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The Original Foreign Policy
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
It is
our true policy to steer clear of entangling alliances with any
portion of the foreign world.
~
George Washington
Last week
I wrote about the critical need for Congress to reassert its authority
over foreign policy, and for the American people to recognize that
the Constitution makes no distinction between domestic and foreign
matters. Policy is policy, and it must be made by the legislature
and not the executive.
But what policy
is best? How should we deal with the rest of the world in a way
that best advances proper national interests, while not threatening
our freedoms at home?
I believe our
founding fathers had it right when they argued for peace and commerce
between nations, and against entangling political and military alliances.
In other words, noninterventionism.
Noninterventionism
is not isolationism. Nonintervention simply means America does not
interfere militarily, financially, or covertly in the internal affairs
of other nations. It does not mean that we isolate ourselves; on
the contrary, our founders advocated open trade, travel, communication,
and diplomacy with other nations.
Thomas Jefferson
summed up the noninterventionist foreign policy position perfectly
in his 1801 inaugural address: Peace, commerce, and honest
friendship with all nations entangling alliances with none.
Washington similarly urged that we must, Act for ourselves
and not for others, by forming an American character
wholly free of foreign attachments.
Yet how many
times have we all heard these wise words without taking them to
heart? How many claim to admire Jefferson and Washington, but conveniently
ignore both when it comes to American foreign policy? Since so many
apparently now believe Washington and Jefferson were wrong on the
critical matter of foreign policy, they should at least have the
intellectual honesty to admit it.
Of course we
frequently hear the offensive cliché that, times have
changed, and thus we cannot follow quaint admonitions from
the 1700s. The obvious question, then, is what other principles
from our founding era should we discard for convenience? Should
we give up the First amendment because times have changed and free
speech causes too much offense in our modern society? Should we
give up the Second amendment, and trust that todays government
is benign and not to be feared by its citizens? How about the rest
of the Bill of Rights?
Its hypocritical
and childish to dismiss certain founding principles simply because
a convenient rationale is needed to justify interventionist policies
today. The principles enshrined in the Constitution do not change.
If anything, todays more complex world cries out for the moral
clarity provided by a noninterventionist foreign policy.
It
is time for Americans to rethink the interventionist foreign policy
that is accepted without question in Washington. It is time to understand
the obvious harm that results from our being dragged time and time
again into intractable and endless Middle East conflicts, whether
in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, or Palestine. It is definitely time
to ask ourselves whether further American lives and tax dollars
should be lost trying to remake the Middle East in our image.
December
19, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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