Why Ron Paul’s Answer Terrifies Them
by
Jacob G. Hornberger
by Jacob G. Hornberger
DIGG THIS
In one short
answer to a moderators question in the South Carolina debate
in which Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul suggested that
U.S. foreign policy motivated the 9/11 terrorists, Paul produced
an earthquake that is shaking the Republican establishment.
The chairman
of the Michigan Republican Party proposed banning Paul from future
debates. Besieged by adverse public reaction, however, he quickly
backed down.
FoxNews commentator
John Gibson and columnist Michelle Malkin somehow reached the warped
conclusion that Paul was suggesting that U.S. officials had committed
the 9/11 attacks. After bloggers pointed out the inherent contradiction
between that claim and Pauls point that foreign terrorists
motivated by U.S. foreign policy had committed the attacks, Malkin
quickly issued a retraction.
Other members
of the Republican establishment suggested that Paul was blaming
America for the 9/11 attacks. Thats because they think
that the federal government is America. In actuality, as
our American ancestors understood, the federal government and the
country are composed of two separate and distinct groups of people
those within the federal government and those within the
private sector, a point reflected in the Bill of Rights, which expressly
protects the country from the federal government.
Whats
going on here? Why the enormous, almost panicky, overreaction to
what is a rather simple point about U.S. foreign policy? Why the
attempts to suppress, distort, and misrepresent? What are they so
scared of?
The answer
is very simple: The Republican establishment knows that if the American
people conclude that Ron Paul is right, the jig is up with respect
to the big-government, pro-empire, interventionist foreign policy
that Republicans (and many Democrats) have supported for many years.
Pauls
point is a straightforward one: U.S. foreign policy in the Middle
East generated the anger that motivated the 9/11 terrorists. If
he had had more time, Paul undoubtedly would have pointed out the
U.S. policies in the Middle East that made people so angry: (1)
the U.S. governments ardent support of Saddam Hussein and the furnishing of biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction
to him; (2) the more than 10 years of brutal sanctions against Iraq, which contributed to the
deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children; (3) UN Ambassador
Madeleine Albrights infamous statement to Sixty Minutes
that the deaths of half a million Iraqi children from the sanctions
had been worth it; (4) the stationing of U.S. troops on Islamic holy
lands, knowing the adverse impact such action would have on Muslims;
(5) the no-fly zones, which were never authorized by
either the UN or the U.S. Congress and which killed still more Iraqis,
including 13-year-old Omran Harbi Jawair, whose head was
shot off by a U.S. missile while he was tending his sheep in 2000;
(6) and the long-time, unconditional financial and military aid
provided the Israeli government.
Thus, by invading
Iraq the U.S. government was simply engaging in the same course
of interventionist conduct that had produced prior acts of terrorism
against the United States (not only the 9/11 attacks but the 1993
attack on the World Trade Center, the 1998 terrorist attacks on
U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, and the 2000 terrorist attack
on the USS Cole). As Paul stated in the debate and
as U.S. intelligence agencies now confirm, the 2003 invasion of Iraq,
which has killed and maimed countless more Iraqis, has been a dream-come-true
for Osama bin Ladens recruiters.
The 9/11 terrorist
attacks also generated the war on terror, which in turn
has given us ever-increasing budgets for the military-industrial
complex, out-of-control federal spending that debauches the currency,
omnipotent power to the CIA, an endless stream of color-coded fear-mongering,
warrantless monitoring of telephone calls and emails, torture, kidnapping
and rendition, secret overseas prison camps, indefinite detention,
cancellation of habeas corpus, military tribunals, enemy combatants,
and ever-increasing infringements on civil liberty.
If the U.S.
governments foreign policy of interventionism is, in fact,
the root cause of terrorism against the United States, as Congressman
Paul contends, there is an obvious solution to the problem: End
the U.S. governments role as international policeman, invader,
intervener, interloper, provider, and sanctioner. Foreign terrorism
against Americans would disappear along with the need for a war
on terror. Civil liberties that were suspended could be restored.
A sense of balance and harmony could return to our lives.
Ending interventionism,
terrorism, and the war on terror would also mean that
the era of big government in foreign affairs could be brought to
an end. No wonder the Republican establishment is so terrified of
Ron Pauls foreign-policy message.
May
24, 2007
Jacob
Hornberger [send him mail]
is founder and president of The Future
of Freedom Foundation. He will be among the 22 speakers at FFF’s
upcoming conference on June 14 in Reston, Virginia: “Restoring
the Constitution: Foreign Policy and Civil Liberties.”
Copyright
© 2007 Future of Freedom Foundation
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