Before
the US House of Representatives,
March 28, 2006
The top Neo-Con
of the twentieth century was Woodrow Wilson. His supposed idealism,
symbolized in the slogan Make the world safe for democracy,
resulted in untold destruction and death across the world for
many decades. His deceit and manipulation of the pre-war intelligence
from Europe dragged America into an unnecessary conflict that
cost the world and us dearly. Without the disastrous Versailles
Treaty, World War II could have been averted and the rise
to power of Communists around the world might have been halted.
We seem to
never learn from our past mistakes. Todays neo-cons are
as idealistically misled and aggressive in remaking the Middle
East as the Wilsonian do-gooders. Even given the horrendous costs
of the Iraq War and the unintended consequences that plague us
today, the neo-cons are eager to expand their regime-change policy
to Iran by force.
The obvious
shortcomings of our regime change and occupation of Afghanistan
are now readily apparent. The Taliban was ousted from power, but
they have regrouped and threaten the delicate stability that now
exists in that country. Opium drug production is once again a
major operation, with drugs lords controlling a huge area of the
country outside Kabul. And now the real nature of the government
we created has been revealed in the case of Abdul Rahman, the
Muslim who faced a possible death sentence from the Karzai administration
for converting to Christianity. Even now that Mr. Rahman is free
due to western pressure, his life remains in danger.
Our bombs
and guns havent changed the fact that the new puppet Afghan
government still follows Sharia law. The same loyalty to Sharia
exists in Iraq, where were trying so hard to stabilize things.
And all this is done in the name of spreading democracy.
The sad fact
is that even under the despicable rule of Saddam Hussein, Christians
were safer in Iraq than they are today. Saddam Husseins
foreign minister was a practicing Christian. Today thousands of
Christians have fled Iraq following our occupation, to countries
like Jordan and Syria. Those Christians who have remained in Iraq
fear for their lives every day. That should tell us something
about the shortcomings of a policy that presumes to make the world
safe for democracy.
The Muslim
world is not fooled by our talk about spreading democracy and
values. The evidence is too overwhelming that we do not hesitate
to support dictators and install puppet governments when it serves
our interests. When democratic elections result in the elevation
of a leader or party not to our liking, we do not hesitate for
a minute to undermine that government. This hypocrisy is rarely
recognized by the American people. Its much more comfortable
to believe in slogans, to believe that were defending our
goodness and spreading true liberty. We accept this and believe
strongly in the cause, strongly enough to sacrifice many of our
sons and daughters, and stupendous amounts of money, to spread
our ideals through force.
Pointing
out the lack of success is taboo. It seems of little concern to
many members of Congress that we lack both the moral right and
constitutional authority to impose our will on other nations.
The toughest
task is analyzing what we do from their perspective. We should
try harder to place ourselves in the shoes of those who live in
the Arab countries where our efforts currently are concentrated.
We are outraged by a Muslim country that would even consider the
death penalty for a Christian convert. But many Muslims see all
that we do as a reflection of Western Christianity, which to them
includes Europe and America. They see everything in terms of religion.
When our
bombs and sanctions kill hundreds of thousands of their citizens,
they see it as an attack on their religion by Christians. To them
our actions represent a crusade to change their culture and their
political systems. They do not see us as having noble intentions.
Cynicism and realism tell them were involved in the Middle
East to secure the oil we need.
Our
occupation and influence in the holy lands of the Middle East
will always be suspect. This includes all the countries of the
Arabian Peninsula, Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan. Naïvely believing
otherwise will guarantee continuing hostilities in Iraq. Our meddling
will remain an incitement for radicals to strike us here at home
in future terrorist attacks. All the intelligence gathering in
the world will serve little purpose if we dont come to understand
exactly why they hate us despite the good intentions that
many Americans hold dear.