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Don't
Start a War With Iran Now!
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Statement
on H. Con. Res. 398: Expressing the concern of Congress over Iran's
development of the means to produce nuclear weapons, 6 May 2004.
I
rise in strong opposition to this ill-conceived and ill-timed legislation.
Let's not fool ourselves: this concurrent resolution leads us down
the road to war against Iran. It creates a precedent for future
escalation, as did similar legislation endorsing "regime change"
in Iraq back in 1998.
I
find it incomprehensible that as the failure of our Iraq policy
becomes more evident even to its most determined advocates
we here are approving the same kind of policy toward Iran.
With Iraq becoming more of a problem daily, the solution as envisioned
by this legislation is to look for yet another fight. And we should
not fool ourselves: this legislation sets the stage for direct conflict
with Iran. The resolution "calls upon all State Parties to
the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), including
the United States, to use all appropriate means to deter, dissuade,
and prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons..." Note the
phrase "...use all appropriate means...."
Additionally,
this legislation calls for yet more and stricter sanctions on Iran,
including a demand that other countries also impose sanctions on
Iran. As we know, sanctions are unmistakably a move toward war,
particularly when, as in this legislation, a demand is made that
the other nations of the world similarly isolate and blockade the
country. Those who wish for a regime change in Iran should especially
reject sanctions just look at how our Cuba policy has allowed
Fidel Castro to maintain his hold on power for decades. Sanctions
do not hurt political leaders, as we know most recently from our
sanctions against Iraq, but rather sow misery among the poorest
and most vulnerable segments of society. Dictators do not go hungry
when sanctions are imposed.
It
is somewhat ironic that we are again meddling in Iranian affairs.
Students of history will recall that the US government's ill-advised
coup against Iranian leader Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953 and its subsequent
installation of the Shah as the supreme ruler led to intense hatred
of the United States and eventually to the radical Islamic revolution
of 1979. One can only wonder what our relations would be with Iran
if not for the decades of meddling in that country's internal affairs.
We likely would not be considering resolutions such as this. Yet
the solution to all the difficulties created by our meddling foreign
policy always seems to always be yet more meddling. Will Congress
ever learn?
I
urge my colleagues to reject this move toward war with Iran, to
reject the failed policies of regime-change and nation-building,
and to return to the wise and consistent policy of non-interventionism
in the affairs of other sovereign nations.
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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