I was recently
asked why I thought it was a bad idea for the President to initiate
a war against Iraq. I responded by saying that I could easily
give a half a dozen reasons why; and if I took a minute, I could
give a full dozen. For starters, here is a half a dozen.
Number one,
Congress has not given the President the legal authority to wage
war against Iraq as directed by the Constitution, nor does he
have U.N. authority to do so. Even if he did, it would not satisfy
the rule of law laid down by the Framers of the Constitution.
Number two,
Iraq has not initiated aggression against the United States. Invading
Iraq and deposing Saddam Hussein, no matter how evil a dictator
he may be, has nothing to do with our national security. Iraq
does not have a single airplane in its air force and is a poverty-ridden
third world nation, hardly a threat to U.S. security. Stirring
up a major conflict in this region will actually jeopardize our
security.
Number three,
a war against Iraq initiated by the United States cannot be morally
justified. The argument that someday in the future Saddam Hussein
might pose a threat to us means that any nation, any place in
the world is subject to an American invasion without cause. This
would be comparable to the impossibility of proving a negative.
Number four,
initiating a war against Iraq will surely antagonize all neighboring
Arab and Muslim nations as well as the Russians, the Chinese,
and the European Union, if not the whole world. Even the English
people are reluctant to support Tony Blair's prodding of our President
to invade Iraq. There is no practical benefit for such action.
Iraq could end up in even more dangerous hands like Iran.
Number five,
an attack on Iraq will not likely be confined to Iraq alone. Spreading
the war to Israel and rallying all Arab nations against her may
well end up jeopardizing the very existence of Israel. The President
has already likened the current international crisis more to that
of World War II than the more localized Vietnam war. The law of
unintended consequences applies to international affairs every
bit as much as to domestic interventions, yet the consequences
of such are much more dangerous.
Number six,
the cost of a war against Iraq would be prohibitive. We paid a
heavy economic price for the Vietnam war in direct cost, debt
and inflation. This coming war could be a lot more expensive.
Our national debt is growing at a rate greater than $250 billion
per year. This will certainly accelerate. The dollar cost will
be the least of our concerns compared to the potential loss of
innocent lives, both theirs and ours. The systematic attack on
civil liberties that accompanies all wars cannot be ignored. Already
we hear cries for resurrecting the authoritarian program of conscription
in the name of patriotism, of course.
Could any
benefit come from all this warmongering? Possibly. Let us hope
and pray so. It should be evident that big government is anathema
to individual liberty. In a free society, the role of government
is to protect the individual's right to life and liberty. The
biggest government of all, the U.N. consistently threatens personal
liberties and U.S. sovereignty. But our recent move toward unilateralism
hopefully will inadvertently weaken the United Nations. Our participation
more often than not lately is conditioned on following the international
rules and courts and trade agreements only when they please us,
flaunting the consensus, without rejecting internationalism on
principle- as we should.
The way these
international events will eventually play out is unknown, and
in the process we expose ourselves to great danger. Instead of
replacing today's international government, (the United Nations,
the IMF, the World Bank, the WTO, the international criminal court)
with free and independent republics, it is more likely that we
will see a rise of militant nationalism with a penchant for solving
problems with arms and protectionism rather than free trade and
peaceful negotiations.
The last
thing this world needs is the development of more nuclear weapons,
as is now being planned in a pretense for ensuring the peace.
We would need more than an office of strategic information to
convince the world of that.
What
do we need? We need a clear understanding and belief in a free
society, a true republic that protects individual liberty, private
property, free markets, voluntary exchange and private solutions
to social problems, placing strict restraints on government meddling
in the internal affairs of others.
Indeed, we
live in challenging and dangerous times.