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Ignoring Reality in Iraq
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
A
recent study by the Pentagons Defense Science Task Force on
Strategic Communications concluded that in the struggle for hearts
and minds in Iraq, American efforts have not only failed,
they may also have achieved the opposite of what they intended.
This Pentagon report flatly states that our war in Iraq actually
has elevated support for radical Islamists. It goes on to conclude
that our active intervention in the Middle East as a whole has greatly
diminished our reputation in the region, and strengthened support
for radical groups. This is similar to what the CIA predicted in
an October 2002 National Intelligence Estimate, before the invasion
took place.
Then,
earlier this month we learned that the CIA station chief in Baghdad
sent a cable back to the US warning that the situation in Iraq is
deteriorating, and not expected to improve any time soon. Other
CIA experts also warn that the security situation in Iraq is likely
to get even worse in the future. These reports are utterly ignored
by the administration.
These
recent reports are not the product of some radical antiwar organization.
They represent the US governments own assessment of our progress
in Iraq after two and a half years and the loss of thousands of
lives. We are alienating the Islamic world in our oxymoronic quest
to impose democracy in Iraq.
This
demonstrates once again the folly of nation building, which is something
candidate Bush wisely rejected before the 2000 election. The worsening
situation in Iraq also reminds us that going to war without a congressional
declaration, as the Constitution requires, leads us into protracted
quagmires over and over again.
The
reality is that current-day Iraq contains three distinct groups
of people who have been at odds with each other for generations.
Pundits and politicians tell us that a civil war will erupt if the
US military departs. Yet our insistence that Iraq remain one indivisible
nation actually creates the conditions for civil war. Instead of
an artificial, forced, nationalist unity between the Sunnis, Shiites,
and Kurds, we should allow each group to seek self-government and
choose voluntarily whether they wish to associate with a central
government. We cannot impose democracy in Iraq any more than we
can erase hundreds of years of Iraqi history.
Even
opponents of the war now argue that we must occupy Iraq indefinitely
until a democratic government takes hold, no matter what the costs.
No attempt is made by either side to explain exactly why it is the
duty of American soldiers to die for the benefit of Iraq or any
other foreign country. No reason is given why American taxpayers
must pay billions of dollars to build infrastructure in Iraq. We
are expected to accept the interventionist approach without question,
as though no other options exist. This blanket acceptance of foreign
meddling and foreign aid may be the current Republican policy, but
it is not a conservative policy by any means.
Non-interventionism
was the foreign policy ideal of the Founding Fathers, an ideal that
is ignored by both political parties today. Those who support political
and military intervention in Iraq and elsewhere should have the
integrity to admit that their views conflict with the principles
of our nations founding. Its easy to repeat the tired
cliché that times have changed since the Constitution
was written in fact, thats an argument the left has
used for decades to justify an unconstitutional welfare state. Yet
if we accept this argument, what other principles from the founding
era should we discard? Should we reject federalism? Habeas corpus?
How about the Second Amendment? The principle of limited government
enshrined in the Constitution limited government in both domestic
and foreign affairs has not changed over time. What has changed
is our willingness to ignore that principle.
December
14, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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