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We
Just Marched In (So We Can Just March Out)
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Before the
U.S. House of Representatives, April 17, 2007
All the reasons
given to justify a preemptive strike against Iraq were wrong. Congress
and the American people were misled.
Support for
the war came from various special interests that had agitated for
an invasion of Iraq since 1998. The Iraq Liberation Act, passed
by Congress and signed into law by President Clinton, stated that
getting rid of Saddam Hussein was official U.S. policy. This policy
was carried out in 2003.
Congress failed
miserably in meeting its crucial obligations as the branch of government
charged with deciding whether to declare war. It wrongly and unconstitutionally
transferred this power to the president, and the president did not
hesitate to use it.
Although it
is clear there was no cause for war, we just marched in. Our leaders
deceived themselves and the public with assurances that the war
was righteous and would be over quickly. Their justifications were
false, and they failed to grasp even basic facts about the chaotic
political and religious history of the region.
Congress bears
the greater blame for this fiasco. It reneged on its responsibility
to declare or not declare war. It transferred this decision-making
power to the executive branch, and gave open sanction to anything
the president did. In fact the founders diligently tried to prevent
the executive from possessing this power, granting it to Congress
alone in Article 1 Section 8 of the Constitution.
Today just
about everyone acknowledges the war has gone badly, and 70% of the
American people want it to end. Our national defense is weakened,
the financial costs continue to drain us, our allies have deserted
us, and our enemies are multiplying not to mention the tragic
toll of death and injury suffered by American forces.
Iraq is a mess,
and we urgently need a new direction but our leaders offer
only hand-wringing and platitudes. They have no clear-cut ideas
to end the suffering and war. Even the most ardent war hawks cannot
begin to define victory in Iraq.
As an Air Force
officer serving from 19631968, I heard the same agonizing
pleas from the American people. These pleas were met with the same
excuses about why we could not change a deeply flawed policy and
rethink the war in Vietnam. That bloody conflict, also undeclared
and unconstitutional, seems to have taught us little despite the
horrific costs.
Once again,
though everyone now accepts that the original justifications for
invading Iraq were not legitimate, we are given excuses for not
leaving. We flaunt our power by building permanent military bases
and an enormous billion-dollar embassy, yet claim we have no plans
to stay in Iraq permanently. Assurances that our presence in Iraq
has nothing to do with oil are not believed in the Middle East.
The
argument for staying to prevent civil war and bring stability to
the region logically falls on deaf ears.
If the justifications
for war were wrong;
If the war
is going badly;
If we cant
afford the costs, both human and economic;
If
civil war and chaos have resulted from our occupation;
If the reasons
for staying are no more credible than the reasons for going;
THEN
..
Why the dilemma?
The American people have spoken, and continue to speak out, against
this war. So why not end it? How do we end it? Why not exactly the
way we went in? We just marched in, and we can just march out.
More good things
may come of it than anyone can imagine. Consider our relationship
with Vietnam, now our friendly trading partner. Certainly we are
doing better with her than when we tried to impose our will by force.
It is time to march out of Iraq and march home.
April
24, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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