5 April 2006
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Ms.
Foxx). Under the Speakers announced
policy of January 4, 2005, the gentleman
from Texas (Mr. PAUL) is recognized
for half the time remaining until
midnight.
2006 Ron Paul 21:1
Mr. PAUL. Madam Speaker, it has been 3 years since the U.S. launched its
war against Saddam Hussein and his
weapons of mass destruction. Of
course, now almost everybody knows
there were no weapons of mass destruction
and Saddam Hussein posed no
threat to the United States. Though
some of our soldiers serving in Iraq
still believe they are there because
Saddam Hussein was involved in 9/11,
even the administration now acknowledges
that there was no connection.
2006 Ron Paul 21:2
Indeed, no one can be absolutely certain why we invaded Iraq. The current
excuse, also given for staying in Iraq,
is to make it a democratic state friendly
to the United States. There are now
fewer denials that securing oil supplies
played a significant role in our decision
to go into Iraq and stay there.
That certainly would explain why the
U.S. taxpayers are paying such a price
to build and maintain numerous, huge,
permanent military bases in Iraq.
There are also funding a new $1 billion
embassy, the largest in the world.
2006 Ron Paul 21:3
The significant question we must ask ourselves is, what have we learned
from these 3 years in Iraq? With plans
now being laid for regime change in
Iran, it appears we have learned
absolutely
nothing. There still are plenty of
administration officials who daily
paint a rosy picture of the Iraq we have
created. But I wonder, if the past 3
years were nothing more than a bad
dream and our Nation suddenly awakened,
how many would for national security
reasons urge the same invasion?
Or would we instead give a gigantic
sigh of relief that it was only a bad
dream, that we need not relive the 3-
year nightmare of death, destruction,
chaos and stupendous consumption of
tax dollars? Conceivably, we would still
see oil prices under $30 a barrel, and,
most importantly, 20,000 severe U.S.
casualties would not have occurred. My
guess is 99 percent of all Americans
would be thankful it was only a bad
dream and would never support the invasion
knowing what we know today.
2006 Ron Paul 21:4
Even with the horrible results of the past 3 years, Congress is abuzz with
plans to change the Iranian government.
There is little resistance to the
rise and clamor for democratization in
Iran, even though their current President,
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is an
elected leader.
2006 Ron Paul 21:5
Though Iran is hardly a perfect democracy, its system is far superior to
most of our Arab allies, about which
we never complain. Already the coordinated
propaganda has galvanized the
American people against Iran for the
supposed threat it poses to us with
weapons of mass destruction that are
no more present than those Saddam
Hussein was alleged to have had.
2006 Ron Paul 21:6
It is amazing how soon after being thoroughly discredited over the
charges levied against Saddam Hussein
the neoconservatives are willing to use
the same arguments against Iran. It is
frightening to see how easily Congress,
the media and the people accept many
of the same arguments against Iran
that were used to justify an invasion of
Iraq.
2006 Ron Paul 21:7
Since 2001, we have spent over $300 billion and occupied two Muslim nations,
Afghanistan and Iraq. We are
poorer, but certainly not safer, for it.
We invaded Afghanistan to get Osama
bin Laden, the ringleader behind 9/11.
This effort has been virtually abandoned.
Even though the Taliban was removed
from power in Afghanistan,
most of the country is now occupied
and controlled by warlords who manage
a drug trade bigger than ever before.
Removing the Taliban from power
in Afghanistan actually served the interests
of Iran, the Talibans arch-
enemy, more than our own.
2006 Ron Paul 21:8
The long time neocon goal to remake Iraq prompted us to abandoned the
search for Osama bin Laden. The invasion
of Iraq in 2003 was hyped as a
noble mission, justified by misrepresentation
of intelligence concerning
Saddam Hussein and his ability to attack
us and his neighbors. This failed
policy has created the current chaos in
Iraq, chaos that many describe as a
civil war.
2006 Ron Paul 21:9
Saddam Hussein is out of power, and most people are pleased. Yet some
Iraqis who dream of stability long for
his authoritarian rule. But, once again,
Saddam Husseins removal benefited
the Iranians, who considered Saddam
Hussein an arch-enemy.
2006 Ron Paul 21:10
Our obsession with democracy, which is clearly conditional when one looks
at our response to the recent Pakistani
elections, will allow the majority Shia
to claim leadership title if Iraqs election
actually leads to an organized government.
This delights the Iranians,
who are close allies of the Iraqi Shia.
2006 Ron Paul 21:11
Talk about unintended consequences. This war has produced chaos, civil war,
death and destruction and huge financial
costs. It has eliminated two of
Irans worst enemies and placed power
in Irans best friends.
2006 Ron Paul 21:12
Even this apparent failure of policy does nothing to restrain the current
march towards a similar confrontation
with Iran. What will it take for us to
learn from our failures? Common sense
tells us the war in Iraq soon will spread
to Iran. Fear of imaginary nuclear
weapons or an incident involving Iran,
whether planned or accidental, will
rally the support needed for us to move
on Muslim country number three.
2006 Ron Paul 21:13
All the past failures and unintended consequences will be forgotten. Even
with deteriorating support for the Iraq
war, new information, well-planned
propaganda, or a major incident will
override the skepticism and heartache
of our frustrating fight. Vocal opponents
of an attack on Iran again will be
labeled unpatriotic, unsupportive of
the troops, and sympathetic to Irans
radicals.
2006 Ron Paul 21:14
Instead of capitulating to these charges, we should point out that those
who maneuver us into war do so with
little concern for our young people
serving in the military and theoretically
think little of their own children
if they have any. It is hard to conceive
that political supporters of the war
would consciously claim that a preemptive
war for regime change where
young people are sacrificed is only
worth it if the deaths and the injuries
are limited to other peoples children.
This I am sure would be denied, which
means their own children are technically
available for the sacrifice that
is so often praised and glorified for the
benefit of families who have lost so
much. If so, they should think more of
their own children. If this is not so and
their children are not available for
such sacrifice, the hypocrisy is apparent.
Remember, most neocon planners
fall into the category of chicken
hawks.
2006 Ron Paul 21:15
For the past 3 years, it has been inferred that, if one is not in support of
the current policy, one is against the
troops and supports the enemy. Lack of
support for the war in Iraq was said to
be supportive of Saddam Hussein and
his evil policies. This is an insulting
and preposterous argument. Those who
argued for the containment of the Soviets
were never deemed sympathetic
to Stalin or Kruschev. Lack of support
for the Iraq war should never be used
as an argument that one was sympathetic
to Saddam Hussein. Containment
and diplomacy are far superior to
confront an enemy, and are less costly
and far less dangerous, especially when
there is no evidence that our national
security is being threatened.
2006 Ron Paul 21:16
Although a large percentage of the public now rejects the various arguments
for the Iraq war 3 years ago,
they were easily persuaded by the politicians
and media to fully support the
invasion. Now, after 3 years of terrible
pain for so many, even the troops are
awakening from their slumber and
sensing the fruitlessness of our failing
effort. Seventy-two percent of our
troops now serving in Iraq say it is
time to come home. Yet, the majority
still cling to the propaganda that they
are there because of the 9/11 attacks,
something even the administration has
ceased to claim. Propaganda is pushed
on our troops to exploit their need to
believe in a cause that is worth the
risk to life and limb.
2006 Ron Paul 21:17
I smell an expanded war in the Middle East and pray that I am wrong. I
sense that circumstances will arise
that demand support regardless of the
danger and the cost. Any lack of support
once again will be painted as being
soft on terrorism and al Qaeda. We will
be told we must support Israel, support
patriotism, support the troops, defend
freedom. The public too often only
smells the stench of war after the killing
starts. Public objection comes later
on, but eventually it helps to stop the
war.
2006 Ron Paul 21:18
I worry that before we can finish the war we are in and extricate ourselves,
the patriotic fervor for expanding into
Iran will drown out the cries of,
Enough already. The agitation and
congressional resolutions painting Iran
as an enemy about to attack us have
already begun. It is too bad we cannot
learn from our mistakes. This time,
there will be a greater pretense of an
international effort sanctioned by the
U.N. before the bombs are dropped. But
even without support from the international
community, we should expect
the plan for regime change to continue.
We have been forewarned that all options
remain on the table, and there is
little reason to expect much resistance
from Congress. So far there is little resistance
expressed in Congress for taking
on Iran than there was prior to
going into Iraq.
2006 Ron Paul 21:19
It is astonishing that after 3 years of bad results and tremendous expense
there is little indication, we will reconsider
our traditional non-interventionist
foreign policy. Unfortunately,
regime change, nation-building, policing
the world, protecting our oil still
constitutes an acceptable policy by the
leaders of both major parties. It is already
assumed by many in Washington
I talk to that Iran is dead serious
about obtaining a nuclear weapon and
is a much more formidable opponent
than Iraq. Besides, Mahmud
Ahmadinejad threatened to destroy
Israel, and that cannot stand. Washington
sees Iran as a greater threat
than Iraq ever was, a threat that cannot
be ignored.
2006 Ron Paul 21:20
Irans history is being ignored just as we ignored Iraqs history. This ignorance
or deliberate misrepresentation
of our recent relationship to Iraq and
Iran is required to generate the fervor
needed to attack once again a country
that poses no threat to us. Our policies
toward Iran have been more provocative
than those toward Iraq. Yes, President
Bush labeled Iran part of the axis
of evil and unnecessarily provoked
their anger at us. But our mistakes
with Iran started a long time before
this President took office. In 1953, our
CIA, with the help of the British, participated
in overthrowing the democratic-
elected leader, Mohammed
Mossadegh. We placed in power the
Shah. He ruled ruthlessly but protected
our oil interests, and for that, we protected
him. That is, until 1979. We even
provided him with Irans first nuclear
reactor.
2006 Ron Paul 21:21
Evidently, we did not buy the argument that his oil supplies precluded a
need for civilian nuclear energy. From
1953 to 1979, his authoritarian rule
served to incite a radical opposition led
by the Ayatollah Khomeini who overthrew
the Shah and took our hostages
in 1979. This blow-back event was slow
in coming, but Muslims have long
memories. The hostage crisis and overthrow
of the Shah by the Ayatollah
was a major victory for the radical
Islamists. Most Americans either never
knew about or easily forgot about our
unwise meddling in the internal affairs
in Iran in 1953.
2006 Ron Paul 21:22
During the 1980s, we further antagonized Iran by supporting the Iraqis in
their invasion of Iran. This made our
relationship with Iran worse, while
sending a message to Saddam Hussein
that invading a neighboring country is
not all that bad. When Hussein got the
message from our State Department
that his plan to invade Kuwait was not
of much concern to the United States,
he immediately preceded to do so. We,
in a way, encouraged him to do it almost
like we encouraged him to go into
Iran. Of course, this time our reaction
was quite different, and all of a sudden,
our friendly ally, Saddam Hussein, became
our arch enemy.
2006 Ron Paul 21:23
The American people may forget this flip-flop, but those who suffered from it
never forgot. And the Iranians remember
well our meddling in their affairs.
Labeling the Iranians part of the axis
of evil further alienated them and contributed
to the animosity directed toward
us.
2006 Ron Paul 21:24
For whatever reasons the neoconservatives might give, they are
bound and determined to confront the
Iranian government and demand
changes in its leadership. This policy
will further spread our military presence
and undermine our security. The
sad truth is that the supposed dangers
posed by Iran are no more real than
those claimed about Iraq. The charges
made against Iran are unsubstantiated
and amazingly sound very similar to
the false charges made against Iraq.
One would think promoters of the war
against Iraq would be a little bit more
reluctant to use the same arguments to
stir up hatred toward Iran. The American
people and Congress should be
more cautious in accepting these
charges at face value, yet it seems the
propaganda is working since few in
Washington object as Congress passes
resolutions condemning Iran and asking
for U.N. sanctions against her.
2006 Ron Paul 21:25
There is no evidence of a threat to us by Iran and no reason to plan and initiate
a confrontation with her. There
are many reasons not to do so: Iran
does not have a nuclear weapon and
there is no evidence that she is working
on one, only conjecture. Even if
Iran had a nuclear weapon, why would
this be different from Pakistan, India,
and North Korea having one? Why does
Iran have less right to a defensive
weapon than these other countries? If
Iran had a nuclear weapon, the odds of
her initiating an attack against anybody,
which would guarantee her own
annihilation are zero, and the same
goes for the possibility she would place
weapons in the hands of a nonstate terrorist
group.
2006 Ron Paul 21:26
Pakistan has spread nuclear technology throughout the world, and in
particular, to the North Koreans. They
flaunt international restrictions on nuclear
weapons, but we reward them just
as we reward India. We needlessly and
foolishly threaten Iran, even though
they have no nuclear weapons, but listen
to what a leading Israeli historian,
Martin van Creveld had to say about
this: Obviously we do not want Iran to
have a nuclear weapon, and I do not
know if they are developing them. But
if they are not developing them, they
are crazy.
2006 Ron Paul 21:27
There has been a lot of misinformation regarding Irans nuclear program.
This distortion of the truth has been
used to pump up emotions in Congress
to pass resolutions condemning her and
promoting U.N. sanctions. IAEA Director
General Mohamed ElBaradei has
never reported any evidence of
undeclared sources or special nuclear
material in Iran or any diversion of nuclear
material. We demand that Iran
prove it is not in violation of nuclear
agreements, which is asking them impossibly
to prove a negative. ElBaradei
states Iran is in compliance with the
nuclear nonproliferation treaty required
IAEA safeguards agreement.
2006 Ron Paul 21:28
We forget that the weapons we feared Saddam Hussein had were supplied to
him by the United States, and we refused
to believe U.N. inspectors and the
CIA that he no longer had them. Likewise,
Iran received her first nuclear reactor
from us; now we are hysterically
wondering if some day she might decide
to build a bomb in self-interest.
Anti-Iran voices beating the drums of
confrontation distort the agreement
made in Paris and the desire of Iran to
restart the enrichment process. Their
suspension of the enrichment process
was voluntary and not a legal obligation.
Iran has an absolute right under
the Nuclear Proliferation Treaty to develop
and use nuclear power for peaceful
purposes, and this is now said to be
an egregious violation of the NPT. It is
the U.S. and her allies that are distorting
and violating the Nuclear Proliferation
Treaty.
2006 Ron Paul 21:29
Likewise, our proliferation of nuclear material to India is a clear violation of
the nuclear proliferation treaty as
well.
2006 Ron Paul 21:30
The demand for U.N. sanctions is now being strongly encouraged by Congress.
The Iran Freedom Support Act, H.R.
282 passed in the International Relations
Committee and recently the
House passed H. Con. Res. 341, which
inaccurately condemned Iran for violating
its international nuclear nonproliferation
obligations. At present,
the likelihood of reason prevailing in
Congress is minimal. Let there be no
doubt, the neoconservative warriors
are still in charge and are conditioning
Congress, the media, and the American
people for a preemptive attack on Iran,
never mind that Afghanistan has unraveled
and Iraq is in a Civil War.
2006 Ron Paul 21:31
Serious plans are being laid for the next distraction which will further
spread this war in the Middle East. The
unintended consequences of this effort
surely will be worse than any of the
complications experienced in the 3-
year occupation of Iraq.
2006 Ron Paul 21:32
Our offer of political and financial assistance to foreign and domestic individuals
who support the overthrow of
the current Iranian government is
fraught with danger and saturated with
arrogance. Imagine how Americans
citizens would respond if China supported
similar efforts here in the
United States to bring about regime
change. How many of us would remain
complacent if someone like Timothy
McVeigh had been financed by a foreign
power? Is it any wonder the Iranian
people resent us and the attitude
of our leaders?
2006 Ron Paul 21:33
Even though ElBaradei and his IAEA investigations have found no violations
of the NPT required IAEA safeguard
agreement, the Iran Freedom Support
Act still demands that Iran prove they
have no nuclear weapons, refusing to
acknowledge that proving a negative is
impossible. Let there be no doubt,
though, the words regime change are
not found in the bill. That is precisely
what they are talking about.
Neoconservative Michael Ladine, one
of the architects of the Iraq fiasco, testifying
before the International Relations
Committee in favor of the Iraq
Freedom Support Act stated it plainly.
I know some members would prefer to
dance around the explicit declaration
of regime change as the policy of this
country, but anyone looking closely at
the language and the context of the
Iraq Freedom Support Act and its close
relative in the Senate can clearly see
that this is, in fact, the essence of the
matter.
2006 Ron Paul 21:34
You cant have freedom in Iran without bringing down the mulahs.
2006 Ron Paul 21:35
Sanctions, along with financial and political support to persons and groups
dedicated to the overthrow of the Iranian
government, are acts of war. Once
again, we are unilaterally declaring a
preemptive war against a country and
a people that have not harmed us and
do not have the capacity to do so. And
do not expect Congress to seriously debate
a declaration of war. For the past
56 years, Congress has transferred to
the executive branch the power to go
to war as it pleases, regardless of the
tragic results and costs.
2006 Ron Paul 21:36
Secretary of State Rice recently signaled a sharp shift toward confrontation
in Irans policy as she insisted on
$75 million to finance propaganda,
through TV and radio broadcasts into
Iran. She expressed this need because
of the so-called aggressive policies of
the Iranian government. We are 7,000
miles from home, telling the Iraqis and
the Iranians what kind of government
they will have, backed up by the use of
our military force, and we call them
the aggressors? We fail to realize the
Iranian people, for whatever faults
they may have, have not in modern
times invaded any neighboring country.
This provocation is so unnecessary,
costly and dangerous.
2006 Ron Paul 21:37
Just as the invasion of Iraq inadvertently served the interests of the Iranians,
military confrontation with Iran
will have unintended consequences.
The successful alliance engendered between
the Iranians and the Iraqi majority
Shiia will prove a formidable opponent
for us in Iraq as that civil war
spreads. Shipping in the Persian Gulf
through the Straits of Hormuz may
well be disrupted by the Iranians in retaliation
for any military confrontation.
Since Iran would be incapable of
defending herself by conventional
means, it seems logical that they
might well resort to terrorist attacks
on us here at home. They will not passively
lie down, nor can they be easily
destroyed.
2006 Ron Paul 21:38
One of the reasons given for going into Iraq was to secure our oil supplies.
This backfired badly. Production in
Iraq is down 50 percent, and world oil
prices have more than doubled to $60
per barrel. Meddling with Iran could
easily have a similar result. We could
see oil at $120 a barrel and gasoline at
$6 a gallon. The obsession the neo-cons
have with remaking the Middle East is
hard to understand. One thing that is
easy to understand is none of those
who plan these wars expect to fight in
them, nor do they expect their children
to die in some IED explosion.
2006 Ron Paul 21:39
Exactly when an attack will occur is not known, but we have been forewarned
more than once that all options
are on the table. The sequence of
events now occurring with regards to
Iran are eerily reminiscent of the hype
to our preemptive strike against Iraq.
We should remember the saying: Fool
me once, shame on you; fool me twice,
shame on me. It looks to me like the
Congress and the country is open to
being fooled once again.
2006 Ron Paul 21:40
Interestingly, many early supporters of the Iraq War are now highly critical
of the President, having been misled as
to reasons for the invasion and occupation.
But these same people are only
too eager to accept the same flawed arguments
for our need to undermine the
Iranian government.
2006 Ron Paul 21:41
The Presidents 2006 National Security Strategy, just released, is every
bit as frightening as the one released in
2002 endorsing preemptive war. In it he
claims, We face no greater challenge
from a single country than from Iran.
He claims the Iranians have for 20
years hidden key nuclear activities,
though the IAEA makes no such assumption,
nor has the Security Council
in at least 20 years ever sanctioned
Iran. The clincher in the National Security
Strategy document is if diplomatic
efforts fail, confrontation will
follow. The problem is the diplomatic
effort, if one wants to use that term, is
designed to fail by demanding the Iranians
prove an unprovable negative.
The West, led by the U.S., is in greater
violation by demanding Iran not pursue
any nuclear technology, even
peaceful, that the NPT guarantees is
their right.
2006 Ron Paul 21:42
The President states: Irans desire to have a nuclear weapon is unacceptable.
A desire is purely subjective and
cannot be substantiated nor disproved.
Therefore, all that is necessary to justify
an attack is if Iran fails to prove it
does not have a desire to be like the
United States, China, Russia, Britain,
France, Pakistan, North Korea, India
and Israel whose nuclear missiles surround
Iran. Logic like this to justify a
new war, without the least consideration
for a congressional declaration of
war, is indeed frightening.
2006 Ron Paul 21:43
Commonsense telling us Congress, especially given the civil war in Iraq and
the mess in Afghanistan, should move
with great caution in condoning a military
confrontation with Iran.
2006 Ron Paul 21:44
Madam Speaker, there are reasons for my concern and let me list those.
Most Americans are uninterested in
foreign affairs until we get mired down
in a war that costs too much, lasts too
long, and kills too many U.S. troops.
Getting out of a lengthy war is difficult,
as I remember all too well with
Vietnam while serving in the U.S. Air
Force in 1963 to 1968. Getting into war
is much easier.
2006 Ron Paul 21:45
Unfortunately, the legislative branch of our government too often defers to
the executive branch and offers little
resistance to war plans, even with no
significant threat to our security. The
need to go to war is always couched in
patriotic terms and falsehoods regarding
an imaginary, imminent danger.
Not supporting the effort is painted as
unpatriotic and wimpish against some
evil that is about to engulf us. The real
reason for our militarism is rarely revealed
and hidden from the public.
Even Congress is deceived into
supporting
adventurism they would not
accept if fully informed.
2006 Ron Paul 21:46
If we accepted the traditional American and constitutional foreign policy
of nonintervention across the board,
there would be no temptation to go
along with these unnecessary military
operations. A foreign policy of intervention
invites all kinds of excuses for
spreading ourselves around the world.
The debate shifts from nonintervention
versus intervention, to where and for
what particular reason should we involve
ourselves. Most of the time, it is
for less than honorable reasons. Even
when cloaked in honorable slogans,
like making the world safe for democracy,
the unintended consequences and
the ultimate costs cancel out the good
intentions.
2006 Ron Paul 21:47
One of the greatest losses suffered these past 60 years from interventionism
becoming an acceptable policy
of both major parties is respect for the
Constitution. Congress flatly has
reneged on its huge responsibility to
declare war. Going to war was never
meant to be an executive decision, used
indiscriminately with no resistance
from Congress. The strongest attempt
by Congress in the past 60 years to
properly exert itself over foreign policy
was the passage of the Foley amendment,
demanding no assistance be
given to the Nicaraguan contras. Even
this explicit prohibition was flaunted
by an earlier administration.
2006 Ron Paul 21:48
Arguing over the relative merits of each intervention is not a true debate,
because it assumes that intervention
per se is both moral and constitutional.
Arguing for a Granada-type intervention
because of its success and against
the Iraq War because of its failure and
cost is not enough. We must once
again, understand the wisdom of rejecting
entangling alliances and rejecting
Nation building. We must stop trying
to police the world and, instead, embrace
noninterventionism as the proper
moral and constitutional foreign policy
of our country.
2006 Ron Paul 21:49
The best reason to oppose interventionism is that people die, needlessly,
on both sides. We have suffered over
20,000 American casualties in Iraq already,
and Iraqi civilian deaths probably
number over 100,000 by all reasonable
counts.
2006 Ron Paul 21:50
The next best reason is that the rule of law is undermined, especially when
military interventions are carried out
without a declaration of war. Whenever
a war is ongoing, civil liberties are
under attack at home. The current war
in Iraq and the misnamed war on terror
have created an environment here at
home that affords little constitutional
protection of our citizens rights. Extreme
nationalism is common during
war. Signs of this are now apparent.
2006 Ron Paul 21:51
Prolonged wars, as this one has become, have profound consequences. No
matter how much positive spin is put
on it, war never makes a society
wealthier. World War II was not a solution
to the Depression, as many claim.
If $1 billion is spent on weapons of war,
the GDP records positive growth in
that amount, but the expenditure is
consumed by destruction of the weapons
or bombs it bought, and the real
economy is denied $1 billion to produce
products that would have raised someones
standard of living.
2006 Ron Paul 21:52
Excessive spending to finance the war causes deficits to explode. There
are never enough tax dollars available
to pay the bills, and since there are not
enough willing lenders and dollars
available, the Federal Reserve must
create new money out of thin air and
new credit for buying Treasury bills to
prevent interest rates from rising too
rapidly. Rising rates would tip off everyone
that there are not enough savings
or taxes to finance the war.
2006 Ron Paul 21:53
This willingness to print whatever amount of money the government
needs to pursue the war is literally inflation.
Without a fiat monetary system,
wars would be very difficult to finance
since the people would never tolerate
the taxes required to pay for it.
Inflation of the money supply delays
and hides the real cost of war. The result
of the excessive creation of new
money leads to the higher cost of living
everyone decries and the Fed denies.
Since taxes are not levied, the increase
in prices that results from printing
too much money is technically the
tax required to pay for the war.
2006 Ron Paul 21:54
The tragedy is that the inflation tax is borne more by the poor and the middle
class than the rich. Meanwhile, the
well-connected rich, the politicians,
the bureaucrats, the bankers, the military
industrialists and the international
corporations reap the benefits
of war profits.
2006 Ron Paul 21:55
A sound economic process is disrupted with a war economy and monetary
inflation. Strong voices emerge
blaming the wrong policies for our
problems, prompting an outcry for protectionist
legislation. It is always easier
to blame foreign producers and savers
for our inflation, our lack of savings,
excessive debt and loss of industrial
jobs. Protectionist measures only
make economic conditions worse. Inevitably
these conditions, if not corrected,
lead to a lower standard of living
for most of our citizens.
2006 Ron Paul 21:56
Careless military intervention is also bad for the civil disturbance that results.
The chaos in the streets of America
in the 1960s while the Vietnam War
raged, aggravated by the draft, was an
example of domestic strife caused by
an ill-advised unconstitutional war
that could not be won. The early signs
of civil discord are now present. Hopefully,
we can extricate ourselves from
Iraq and avoid a conflict in Iran before
our streets explode, as they did in the
1960s.
2006 Ron Paul 21:57
In a way, it is amazing there is not a lot more outrage expressed by the
American people. There is plenty of
complaining but no outrage over policies
that are not part of our American
tradition. War based on false pretenses,
20,000 American casualties, torture
policies, thousands jailed without due
process, illegal surveillance of citizens,
warrantless searches, and yet no outrage.
When the issues come before Congress,
executive authority is maintained
or even strengthened while real
oversight is ignored.
2006 Ron Paul 21:58
Though many Americans are starting to feel the economic pain of paying for
this war through inflation, the real
pain has not yet arrived. We generally
remain fat and happy with a system of
money and borrowing that postpones
the day of reckoning. Foreigners, in
particular the Chinese and Japanese,
gladly participate in the charade. We
print the money and they take it, as do
the OPEC Nations, and provide us with
consumer goods and oil. Then they
loan the money back to us at low interest
rates, which we use to finance the
war and our housing bubble and excessive
consumption. This recycling and
perpetual borrowing of inflated dollars
allow us to avoid the pain of high taxes
to pay for our war and welfare spending.
It is fine until the music stops and
the real costs are realized, with much
higher interest rates and significant
price inflation. That is when outrage
will be heard and the people will realize
we cannot afford the humanitarianism
of the neo-conservatives.
2006 Ron Paul 21:59
The notion that our economic problems are principally due to the Chinese
is nonsense. If the protectionists were
to have it their way, the problem of financing
the war would become readily
apparent and have immediate ramifications,
none good.
2006 Ron Paul 21:60
Todays economic problems, caused largely by our funny money system,
wont be solved by altering exchange
rates to favor us in the short run or by
imposing high tariffs. Only sound
money with real value will solve the
problems of competing currency devaluations
and protectionist measures.
2006 Ron Paul 21:61
Economic interests almost always are major reasons for wars being
fought. Noble and patriotic causes are
easier to sell to a public who must pay
and provide cannon fodder to defend
the financial interests of a privileged
class. The fact that Saddam Hussein
demanded Euros for oil in an attempt
to undermine the U.S. dollar is believed
by many to be one of the ulterior
motives for our invasion and occupation
of Iraq. Similarly, the Iranian
oil burse now about to open may be
seen as a threat to those who depend on
maintaining the current monetary system
with the dollar as the worlds reserve
currency.
2006 Ron Paul 21:62
The theory and significance of peak oil is believed to be an additional motivating
factor for the United States
and Great Britain wanting to maintain
firm control over the oil supplies in the
Middle East. The two nations have
been protecting our oil interests in the
Middle East for nearly 100 years. With
diminishing supplies and expanding demands,
the incentive to maintain a
military presence in the Middle East is
quite strong. Fear of China and Russia
moving in to this region to consume
more control alarms those who dont
understand how a free market can develop
substitutes to replace diminishing
resources. Supporters of the
military efforts to maintain control
over large regions of the world to protect
oil fail to count the real cost of
energy once the DOD budget is factored
in. Remember, invading Iraq was costly
and oil prices doubled. Confrontation
in Iran may evolve differently, but we
can be sure it will be costly and oil
prices will rise significantly.
2006 Ron Paul 21:63
There are long-term consequences or blowback from our militant policies of
intervention around the world. They
are unpredictable as to time and place.
9/11 was a consequence of our military
presence on Muslim holy lands; the
Ayatollah Khomeinis success in taking
over the Iranian government in 1979
was a consequence of our CIA overthrowing
Mossadech in 1953. These connections
are rarely recognized by the
American people and never acknowledged
by our government. We never
seem to learn how dangerous interventionism
is to us and to our security.
2006 Ron Paul 21:64
There are some who may not agree strongly with any of my arguments,
and instead believe the propaganda
Iran and her President, Mahmoud
Almadinejad, are thoroughly irresponsible
and have threatened to destroy
Israel. So all measures must be taken
to prevent Iran from getting nukes,
thus the campaign to intimidate and
confront Iran.
2006 Ron Paul 21:65
First, Iran doesnt have a nuke and it is nowhere close to getting one, according
to the CIA. If they did have one,
using it would guarantee almost instantaneous
annihilation by Israel and
the United States. Hysterical fear of
Iran is way out of proportion to reality.
With a policy of containment, we
stood down and won the Cold War
against the Soviets and their 30,000 nuclear
weapons and missiles. If you are
looking for a real kook with a bomb to
worry about, North Korea would be
high on the list. Yet we negotiate with
Kim Jong Il. Pakistan has nukes and
was a close ally of the Taliban up until
9/11. Pakistan was never inspected by
the IAEA as to their military capability.
Yet we not only talk to her, we
provide economic assistance, though
someday Musharraf may well be overthrown
and a pro-al Qaeda government
put in place. We have been nearly obsessed
with talking about regime
change in Iran, while ignoring Pakistan
and North Korea. It makes no
sense and it is a very costly and dangerous
policy.
2006 Ron Paul 21:66
The conclusion we should derive from this is simple. It is in our best interest
to pursue a foreign policy of nonintervention.
A strict interpretation of
the Constitution mandates it. The
moral imperative of not imposing our
will on others, no matter how well intentioned,
is a powerful argument for
minding our own business. The principle
of self-determination should be
respected. Strict nonintervention
removes
the incentives for foreign powers
and corporate interests to influence
and control our policies overseas. We
cant afford the cost that intervention
requires, whether through higher taxes
or inflation. If the moral arguments
against intervention dont suffice for
some, the practical arguments should.
2006 Ron Paul 21:67
Intervention just doesnt work. It backfires and ultimately hurts the
American citizens both at home and
abroad. Spreading ourselves too thin
around the world actually diminishes
our national security through a weakened
military. As the only superpower
of the world, a constant interventionist
policy is perceived as arrogant, and
greatly undermines our ability to use
diplomacy in a positive manner.
2006 Ron Paul 21:68
Conservatives, libertarians, constitutionalists, and many of todays liberals
have all at one time or another endorsed
a less interventionist foreign
policy. There is no reason a coalition of
these groups might not once again
present the case for a pro-American
nonmilitant noninterventionist foreign
policy dealing with all nations. A policy
of trade and peace, and a willingness
to use diplomacy is far superior to
the foreign policy that has evolved
over the past 60 years. It is time for a
change.