HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
Before the U.S. House of Representatives
January 5, 2007
3000 American Deaths in Iraq
The regime in Iraq has been changed.
Yet victory will not be declared: not only does the war go on, it’s
about to escalate. Obviously the
turmoil in Iraq is worse than ever, and most Americans no longer are willing to
tolerate the costs, both human and economic, associated with this war.
We have been in Iraq for 45 months. Many
more Americans have been killed in Iraq than were killed in the first 45 months
of our war in Vietnam. I was in the
U.S. Air Force in 1965, and I remember well when President Johnson announced a
troop surge in Vietnam to hasten victory. That
war went on for another decade, and by the time we finally got out 60,000
Americans had died. God knows we
should have gotten out ten years earlier. “Troop
surge” meant serious escalation.
The election is over and Americans have spoken.
Enough is enough! They want
the war ended and our troops brought home.
But the opposite likely will occur, with bipartisan support.
Up to 50,000 more troops will be sent.
The goal no longer is to win, but simply to secure Baghdad! So much has
been spent with so little to show for it.
Who possibly benefits from escalating chaos in Iraq? Neoconservatives unabashedly have written about how chaos
presents opportunities for promoting their goals. Certainly Osama bin Laden has
benefited from the turmoil in Iraq, as have the Iranian Shiites who now are
better positioned to take control of southern Iraq.
Yes, Saddam Hussein is dead, and only the Sunnis mourn. The Shiites and Kurds celebrate his death, as do the Iranians
and especially bin Laden-- all enemies of Saddam Hussein. We have performed a tremendous service for both bin Laden and
Ahmadinejad, and it will cost us plenty. The
violent reaction to our complicity in the execution of Saddam Hussein is yet to
come.
Three thousand American military personnel are dead, more than 22,000 are
wounded, and tens of thousands will be psychologically traumatized by their
tours of duty in Iraq. Little
concern is given to the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians killed in this
war. We’ve spent $400 billion so
far, with no end in sight.
This is money we don’t have. It
is all borrowed from countries like China, that increasingly succeed in the
global economy while we drain wealth from our citizens through heavy taxation
and insidious inflation. Our
manufacturing base is now nearly extinct.
Where the additional U.S. troops in Iraq will come from is anybody’s guess.
But surely they won’t be redeployed from Japan, Korea, or Europe.
We at least must pretend that our bankrupt empire is intact. But then again, the Soviet empire appeared intact in 1988.
Some Members of Congress, intent on equitably distributing the suffering among
all Americans, want to bring back the draft.
Administration officials vehemently deny making any concrete plans for a
draft. But why should we believe
this? Look what happened when so
many believed the reasons given for our preemptive invasion of Iraq.
Selective Service officials admit running a check of their lists of available
young men. If the draft is
reinstated, we probably will include young women as well to serve the god of
“equality.” Conscription is slavery, plain and simple.
And it was made illegal under the 13th amendment, which prohibits
involuntary servitude. One may well
be killed as a military draftee, which makes conscription a very dangerous kind
of enslavement.
Instead of testing the efficacy of the Selective Service System and sending more
troops off to a war we’re losing, we ought to revive our love of liberty.
We should repeal the Selective Service Act.
A free society should never depend on compulsory conscription to defend
itself.
We get into trouble by not following the precepts of
liberty or obeying the rule of law. Preemptive,
undeclared wars fought under false pretenses are a road to disaster. If a full declaration of war by Congress had been demanded as
the Constitution requires, this war never would have been fought.
If we did not create credit out of thin air as the Constitution
prohibits, we never would have convinced taxpayers to support this war directly
from their pockets. How long this
financial charade can go on is difficult to judge, but when the end comes it
will not go unnoticed by any American.