2002 Ron Paul 18:1
Mr. PAUL.
Mr. Speaker, I strongly oppose H. Res. 339, a bill by the
United States Congress which seeks to tell a sovereign nation how to hold its
own elections. It seems the height of arrogance for us to sit here and
lecture the people and government of Ukraine on what they should do and should not
do in their own election process. One would have thought after our own
election debacle in November 2000, that we would have learned how
counterproductive and hypocritical it is to lecture other democratic countries on their
electoral
processes. How would members of this body–or any American–react if
countries
like Ukraine demanded that our elections here in the United States
conform to
their criteria? So I think we can guess how Ukrainians feel about this
piece of
legislation.
2002 Ron Paul 18:2
Mr. Speaker, Ukraine has been the recipient of hundreds of millions
of
dollars in foreign aid from the United States. In fiscal year 2002
alone,
Ukraine was provided $154 million. Yet after all this money–which we
were told
was to promote democracy–and more than ten years after the end of the
Soviet
Union, we are told in this legislation that Ukraine has made little if
any
progress in establishing a democratic political system.
2002 Ron Paul 18:3
Far from getting more involved in Ukraines electoral process, which
is where
this legislation leads us, the United States is already much too
involved in the
Ukrainian elections. The U.S. government has sent some $4.7 million
dollars to
Ukraine for monitoring and assistance programs, including to train
their
electoral commission members and domestic monitoring organizations.
There have
been numerous reports of U.S.-funded non-governmental organizations in
Ukraine
being involved in pushing one or another political party. This makes it
look
like the United States is taking sides in the Ukrainian elections.
2002 Ron Paul 18:4
The legislation calls for the full access of Organization for
Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) monitors to all aspects of the
parliamentary
elections, but that organization has time and time again, from Slovakia
to
Russia and elsewhere, shown itself to be unreliable and politically
biased. Yet
the United States continues to fund and participate in OSCE activities.
As
British writer John Laughland observed this week in the Guardian
newspaper,
Western election monitoring has become the political equivalent of an
Arthur Andersen audit. This supposedly technical process is now so
corrupted by political bias that it would be better to abandon it. Only then will
countries be able to elect their leaders freely.
Mr. Speaker, I think this is
advice we would be wise to heed.
2002 Ron Paul 18:5
Other aspects of this bill are likewise troubling. This bill seeks,
from
thousands of miles away and without any of the facts, to demand that
the
Ukrainian government solve crimes within Ukraine that have absolutely
nothing to
do with the United States. No one knows what happened to journalist
Heorhiy
Gongadze or any of the alleged murdered Ukrainian journalists, yet by
adding it
into this ill-advised piece of legislation we are sitting here
suggesting that
the government has something to do with the alleged murders. This
meddling into
the Ukrainian judicial system is inappropriate and counter-productive.
2002 Ron Paul 18:6
Mr. Speaker, we are legislators in the United States Congress. We
are not in Ukraine. We have no right to interfere in the internal affairs of that
country and no business telling them how to conduct their elections. A far
better policy toward Ukraine would be to eliminate any U.S.-government imposed
barrier to free trade between Americans and Ukrainians.
Note:
This chapter was on Ron Pauls Congressional website with the date given as March 20, 2002. However, it appears in Congressional Record of 19 March 2002. The date is arbitrary because the words were not spoken in a Congressional session.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2002/cr032002.htm