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Iraq: Claim vs. Reality
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
Ron Paul
in the US House of Representatives, October 8, 2002
Mr. Speaker,
I rise in opposition to this resolution, which regardless of what
many have tried to claim will lead us into war with Iraq. This
resolution is not a declaration of war, however, and that is an
important point: this resolution transfers the Constitutionally-mandated
Congressional authority to declare wars to the executive branch.
This resolution tells the president that he alone has the authority
to determine when, where, why, and how war will be declared. It
merely asks the president to pay us a courtesy call a couple of
days after the bombing starts to let us know what is going on.
This is exactly what our Founding Fathers cautioned against when
crafting our form of government: most had just left behind a monarchy
where the power to declare war rested in one individual. It is
this they most wished to avoid.
As James
Madison wrote in 1798, "The Constitution supposes what the history
of all governments demonstrates, that the executive is the branch
of power most interested in war, and most prone to it. It has,
accordingly, with studied care, vested the question of war in
the legislature."
Some – even
some in this body – have claimed that this Constitutional requirement
is an anachronism, and that those who insist on following the
founding legal document of this country are just being frivolous.
I could not disagree more.
Mr. Speaker,
for the more than one dozen years I have spent as a federal legislator
I have taken a particular interest in foreign affairs and especially
the politics of the Middle East. From my seat on the international
relations committee I have had the opportunity to review dozens
of documents and to sit through numerous hearings and mark-up
sessions regarding the issues of both Iraq and international terrorism.
Back in 1997
and 1998 I publicly spoke out against the actions of the Clinton
Administration, which I believed was moving us once again toward
war with Iraq. I believe the genesis of our current policy was
unfortunately being set at that time. Indeed, many of the same
voices who then demanded that the Clinton Administration attack
Iraq are now demanding that the Bush Administration attack Iraq.
It is unfortunate that these individuals are using the tragedy
of September 11, 2001 as cover to force their long-standing desire
to see an American invasion of Iraq. Despite all of the information
to which I have access, I remain very skeptical that the nation
of Iraq poses a serious and immanent terrorist threat to the United
States. If I were convinced of such a threat I would support going
to war, as I did when I supported President Bush by voting to
give him both the authority and the necessary funding to fight
the war on terror.
Mr. Speaker,
consider some of the following claims presented by supporters
of this resolution, and contrast them with the following facts:
Claim: Iraq
has consistently demonstrated its willingness to use force against
the US through its firing on our planes patrolling the UN-established
"no-fly zones."
Reality:
The "no-fly zones" were never authorized by the United Nations,
nor was their 12 year patrol by American and British fighter planes
sanctioned by the United Nations. Under UN Security Council Resolution
688 (April, 1991), Iraq's repression of the Kurds and Shi'ites
was condemned, but there was no authorization for "no-fly zones,"
much less airstrikes. The resolution only calls for member states
to "contribute to humanitarian relief" in the Kurd and Shi'ite
areas. Yet the US and British have been bombing Iraq in the "no-fly
zones" for 12 years. While one can only condemn any country firing
on our pilots, isn't the real argument whether we should continue
to bomb Iraq relentlessly? Just since 1998, some 40,000 sorties
have been flown over Iraq.
Claim: Iraq
is an international sponsor of terrorism.
Reality:
According to the latest edition of the State Department's Patterns
of Global Terrorism, Iraq sponsors several minor Palestinian groups,
the Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MEK), and the Kurdistan Workers' Party
(PKK). None of these carries out attacks against the United States.
As a matter of fact, the MEK (an Iranian organization located
in Iraq) has enjoyed broad Congressional support over the years.
According to last year's Patterns of Global Terrorism, Iraq has
not been involved in terrorist activity against the West since
1993 – the alleged attempt against former President Bush.
Claim: Iraq
tried to assassinate President Bush in 1993.
Reality:
It is far from certain that Iraq was behind the attack. News reports
at the time were skeptical about Kuwaiti assertions that the attack
was planned by Iraq against former President Bush. Following is
an interesting quote from Seymore Hersh's article from Nov. 1993:
Three years ago, during Iraq's six-month occupation of Kuwait,
there had been an outcry when a teen-age Kuwaiti girl testified
eloquently and effectively before Congress about Iraqi atrocities
involving newborn infants. The girl turned out to be the daughter
of the Kuwaiti Ambassador to Washington, Sheikh Saud Nasir al-Sabah,
and her account of Iraqi soldiers flinging babies out of incubators
was challenged as exaggerated both by journalists and by human-rights
groups. (Sheikh Saud was subsequently named Minister of Information
in Kuwait, and he was the government official in charge of briefing
the international press on the alleged assassination attempt against
George Bush.) In a second incident, in August of 1991, Kuwait
provoked a special session of the United Nations Security Council
by claiming that twelve Iraqi vessels, including a speedboat,
had been involved in an attempt to assault Bubiyan Island, long-disputed
territory that was then under Kuwaiti control. The Security Council
eventually concluded that, while the Iraqis had been provocative,
there had been no Iraqi military raid, and that the Kuwaiti government
knew there hadn't. What did take place was nothing more than a
smuggler-versus-smuggler dispute over war booty in a nearby demilitarized
zone that had emerged, after the Gulf War, as an illegal marketplace
for alcohol, ammunition, and livestock.
This establishes
that on several occasions Kuwait has lied about the threat from
Iraq. Hersh goes on to point out in the article numerous other
times the Kuwaitis lied to the US and the UN about Iraq. Here
is another good quote from Hersh:
The President was not alone in his caution. Janet Reno, the Attorney
General, also had her doubts. "The A.G. remains skeptical of certain
aspects of the case," a senior Justice Department official told
me in late July, a month after the bombs were dropped on Baghdad...Two
weeks later, what amounted to open warfare broke out among various
factions in the government on the issue of who had done what in
Kuwait. Someone gave a Boston Globe reporter access to a classified
C.I.A. study that was highly skeptical of the Kuwaiti claims of
an Iraqi assassination attempt. The study, prepared by the C.I.A.'s
Counter Terrorism Center, suggested that Kuwait might have "cooked
the books" on the alleged plot in an effort to play up the "continuing
Iraqi threat" to Western interests in the Persian Gulf. Neither
the Times nor the Post made any significant mention of the Globe
dispatch, which had been written by a Washington correspondent
named Paul Quinn-Judge, although the story cited specific paragraphs
from the C.I.A. assessment. The two major American newspapers
had been driven by their sources to the other side of the debate.
At the very
least, the case against Iraq for the alleged bomb threat is not
conclusive.
Claim: Saddam
Hussein will use weapons of mass destruction against us – he has
already used them against his own people (the Kurds in 1988 in
the village of Halabja).
Reality:
It is far from certain that Iraq used chemical weapons against
the Kurds. It may be accepted as conventional wisdom in these
times, but back when it was first claimed there was great skepticism.
The evidence is far from conclusive. A 1990 study by the Strategic
Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College cast great doubts
on the claim that Iraq used chemical weapons on the Kurds. Following
are the two gassing incidents as described in the report:
In September
1988, however – a month after the war (between Iran and Iraq)
had ended – the State Department abruptly, and in what many
viewed as a sensational manner, condemned Iraq for allegedly
using chemicals against its Kurdish population. The incident
cannot be understood without some background of Iraq's relations
with the Kurds...throughout the war Iraq effectively faced two
enemies – Iran and elements of its own Kurdish minority. Significant
numbers of the Kurds had launched a revolt against Baghdad and
in the process teamed up with Tehran. As soon as the war with
Iran ended, Iraq announced its determination to crush the Kurdish
insurrection. It sent Republican Guards to the Kurdish area,
and in the course of the operation – according to the U.S. State
Department – gas was used, with the result that numerous Kurdish
civilians were killed. The Iraqi government denied that any
such gassing had occurred. Nonetheless, Secretary of State Schultz
stood by U.S. accusations, and the U.S. Congress, acting on
its own, sought to impose economic sanctions on Baghdad as a
violator of the Kurds' human rights.
Having
looked at all the evidence that was available to us, we find
it impossible to confirm the State Department's claim that gas
was used in this instance. To begin with, there were never any
victims produced. International relief organizations who examined
the Kurds in Turkey where they had gone for asylum
failed to discover any. Nor were there ever any found inside
Iraq. The claim rests solely on testimony of the Kurds who had
crossed the border into Turkey, where they were interviewed
by staffers of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee...
It appears
that in seeking to punish Iraq, the Congress was influenced
by another incident that occurred five months earlier in another
Iraqi-Kurdish city, Halabjah. In March 1988, the Kurds at Halabjah
were bombarded with chemical weapons, producing many deaths.
Photographs of the Kurdish victims were widely disseminated
in the international media. Iraq was blamed for the Halabjah
attack, even though it was subsequently brought out that Iran
too had used chemicals in this operation and it seemed likely
that it was the Iranian bombardment that had actually killed
the Kurds.
Thus, in our view, the Congress acted more on the basis of emotionalism
than factual information, and without sufficient thought for the
adverse diplomatic effects of its action.
Claim: Iraq
must be attacked because it has ignored UN Security Council resolutions
these resolutions must be backed up by the use of force.
Reality:
Iraq is but one of the many countries that have not complied with
UN Security Council resolutions. In addition to the dozen or so
resolutions currently being violated by Iraq, a conservative estimate
reveals that there are an additional 91 Security Council resolutions
by countries other than Iraq that are also currently being violated.
Adding in older resolutions that were violated would mean easily
more than 200 UN Security Council resolutions have been violated
with total impunity. Countries currently in violation include:
Israel, Turkey, Morocco, Croatia, Armenia, Russia, Sudan, Turkey-controlled
Cyprus, India, Pakistan, Indonesia. None of these countries have
been threatened with force over their violations.
Claim: Iraq
has anthrax and other chemical and biological agents.
Reality:
That may be true. However, according to UNSCOM's chief weapons
inspector 9095 percent of Iraq's chemical and biological
weapons and capabilities were destroyed by 1998; those that remained
have likely degraded in the intervening four years and are likely
useless. A 1994 Senate Banking Committee hearing revealed some
74 shipments of deadly chemical and biological agents from the
U.S. to Iraq in the 1980s. As one recent press report stated:
One 1986 shipment from the Virginia-based American Type Culture
Collection included three strains of anthrax, six strains of the
bacteria that make botulinum toxin and three strains of the bacteria
that cause gas gangrene. Iraq later admitted to the United Nations
that it had made weapons out of all three...
The CDC,
meanwhile, sent shipments of germs to the Iraqi Atomic Energy
Commission and other agencies involved in Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction programs. It sent samples in 1986 of botulinum toxin
and botulinum toxoid used to make vaccines against botulinum
toxin directly to the Iraqi chemical and biological weapons
complex at al-Muthanna, the records show.
These were
sent while the United States was supporting Iraq covertly in its
war against Iran. U.S. assistance to Iraq in that war also included
covertly-delivered intelligence on Iranian troop movements and
other assistance. This is just another example of our policy of
interventionism in affairs that do not concern us and how
this interventionism nearly always ends up causing harm to the
United States.
Claim: The
president claimed last night that: "Iraq possesses ballistic missiles
with a likely range of hundreds of miles; far enough to strike
Saudi Arabia, Israel, Turkey and other nations in a region where
more than 135,000 American civilians and service members live
and work."
Reality:
Then why is only Israel talking about the need for the U.S. to
attack Iraq? None of the other countries seem concerned at all.
Also, the fact that some 135,000 Americans in the area are under
threat from these alleged missiles just makes the point that it
is time to bring our troops home to defend our own country.
Claim: Iraq
harbors al-Qaeda and other terrorists.
Reality:
The administration has claimed that some Al-Qaeda elements have
been present in Northern Iraq. This is territory controlled by
the Kurds who are our allies and is patrolled by
U.S. and British fighter aircraft. Moreover, dozens of countries
including Iran and the United States are said to
have al-Qaeda members on their territory. Of the other terrorists
allegedly harbored by Iraq, all are affiliated with Palestinian
causes and do not attack the United States.
Claim:
President Bush said in his speech on 7 October 2002: " Many people
have asked how close Saddam Hussein is to developing a nuclear
weapon. Well, we don't know exactly, and that's the problem..."
Reality:
An admission of a lack of information is justification for an
attack?
Dr.
Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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