Mr. Speaker,
the neo-conservative media machine has been hard at work lately
drumming up support for the $87 billion appropriation to extend
our precarious occupation of Iraq. Opposition to this funding,
according to the Secretary of Defense, encourages our enemies
and hinders the war against terrorism. This is a distortion of
the facts and is nothing more than attacking the messenger when
one disapproves of the message.
Those within
the administration, prior to the war, who warned of the dangers
and real costs were fired. Yet now it turns out that they were
correct, that it would not be a cakewalk, that it would require
a lot more troops, and costs would far exceed original expectations.
The President
recently reminded us that we went into Iraq to force its compliance
with U.N. resolutions, since the U.N. itself was not up to the
task. It was not for national security reasons. Yet we all know
that the U.N. never endorsed this occupation.
The question
we in the Congress ought to ask is this: What if our efforts to
westernize and democratize Iraq do not work? Who knows? Many believe
that our pursuit of nation building in Iraq will actually make
things worse in Iraq, in the entire Middle East, throughout the
entire Muslim world, and even here in the United States.
This is a
risky venture, and new funding represents an escalation of our
efforts to defend a policy that has little chance of working.
Since no
weapons of mass destruction were found in Iraq, nor any evidence
that the army of Saddam Hussein could have threatened the security
of any nation, let alone the United States, a new reason is now
given to justify an endless entanglement in a remote area of the
world 6,000 miles from our homeland.
We are now
told that we must occupy Iraq to fight the terrorists that attacked
us on 9/11. Yet not one shred of evidence has been produced to
show that the Iraqi government had anything to do with 9/11 or
any affiliation with al-Qaeda.
The American
people are first told they have to sacrifice to pay for the bombing
of Iraq. Now they must accept the fact that they must pay to rebuild
it. If they complain, they will be accused of being unpatriotic
and not supporting the troops. I wonder what a secret poll of
our troops would reveal about whether they thought public support
for bringing them home next week indicated a lack of support for
their well-being.
Some believe
that by not raising taxes to pay for the war we can fund it on
the cheap. We cannot. When deficits skyrocket the federal government
prints more money, the people are effectively taxed by losing
value in their savings and in their paychecks. The inflation tax
is a sinister and evil way to pay for unpopular wars. It has been
done that way for centuries.
Mr. Speaker,
I guess we shouldn't worry because we can find a way to pay for
it. Already we are charging our wounded soldiers $8.10 a day for
food when recuperating in a hospital from their war injuries.
We also know that other soldiers are helping out by buying their
own night vision goggles, GPS devices, short wave radios, backpacks,
and even shoes! So I suppose we can fund the war that way. It
does not seem like much of a bother to cut veterans' benefits.
Besides, many conservatives for years have argued that deficits
do not really matter, only tax rates do. So let us just quit worrying
about deficits and this $87 billion supplemental. Of course Im
being sarcastic.
Seriously,
though, funding for this misadventure should be denied no matter
how well-meaning its supporters are. To expect a better world
to come from force of arms abroad and confiscatory taxation at
home is nothing but a grand illusion. The sooner we face the reality,
the better.
While we
nation-build in Iraq in the name of defeating terrorism, we ignore
our responsibilities to protect our borders at home while we compromise
the liberties of our citizens with legislation like the Patriot
Act.
There are
two main reasons we need to reject the foreign policy of the past
50 years that has been used to rationalize our presence in Iraq.
First, the practical: We cannot expect to force western, U.S.-style
democracy on a nation that for over 1,000 years learned to live
with and accept an Islamic-based legal system. No matter what
we say or believe, to the Iraqis they have been invaded by the
Christian west, and whether it is the United States, U.N. or European
troops that are sent to teach them the ways of the west it will
not matter.
Second,
we have no constitutional authority to police the world or involve
ourselves in nation building, in making the world safe for our
style of democracy. Our founders advised against it and the early
presidents followed that advice. If we believe strongly in our
ideals, the best way to spread them is to set a good example so
that others will voluntarily emulate us. Force will not work.
Besides, we do not have the money. The $87 billion appropriations
request should be rejected.