On the Elimination of Osama bin Laden
by
Ron Paul
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on Federal Reserve's Press Conference
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Last week marked
an important milestone in the war on terrorism for our country.
Osama bin Laden applauded the 9/11 attacks. Such deliberate killing
of innocent lives deserved retaliation. It is good that bin Laden
is dead and justice is served. The way in which he was finally captured
and killed shows that targeted retribution is far superior to wars
of aggression and nation-building. In 2001 I supported giving the
president the authority to pursue those responsible for the vicious
9/11 attacks. However, misusing that authority to pursue nation-building
and remaking the Middle East was cynical and dangerous, as the past
ten years have proven.
It is tragic
that it took ten years, trillions of dollars, tens of thousands
of American casualties and many thousands of innocent lives to achieve
our mission of killing one evil person. A narrow, targeted mission
under these circumstances was far superior to initiating wars against
countries not involved in the 9/11 attacks, and that is all we should
have done. This was the reason I emphasized at the time the principle
of Marque and Reprisal, permitted to us by the US Constitution for
difficult missions such as we faced. I am convinced that this approach
would have achieved our goal much sooner and much cheaper.
The elimination
of Osama bin Laden should now prompt us to declare victory and bring
our troops home from Afghanistan and Iraq. Al Qaeda was never in
Iraq and we were supposedly in Afghanistan to get Osama bin Laden.
With bin Laden gone, there is no reason for our presence in the
region unless indeed it was all about oil, nation-building,
and remaking the Middle East and Central Asia.
Hopefully bin
Laden does not get the last laugh. He claimed the 9/11 attacks were
designed to get the US to spread its military dangerously and excessively
throughout the Middle East, bankrupting us through excessive military
spending as he did the Soviets, and to cause political dissention
within the United States. Some 70 percent of Americans now believe
we should leave Afghanistan yet both parties seem determined to
stay. The best thing we could do right now is prove bin Laden a
false prophet by coming home and ending this madness on a high note.
Tragically,
one result may be the acceptance of torture as a legitimate tool
for pursuing our foreign policy. A free society, calling itself
a republic, grounded in the rule of law, should never succumb to
such evil.
At the very
least we should all be able to agree that foreign aid to Pakistan
needs to end immediately. The idea that bin Laden was safely protected
for ten years in Pakistan, either willfully or through incompetence,
should make us question the wisdom of robbing American citizens
to support any government around the world with foreign aid. All
foreign aid and intervention needs to end.
Our failed
foreign policy is reflected in our bizarre relationship with Pakistan.
We bomb them with drones, causing hundreds of civilian casualties,
we give them billions of dollars in foreign aid for the privilege
to do so, all while they protect America's enemy number one for
a decade.
It is time
to consider a sensible non-interventionist foreign policy as advised
by our Founders and authorized by our Constitution. We would all
be better off for it.
See
the Ron Paul File
May
10, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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