HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
October 7, 2005
Staying or Leaving
Supporters of the war in Iraq, as well as some non-supporters, warn of
the dangers if we leave. But
isn’t it quite possible that these dangers are simply a consequence of having
gone into Iraq in the first place, rather than a consequence of leaving?
Isn’t it possible that staying only makes the situation worse?
If chaos results after our departure, it’s because we occupied Iraq,
not because we left.
The original reasons for our pre-emptive strike are long forgotten, having been
based on false assumptions. The
justification given now is that we must persist in this war or else dishonor
those who already have died or been wounded.
We’re also told civil strife likely will engulf all of Iraq.
But what is the logic of perpetuating a flawed policy where more Americans die
just because others have suffered? More
Americans deaths cannot possibly help those who already have been injured or
killed.
Civil strife, if not civil war, already exists in Iraq-- and despite the
infighting, all factions oppose our occupation.
The insistence on using our military to occupy and run Iraq provides
convincing evidence to our detractors inside and outside Iraq that we have no
intention of leaving. Building
permanent military bases and a huge embassy confirms these fears.
We deny the importance of oil and Israel’s influence on our policy, yet we
fail to convince the Arab/Muslim world that our intentions are purely
humanitarian.
In truth, our determined presence in Iraq actually increases the odds of
regional chaos, inciting Iran and Syria while aiding Osama bin Laden in his
recruiting efforts. Leaving Iraq
would do the opposite-- though not without some dangers that rightfully should
be blamed on our unwise invasion rather than our exit.
We should remember that losing a war to China over control of North
Korea ultimately did not enhance communism in China, as she now has accepted
many capitalist principles. In
fact, China today outproduces us in many ways-- as reflected by our negative
trade balance with her.
We lost a war in Vietnam, and the domino theory that communism would spread
throughout southeast Asia was proven wrong. Today, Vietnam accepts American investment dollars and
technology. We maintain a trade
relationship with Vietnam that the war never achieved.
We contained the USSR and her thousands of nuclear warheads without military
confrontation, leading to the collapse and disintegration of a powerful Soviet
empire. Today we trade with Russia
and her neighbors, as the market economy spreads throughout the world without
the use of arms.
We should heed the words of Ronald Reagan about his experience with a
needless and mistaken military occupation of Lebanon.
Sending troops into Lebanon seemed like a good idea in 1983, but in 1990
President Reagan said this in his memoirs:
“…we did not appreciate fully enough the depth of the hatred and
complexity of the problems that made the Middle East such a jungle…In the
weeks immediately after the bombing, I believed the last thing we should do was
turn tail and leave…yet, the irrationality of Middle Eastern politics forced
us to rethink our policy there.”
During the occupation of Lebanon by American, French, and Israeli troops between
1982 and 1986, there were 41 suicide terrorist attacks in that country.
One horrific attack killed 241 U.S. Marines.
Yet once these foreign troops were removed, the suicide attacks literally
stopped. Today we should once again
rethink our policy in this region.
It’s amazing what ending military intervention in the affairs of
others can achieve. Setting an
example of how a free market economy works does wonders.
We should have confidence in how well freedom works, rather than relying
on blind faith in the use of military force to spread our message.
Setting an example and using persuasion is always superior to military
force in showing how others might live. Force
and war are tools of authoritarians; they are never tools of champions of
liberty and justice. Force and war inevitably lead to dangerous unintended
consequences.