administration of three presidents and many congresses
controlled by both parties. This makes Congress every bit as
responsible for the current quagmire as the president. But the
real problem is the acceptance by our country as a whole of the
principle of meddling in the internal affairs of other nations when
unrelated to our national security. Intervention, no matter how
well intended, inevitably boomerangs and comes back to haunt us.
Minding our own business is not only economical; it's the only policy
that serves our national security interests and the cause of peace.
The neo-conservatives who want to remake the entire Middle East are not
interested in the pertinent history of this region. Creating an
artificial Iraq after World War I as a unified country was like mixing
water and oil. It has only led to frustration, anger, and
hostilities-- with the resulting instability creating conditions ripe
for dictatorships. The occupying forces will not permit any of
the three regions of Iraq to govern themselves. This is strictly
motivated by a desire to exert control over the oil.
Self-determination and independence for each region, or even a true
republican form of government with a minimalist central authority is
never considered-- yet it is the only answer to the difficult political
problems this area faces. The relative and accidental
independence of the Kurds and the Shiites in the 1990s served those
regions well, and no suicide terrorism existed during that decade.
The claim that our immediate withdrawal from Iraq would cause chaos is
not proven. It didn't happen in Vietnam or even Somalia.
Even today, the militias of the Kurds and the Shiites may well be able
to maintain order in their regions much better than we can
currently. Certainly the Sunnis can take care of themselves, and
it might be in their best interests for all three groups not to fight
each other when we leave. One thing for sure: if we left no more
young Americans would have to die for an indefinable cause.
Instead, we have been forcing on the people of Iraq a type of democracy
that, if implemented, will mean an Islamic state under Sharia'
law. Already we read stories of barbers no longer being safe
shaving beards; Christians are threatened and forced to leave the
country; and burqas are returning out of fear. Unemployment is
over 50%, and oil production is still significantly below pre-war
levels. These results are not worth fighting and dying for.
In this war, like all others, the propagandists and promoters
themselves don't fight, nor do their children. It's always worth
the effort to
wage war when others must suffer and die. Many of those who today
pump the nation up with war fever were nowhere to be found when their
numbers were called in the 1960s-- when previous presidents and
Congresses thought so little about sending young men off to war.
Then it was in their best interests to find more important things to
do-- despite the so-called equalizing draft.
The inability of taxpayers to fund both guns-and-butter has not
deterred those who smell the glory of war. Notoriously, great
nations fall once their appetite for foreign domination outstrips their
citizens' ability or willingness to pay. We tried the
guns-and-butter approach in the 1960s with bad results, and the same
will happen again as a consequence of the current political decision
not to cut back on any expenditure, domestic or foreign. Veto
nothing is current policy! Tax, borrow, and print to pay the
bills is today's conventional wisdom. The problem is that all the
bills eventually must be paid. There's no free lunch, and no free
war. The economic consequences of such a policy are well known
and documented. Excessive spending leads to excessive deficits,
higher taxes, and more borrowing and inflation-- which spells economic
problems that always clobber the middle class and the poor.
Already the suffering has begun. A lackluster recovery, low
paying jobs, outsourcing, and social unrest already are apparent.
This economic price we pay, along with the human suffering, is an
extravagant price for a war that was started with false information and
now is prolonged for reasons unrelated to our national security.
This policy has led to excessive spending overseas and neglect at
home. It invites enemies to attack us, and drains the resources
needed to defend our homeland and care for our own people. We are
obligated to learn something from the tragedy of Katrina about the
misallocation of funds away from our infrastructure to the rebuilding
of Iraq after first destroying it. If ever there was a time for
us to reassess our policy of foreign interventionism, it is
today. It's time to look inward and attend to the constitutional
needs of our people, and forget about the grandiose schemes to remake
the world in our image through the use of force. These efforts
not only are doomed to fail, as they have for the past one hundred
years, but they invite economic and strategic military problems that
are harmful to our national security interests.
We've been told that we must fight to protect our freedoms here at
home. These reasons are given to make the sacrifices more
tolerable and noble. Without an honorable cause, the suffering
becomes intolerable. Hiding from the truth, though, in the end is
no panacea for a war that promises no peace.
The most important misjudgment regarding Iraq that must be dealt with
is the charge that Muslim terrorists attack us out of envy for our
freedoms, our prosperity, and our way of life. There is no
evidence this is the case. On the contrary, those who have
extensively researched this issue conclude that the #1 reason suicide
terrorists attack anywhere in the world is because their land is
occupied by a
foreign military power. Pretending otherwise and constantly
expanding our military presence in more Arab and Muslim countries as we
have since 1990 has only increased the danger of more attacks on our
soil, as well as in those countries that have allied themselves with
us. If we deny this truth we do so at our own peril.
It's not unusual for the war crusaders to condemn those who speak the
truth in an effort to end an unnecessary war. They claim those
who want honest reasons for the enormous sacrifice are unpatriotic and
un-American, but these charges only serve to exacerbate the social
unrest. Any criticism of policy, no matter how flawed the policy
is, is said to be motivated by a lack of support for the troops.
Yet it is preposterous to suggest that a policy that would have spared
the lives of 1900 servicemen and women lacks concern for the well being
of our troops. The absence of good reasoning to pursue this war
prompts the supporters of the war to demonize the skeptics and
critics. They have no other defense.
Those who want to continue this war accuse those who lost loved ones in
Iraq, and oppose the war, of using the dead for personal political
gain. But what do the war proponents do when they claim the
reason we must fight on is to honor the sacrifice of the military
personnel we lost by completing the mission? The big difference
is that one group argues for saving lives, while the other justifies
more killing. And by that logic, the additional deaths will
require even more killing to make sure they too have not died in
vain. Therefore, the greater number who have died, the greater is
the motivation to complete the mission. This defies logic.
This argument to persevere has been used throughout history to continue
wars that could and should have ended much sooner. This was true
for World War I and Vietnam.
A sad realism struck me recently reading how our Marines in Afghanistan
must now rely on donkey transportation in their efforts at nation
building and military occupation. Evidently the Taliban is alive
and well, as Osama bin Laden remains in this region. But doesn't
this tell us something about our naive assumption that our economic
advantages and technical knowledge can subdue and control
anybody? We're traversing Afghan mountains on donkeys, and losing
lives daily in Baghdad with homemade primitive bombs. Our power
and dominance clearly is limited by the determination of those who see
us as occupiers, proving that just more money and sophisticated weapons
won't bring us victory. Sophisticated weapons and the use of
unlimited military power is no substitute for diplomacy designed to
promote peace while reserving force only for defending our national
interests.
Changing our policy of meddling in the affairs of others won't come
quickly or easily. But a few signals to indicate a change in our
attitude would go a long way to bringing peace to a troubled land.
1. We must soon, and Congress can do this
through the budget process, stop the construction of all permanent
bases in Iraq and any other Muslim country in the region. Think
of how we would react if the Chinese had the military edge on us and
laid claims to the Gulf of
Mexico, building bases within the U.S. in order to promote their
superior way of life. Isn't it ironic that we close down bases
here at home while building new ones overseas? Domestic bases
might well promote security, while bases in Muslim nations only elicit
more hatred toward us.
2. The plans for the biggest U.S. embassy
in the world, costing nearly 1 billion dollars, must be canceled.
This structure in Baghdad
sends a message, like the military bases being built, that we expect to
be in Iraq and running Iraq for a long time to come.
3. All military forces, especially on the
Arabian Peninsula, must be moved offshore at the earliest time
possible. All responsibility for
security and control of the oil must be transferred to the Iraqis from
the United States as soon as possible, within months not years.
The time will come when our policies dealing with foreign affairs will
change for the better. But that will be because we can no longer
afford the extravagance of war. This will occur when the American
people realize that war causes too much suffering here at home, and the
benefits of peace again become attractive to us all. Part of this
recognition will involve a big drop in the value of the dollar, higher
interest rates, and rampant price inflation.
Though these problems are serious and threaten our freedoms and way of
life, there's every reason to work for the traditional constitutional
foreign policy that promotes peace over war, while not being tempted to
mold the world in our image through force. We should not forget
that what we did not achieve by military force in Vietnam, was
essentially achieved with the peace that came from our military failure
and withdrawal of our armed forces. Today, through trade and
peace, U.S. investment and economic cooperation has westernized Vietnam
far more than our military efforts.
We must remember initiating force to impose our will on others negates
all the goodness for which we profess to stand. We cannot be
fighting to secure our freedom if we impose laws like the Patriot Act
and a national ID card on the American people.
Unfortunately, we have lost faith and confidence in the system of
government with which we have been blessed. Today too many
Americans support, at least in the early stages, the use of force to
spread our message of hope and freedom. They too often are
confused by the rhetoric that our armies are needed to spread American
goodness. Using force injudiciously, instead of spreading the worthy
message of American freedom through peaceful means, antagonizes our
enemies, alienates our allies, and threatens personal liberties here at
home while burdening our economy.
If confidence can be restored in our American traditions of peace and
trade, our influence throughout the world would be enhanced just as it
was once we rejected the military approach in Vietnam.
This change in policy can come easily once the people of this country
decide that there is a better way to conduct ourselves throughout the
world. Whenever the people turn against war as a tool to promote
certain beliefs, the war ceases. That's what we need today.
Then we can get down to the business of setting an example of how peace
and freedom brings prosperity in an atmosphere that allows for
excellence and virtue to thrive.
A powerful bureaucratic military state negates all efforts to preserve
these conditions that have served America so well up until recent
times. That is not what the American dream is all
about. Without a change in attitude, the American dream
dies: a simple change that restates the principles of liberty enshrined
in our Constitution will serve us well in solving all the problems we
face. The American people are up to the task; I hope Congress is
as well.