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We Have Been Warned
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
Before
the US House of Representatives, October 26, 2005
We
have been warned. Prepare for a broader war in the Middle East,
as plans are being laid for the next U.S.-led regime change
in Syria. A UN report on the death of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafig
Hariri elicited this comment from a senior U.S. policy maker: Out
of tragedy comes an extraordinary strategic opportunity. This
statement reflects the continued neo-conservative, Machiavellian
influence on our foreign policy. The opportunity refers
to the long-held neo-conservative plan for regime change in Syria,
similar to what was carried out in Iraq.
This plan for remaking the Middle East has been around for a long
time. Just as 9/11 served the interests of those who longed for
changes in Iraq, the sensationalism surrounding Hariris death
is being used to advance plans to remove Assad.
Congress
already has assisted these plans by authorizing the sanctions placed
on Syria last year. Harmful sanctions, as applied to Iraq in the
1990s, inevitably represent a major step toward war since they bring
havoc to so many innocent people. Syria already has been charged
with developing weapons of mass destruction based on no more evidence
than was available when Iraq was similarly charged.
Syria
has been condemned for not securing its borders, by the same U.S.
leaders who cannot secure our own borders. Syria was castigated
for placing its troops in Lebanon, a neighboring country, although
such action was invited by an elected government and encouraged
by the United States. The Syrian occupation of Lebanon elicited
no suicide terrorist attacks, as was suffered by Western occupiers.
Condemning
Syria for having troops in Lebanon seems strange, considering most
of the world sees our 150,000 troops in Iraq as an unwarranted foreign
occupation. Syrian troops were far more welcome in Lebanon.
Secretary
Rice likewise sees the problems in Syria that we helped to
create as an opportunity to advance our Middle Eastern agenda.
In recent testimony she stated that it was always the administrations
intent to redesign the greater Middle East, and Iraq was only one
part of that plan. And once again we have been told that all options
are still on the table for dealing with Syria including war.
The
statement that should scare all Americans (and the world) is the
assurance by Secretary Rice that the President needs no additional
authority from Congress to attack Syria. She argues that authority
already has been granted by the resolutions on 9/11 and Iraq. This
is not true, but if Congress remains passive to the powers assumed
by the executive branch it wont matter. As the war spreads,
the only role for Congress will be to provide funding lest they
be criticized for not supporting the troops. In the meantime, the
Constitution and our liberties here at home will be further eroded
as more Americans die.
This
escalation of conflict with Syria comes as a result of the UN report
concerning the Hariri death. When we need an excuse for our actions,
its always nice to rely on the organization that our administration
routinely condemns, one that brought us the multi-billion dollar
oil-for-food scandal and sexual crimes by UN representatives.
Its
easy to ignore the fact that the report did not implicate Assad,
who is targeted for the next regime change. The UN once limited
itself to disputes between nations; yet now its assumed the
UN, like the United States, has a legal and moral right to inject
itself into the internal policies of sovereign nations. Yet what
is the source of this presumed wisdom? Where is the moral imperative
that allows us to become the judge and jury of a domestic murder
in a country 6,000 miles from our shores?
Moral,
constitutional, and legal arguments for a less aggressive foreign
policy receive little attention in Washington. But the law of unintended
consequences serves as a thorough teacher for the slow learners
and the morally impaired.
- Is Iraq
not yet enough of a headache for the braggarts of the shock and
awe policy?
- Are 2,000
lives lost not enough to get their attention?
- How many
hundreds of billions of dollars must be drained from our economy
before its noticed?
- Is it still
plausible that deficits dont matter?
- Is the apparent
victory for Iran in the Shiite theocracy weve created in
Iraq not yet seen as a disturbing consequence of the ill-fated
Iraq regime change effort?
- When we
have our way with the next election in Lebanon and Hezbollah wins,
what do we do?
- If our effort
to destabilize Syria is no more successful than our efforts in
Iraq, then what?
- If destabilizing
Syria leads to the same in Iran, what are our options?
If
we cant leave now, well surely not leave then
well be told we must stay to honor the fallen to prove the
cause was just.
We
should remember Ronald Reagans admonition regarding this area
of the world. Ronald Reagan reflected on Lebanon in his memoirs,
describing the Middle East as a jungle and Middle East politics
as irrational. It forced him to rethink his policy in the region.
Its time we do some rethinking as well.
October
28, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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