HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
BEFORE THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
House Amendments to Comprehensive Peace in Sudan Act
2004 Ron Paul 80:1
Mr. Speaker, I rise in strong opposition to this ill-conceived,
counter-productive
legislation. This represents exactly the kind of unconstitutional
interventionism the Founding Fathers warned us about. It is arrogant
and
dangerous for us to believe that we can go around the world inserting
ourselves
into civil wars that have nothing to do with us without having to face
the
unintended consequences that always arise. Our steadily-increasing
involvement
in the civil war in Sudan may well delay the resolution of the conflict
that
appears to be proceeding without our involvement. Just today, in talks
with the
UN, the two sides pledged to end the fighting.
2004 Ron Paul 80:2
The fact is we do not know and cannot understand the complexities of the
civil war
in Sudan, which has lasted for 39 of that country’s 48 years of
existence.
Supporters of our intervention in Sudan argue that this is a clear-cut
case of
Sudan’s Christian minority being oppressed and massacred by the Arab
majority
in the Darfur region. It is interesting that the CIA’s World Factbook
states
that Sudan’s Christians, who make up five percent of the population,
are
concentrated in the south of the country. Darfur is a region in the
mid-western
part of Sudan. So I wonder about this very simplistic characterization
of the
conflict.
2004 Ron Paul 80:3
It seems as if this has been all reduced to a few slogans, tossed around
without
much thought or care about real meaning or implication. We
unfortunately see
this often with calls for intervention. One thing we do know, however,
is that
Sudan is floating on a sea of oil. Why does it always seem that when we
hear
urgent clamor for the United States to intervene, oil or some other
valuable
commodity just happens to be present? I find it interesting that so
much
attention is being paid to oil-rich Sudan while right next door in
Congo the
death toll from its civil war is estimated to be two to three million -
several
times the estimated toll in Sudan.
2004 Ron Paul 80:4
At a time when we have just raised the debt-ceiling to allow more massive
debt
accumulation, this legislation will unconstitutionally commit the
United States
to ship some 300 million taxpayer dollars to Sudan. It will also freeze
the US
assets of certain Sudanese until the government of Sudan pursues peace
in a
time-frame and manner that the US determines.
2004 Ron Paul 80:5
Inserting ourselves into this civil war in Sudan will do little to solve the
crisis. In
fact, the promise of US support for one side in the struggle may
discourage the
progress that has been made recently. What incentive is there to seek a
peaceful
resolution of the conflict when the US government promises massive
assistance to
one side? I strongly urge my colleagues to rethink our current
dangerous course
toward further intervention in Sudan. We may end up hurting most those
we are
intending to help.