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Escalation is Hardly the Answer
by the HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
Before the U.S. House of Representatives, January 11, 2007
Mr. Speaker, A military victory in Iraq is unattainable, just as it
was in the Vietnam war.
At the close of the Vietnam war in 1975, a telling conversation took
place between an NVA Colonel named Tu and an American Colonel named
Harry Summers. Colonel Summers reportedly said, You never beat
us on the battlefield. Tu replied, That may be so, but it
is also irrelevant. It is likewise irrelevant to seek military
victory in Iraq.
As conditions deteriorate in Iraq, the American people are told more
blood must be spilled to achieve just such a military victory. 20,000
additional troops and another $100 billion are needed for a surge.
Yet the people remain rightfully skeptical.
Though weve been in Iraq nearly four years, the meager goal today
simply is to secure Baghdad. This hardly shows that the mission is even
partly accomplished.
Astonishingly, American taxpayers now will be forced to finance a multi-billion
dollar jobs program in Iraq. Suddenly the war is about jobs! We export
our manufacturing jobs to Asia, and now we plan to export our welfare
jobs to Iraq-- all at the expense of the poor and middle class here
at home.
Plans are being made to become more ruthless in achieving stability
in Iraq. It appears Muqtada al Sadr will be on the receiving end of
our military efforts, despite his overwhelming support among large segments
of the Iraqi people.
Its interesting to note that one excuse given for our failure
is leveled at the Iraqis themselves. They have not done enough, were
told, and are difficult to train. Yet no one complains that Mahdi or
Kurdish militias or the Badr Brigade (the real Iraq government, not
our appointed government) are not well trained. Our problems obviously
have nothing to do with training Iraqis to fight, but instead with loyalties
and motivations.
We claim to be spreading democracy in Iraq, but al Sadr has far more
democratic support with the majority Shiites than our troops enjoy.
The problem is not a lack of democratic consensus; it is the antipathy
toward our presence among most Iraqis.
In real estate the three important considerations are location, location,
location. In Iraq the three conditions are occupation, occupation, occupation.
Nothing can improve in Iraq until we understand that our occupation
is the primary source of the chaos and killing. We are a foreign occupying
force, strongly resented by the majority of Iraqs citizens.
Our inability to adapt to the tactics of 4th generation warfare compounds
our military failure. Unless we understand this, even doubling our troop
strength will not solve the problems created by our occupation.
The talk of a troop surge and jobs program in Iraq only distracts Americans
from the very real possibility of an attack on Iran. Our growing naval
presence in the region and our harsh rhetoric toward Iran are unsettling.
Securing the Horn of Africa and sending Ethiopian troops into Somalia
do not bode well for world peace. Yet these developments are almost
totally ignored by Congress.
Rumors are flying about when, not if, Iran will be bombed by either
Israel or the U.S.-- possibly with nuclear weapons. Our CIA says Iran
is ten years away from producing a nuclear bomb and has no delivery
system, but this does not impede our plans to keep everything
on the table when dealing with Iran.
We should remember that Iran, like Iraq, is a third-world nation without
a significant military. Nothing in history hints that she is likely
to invade a neighboring country, let alone do anything to America or
Israel. I am concerned, however, that a contrived Gulf of Tonkin- type
incident may occur to gain popular support for an attack on Iran.
Even if such an attack is carried out by Israel over U.S. objections,
we will be politically and morally culpable since we provided the weapons
and dollars to make it possible.
Rep. Ron Paul can be reached through his website at www.house.gov/paul
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