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The
Price of Delaying the Inevitable in Iraq
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
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Good intentions
frequently lead to unintended bad consequences. Tough choices, doing
what is right, often leads to unanticipated good results.
The growing
demand by the American people for us to leave Iraq prompts the naysayers
to predict disaster in the Middle East if we do. Of course, these
merchants of fear are the same ones who predicted that invading
and occupying Iraq would be a slam-dunk operation; that we would
be welcomed as liberators, and oil revenues would pay for the operation
with minimal loss of American lives.
All of this
hyperbole came while ignoring the precise warnings by our intelligence
community of the great difficulties that would lie ahead. The chaos
that this preemptive, undeclared war has created in Iraq has allowed
the Al Qaida to establish a foothold in Iraq and the strategic interests
of Iran to be served.
The unintended
consequences have been numerous. A well-intended but flawed policy
that ignored credible warnings of how things could go awry has produced
conditions that have led to a war dominated by procrastination,
without victory or resolution in sight.
Those who want
a total military victory, which no one has yet defined, dont
have the troops, the money, the equipment or the support of a large
majority of the American people to do so.
Those in Congress
who have heard the cry of the electorate to end the war refuse to
do so out of fear the demagogues will challenge their patriotism
and support of the troops, so nothing happens except more of the
same. The result is continued stalemate with the current policy
and the daily sacrifice of American lives.
This
wait-and-see attitude in Washington, and the promised reassessment
of events in Iraq later on, strongly motivates the insurgents to
accelerate the killing of Americans in order to influence the decision
coming in three months. In contrast, a clear decision to leave would
prompt a wait and see attitude in Iraq, a de facto cease fire, in
anticipation of our leaving, the perfect time for the Iraqi factions
to hold their fire on each other and on our troops and just possibly
begin talking with each other.
Most
Americans do not anticipate a military victory in Iraq, yet the
Washington politicians remain frozen in their unwillingness to change
our policy there, fearful of the dire predictions that conditions
can only get worse when we leave. They refuse to admit that the
condition of foreign occupation is the key ingredient that unleashed
the civil war now raging in Iraq and serves as a recruitment device
for Al Qaida.
Its time
for a change in our foreign policy.
June
5, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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