HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Dont Start a War with Iran!
May 6, 2004
2004 Ron Paul 32:1
Mr. Speaker, I rise in strong opposition to this
ill-conceived and ill-timed legislation. Let’s not fool ourselves: this
concurrent resolution leads us down the road to war against Iran. It
creates a
precedent for future escalation, as did similar legislation endorsing
“regime
change” in Iraq back in 1998.
2004 Ron Paul 32:2
I find it incomprehensible that as the failure of our Iraq
policy becomes more evident - even to its most determined advocates -we
here are
approving the same kind of policy toward Iran. With Iraq becoming more
of a
problem daily, the solution as envisioned by this legislation is to
look for yet
another fight. And we should not fool ourselves: this legislation sets
the stage
for direct conflict with Iran. The resolution “calls upon all State
Parties to
the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), including
the
United States, to use all appropriate means to deter, dissuade, and
prevent Iran
from acquiring nuclear weapons…” Note the phrase “…use all appropriate
means….”
2004 Ron Paul 32:3
Additionally, this legislation calls for yet more and
stricter sanctions on Iran, including a demand that other countries
also impose
sanctions on Iran. As we know, sanctions are unmistakably a move toward
war,
particularly when, as in this legislation, a demand is made that the
other
nations of the world similarly isolate and blockade the country. Those
who wish
for a regime change in Iran should especially reject sanctions - just
look at
how our Cuba policy has allowed Fidel Castro to maintain his hold on
power for
decades. Sanctions do not hurt political leaders, as we know most
recently from
our sanctions against Iraq, but rather sow misery among the poorest and
most
vulnerable segments of society. Dictators do not go hungry when
sanctions are
imposed.
2004 Ron Paul 32:4
It is somewhat ironic that we are again meddling in Iranian
affairs. Students of history will recall that the US government’s
ill-advised
coup against Iranian leader Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953 and its
subsequent
installation of the Shah as the supreme ruler led to intense hatred of
the
United States and eventually to the radical Islamic revolution of 1979.
One can
only wonder what our relations would be with Iran if not for the
decades of
meddling in that country’s internal affairs. We likely would not be
considering resolutions such as this. Yet the solution to all the
difficulties
created by our meddling foreign policy always seems to always be yet
more
meddling. Will Congress ever learn?
2004 Ron Paul 32:5
I urge my colleagues to reject this move toward war with
Iran, to reject the failed policies of regime-change and
nation-building, and to
return to the wise and consistent policy of non-interventionism in the
affairs
of other sovereign nations.