2002 Ron Paul 21:1
We were warned, and in the early years of our Republic, we heeded
that warning. Today, though, we are entangled in everyone’s affairs
throughout the world, and we are less safe as a result. The current Middle-East crisis
is one that we helped create, and it is typical of how foreign intervention
fails to serve our interests. Now we find ourselves smack-dab in the middle of a
fight that will not soon end. No matter what the outcome, we lose.
2002 Ron Paul 21:2
By trying to support both sides we, in the end, will alienate both
sides. We are forced, by domestic politics here at home, to support Israel at all
costs, with billions of dollars of aid, sophisticated weapons, and a guarantee
that America will do whatever is necessary for Israel’s security.
2002 Ron Paul 21:3
Political pressure compels us to support Israel, but it is oil that
prompts us to guarantee security for the western puppet governments of the
oil-rich Arab nations.
2002 Ron Paul 21:4
Since the Israeli-Arab fight will not soon be resolved, our policy
of involving ourselves in a conflict unrelated to our security guarantees
that we will suffer the consequences.
2002 Ron Paul 21:5
What a choice! We must choose between the character of Arafat versus
that of Sharon.
2002 Ron Paul 21:6
The information the average American gets from the major media
outlets, with their obvious bias, only makes the problem worse. Who would ever guess
that the side that loses seven people to every one on the other
side is portrayed as the sole aggressor and condemned as terrorists? We should
remember that Palestinian deaths are seen by most Arabs as being
American-inspired, since our weapons are being used against them, and they’re the ones whose
land has been continuously taken from them.
2002 Ron Paul 21:7
Yet there are still some in this country who can’t understand why
many in the Arab/Muslim world hate America.
2002 Ron Paul 21:8
Is it any wonder that the grassroots people in Arab nations, even in
Kuwait, threaten their own governments that are totally dominated by American
power and money?
2002 Ron Paul 21:9
The arguments against foreign intervention are many. The chaos in
the current Middle-East crisis should be evidence enough for all Americans to
reconsider our extensive role overseas and reaffirm the foreign policy of our early
leaders- a policy that kept us out of the affairs of others.
2002 Ron Paul 21:10
But here we are in the middle of a war that has no end and serves
only to divide us here at home, while the unbalanced slaughter continues with
tanks and aircraft tearing up a country that does not even have an army.
2002 Ron Paul 21:11
It is amazing that the clamor of support for Israel here at home
comes from men of deep religious conviction in the Christian faith, who are
convinced they are doing the Lord’s work. That, quite frankly, is difficult for me as
a Christian to comprehend. We need to remember the young people who will
be on the front lines when the big war starts- which is something so many in this
body seem intent on provoking.
2002 Ron Paul 21:12
Ironically, the biggest frustration in Washington, for those who
eagerly resort to war to resolve differences, is that the violence in the
Middle East has delayed plans for starting another war against Iraq.
2002 Ron Paul 21:13
Current policy prompts our government on one day to give the
go-ahead to Sharon to do what he needs to do to combat terrorism (a term that now
has little or no meaning); on the next day, however, our government tells him to
quit, for fear that we may overly aggravate our oil pals in the Arab nations and
jeopardize our oil supplies. This is an impossible policy that will
inevitably lead to chaos.
2002 Ron Paul 21:14
Foreign interventionism is bad for America. Special interests
control our policies, while true national security is ignored. Real defense needs,
the defense of our borders, are ignored, and the financial interests of
corporations, bankers, and the military-industrial complex gain
control- and the American people lose.
2002 Ron Paul 21:15
It’s costly, to say the least. Already our military budget has
sapped domestic spending and caused the deficit to explode. But the greatest
danger is that one day these contained conflicts will get out of control.
Certainly the stage is set for that to happen in the Middle East and south central
Asia. A world war is a possibility that should not be ignored. Our policy of
subsidizing both sides is ludicrous. We support Arabs and Jews, Pakistanis and
Indians, Chinese and Russians. We have troops in 140 countries around the world
just looking for trouble. Our policies have led us to support Al Qaeda in
Kosovo and bomb their Serb adversaries. We have, in the past, allied ourselves
with bin Laden, as well as Saddam Hussein, only to find out later the
seriousness of our mistake. Will this foolishness ever end?
2002 Ron Paul 21:16
A non-interventionist foreign policy has a lot to say for itself,
especially when one looks at the danger and inconsistency of our current policy in
the Middle East.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2002/cr041002.htm