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More
Funding for the War in Iraq
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Last week the
House passed an emergency supplemental spending bill that was the
worst of all worlds. The presidents request would have already
set a spending record, but the Democratic leadership packed 21 billion
additional dollars of mostly pork barrel spending in attempt to
win Democrat votes. The total burden on the American taxpayer for
this bill alone will be an astonishing 124 billion dollars. Democrats
promised to oppose the war by adding more money to fight the war
than even the president requested.
I am pleased
to have joined with the majority of my Republican colleagues to
oppose this bill.
Among the pork
added to attract votes was more than 200 million dollars to the
dairy industry, 74 million for peanut farmers, and 25 million dollars
for spinach farmers. Also, the bill included more than two billion
dollars in unconstitutional foreign aid, including half a billion
dollars for Lebanon and Eastern Europe.
What might
be most disturbing, however, is the treatment of veterans in the
bill. Playing politics with the funding of critical veterans medical
and other assistance by adding it onto a controversial bill to attract
votes strikes me as highly inappropriate. Veterans funding
should be included in a properly structured, comprehensive appropriations
bill. Better still, veterans spending should be automatically funded
and not subject to yearly politicking and nit-picking.
While I have
been opposed to the war in Iraq from the beginning and do believe
that there is a strong constitutional role for Congress when it
comes to war, I could not support what appeared to be micro-management
of the war in this bill. There is a distinction between the legitimate
oversight role of Congress and attempts to meddle in the details
of how the war is to be fought. The withdrawal and readiness benchmarks
in this bill are in my view inappropriate. That is why the president
has threatened to veto this bill.
In the last
Congress I co-sponsored legislation urging the president to come
up with a plan to conclude our military activity in Iraq, but that
legislation contained no date-specific deadlines to complete withdrawal.
Once
again Congress wants to have it both ways. Back in 2002, Congress
passed the authorization for the president to attack Iraq if and
when he saw fit. By ignoring the Constitution, which clearly requires
a declaration of war, Congress could wash its hands of responsibility
after the war began going badly by citing the ambiguity of its authorization.
This time, House
leaders want to appear to be opposing the war by including problematic
benchmarks, but they include language to allow the president to
waive these if he sees fit.
To top it off,
House leadership may have actually made war with Iran more likely.
The bill originally contained language making it clear that the
president would need congressional authorization before attacking
Iran as the Constitution requires. But this language was
dropped after special interests demanded its removal. This move
can reasonably be interpreted as de facto congressional authority
for an attack on Iran. Lets hope that does not happen.
March
27, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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