The Same Old Failed
Policies in Iraq
Mr. Speaker, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Our allegiances to our allies and friends change constantly. For a
decade, exiled Iraqi Ahmed Chalabi was our chosen leader-to-be in a
new Iraq. Championed by Pentagon neocons and objected to by the
State Department, Mr. Chalabi received more than 100 million U.S.
taxpayer dollars as our man designated to be leader of a new Iraqi
government.
But something happened on the way to the coronation. The State
Department finally won out in its struggle with the Pentagon to dump
Chalabi and his Iraqi National Congress, delivering Iraq to a
competing exiled group, Dr. Iyad Allawi’s Iraqi National Accord. But
never fear, both groups were CIA supported and both would be
expected to govern as an American puppet. And that’s the problem.
Under the conditions that currently exist in Iraq, American
sponsorship of a government, or even United Nations approval, for
that matter, will be rejected by a nationalistic Iraqi
people.
We never seem to learn, and the Muslim Middle East never forgets.
Our support for the Shah of Iran and Saddam Hussein’s war against
Iran has never endeared us to the Iranians. We’re supposed to be
surprised to discover that our close confidant Ahmed Chalabi turns
out to be a cozy pragmatic friend of Iran. The CIA may have
questioned the authenticity of Iranian intelligence passed on to the
U.S. by Chalabi, yet still this intelligence was used eagerly to
promote the pro-war propaganda that so many in Congress and the
nation bought into. And now it looks like the intelligence fed to
Chalabi by Iran was deliberately falsified, but because it fit in so
neatly with the neocon’s determination to remake the entire Middle
East, starting with a preemptive war against Iraq, it was received
enthusiastically.
Inadvertently we served the interests of both Iran and Osama
bin Laden by eliminating the very enemy they despised – Saddam
Hussein. To the Iranians delight, it was payback time for our
allegiance with Saddam Hussein against Iran in the 1980s.
The serious concern is that valuable and top-secret U.S. intelligence
may well have gone in the other direction: to Iran with the help of
Chalabi.
These serious concerns led to the dumping of the heir
apparent Chalabi, the arrest of his colleagues, and the raid on his
home and headquarters to seize important documents. The connection
between Chalabi and the U.N. food-for-oil scandal is yet to be
determined.
What a mess! But no one should be surprised. Regime change plans –
whether by CIA operations or by preemptive war – almost always go
badly. American involvement in installing the Shah of Iran in the
fifties, killing Diem in South Vietnam in the sixties, helping Osama
bin Laden against the Soviets in the eighties, assisting Saddam
Hussein against Iran in the eighties, propping up dictators in many
Arab countries, and supporting the destruction of the Palestinian
people all have had serious repercussions on American interests
including the loss of American life. We have wasted hundreds of
billions of dollars while the old wounds in the Middle East continue
to fester.
How many times have our friends become our enemies and our enemies
our friends, making it difficult to determine which is which? Our
relationship with Kadafi in Libya is an example of the silliness of
our policy. Does his recent “conversion” to our side qualify him for
U.S. assistance? No one can possibly predict what our relationship
with Kadafi will be in a year or two from now. My guess is that he
too has a long memory. And even if he becomes a U.S. stooge, it will
only foment antagonism from his own people for his cozy relationship
with the United States. Long term, interference in the internal
affairs of other nations doesn't help us or those we support.
Those who strongly argue behind the scenes that we must
protect “our oil” surely should have second thoughts, as oil prices
soar over $40 with our current policy of military interventionism.
The real tragedy is that even those with good intentions who argue
the case for our military presence around the world never achieved
their stated goals. Not only do the efforts fall short, the unintended
consequences in life and limb and dollars spent are always much
greater than ever anticipated. The blow-back effects literally go on
for decades.
The invisible economic costs are enormous but generally ignored. A
policy of militarism and constant war has huge dollar costs, which
contribute to the huge deficits, higher interest rates, inflation,
and economic dislocations. War cannot raise the standard of living
for the average American. Participants in the military-industrial
complex do benefit, however. Now the grand scheme of physically
rebuilding Iraq using American corporations may well prove
profitable to the select few with political connections.
The clear failure of the policy of foreign interventionism
followed by our leaders for more than a hundred years should prompt a
reassessment of our philosophy. Tactical changes, or relying more on
the U.N., will not solve these problems. Either way the burden will
fall on the American taxpayer and the American soldier.
The day is fast approaching when we no longer will be able to afford
this burden. For now foreign governments are willing to loan us the
money needed to finance our current account deficit, and indirectly
the cost of our worldwide military operations. It may seem possible
for the moment because we have been afforded the historically unique
privilege of printing the world’s reserve currency. Foreigners have
been only too willing to take our depreciating dollars for their
goods. Economic law eventually will limit our ability to live off
others by credit creation. Eventually trust in the dollar will be
diminished, if not destroyed. Those who hold these trillion plus
dollars can hold us hostage if it’s ever in their interest. It may
be that economic law and hostility toward the United States will
combine to precipitate an emotionally charged rejection of the
dollar.
That’s when the true wealth of the country will become
self-evident and we will no longer be able to afford the extravagant
expense of pursuing an American empire. No nation has ever been able
to finance excessive foreign entanglements and domestic entitlements
through printing press money and borrowing from abroad.
It’s time we reconsider the advice of the founding fathers and the
guidelines of the Constitution, which counsel a foreign policy of
non-intervention and strategic independence. Setting a good example
is a far better way to spread American ideals than through force of
arms. Trading with nations, without interference by international
government regulators, is far better than sanctions and tariffs that
too often plant the seeds of war.
The principle of self-determination should be permitted for all
nations and all demographically defined groups. The world tolerated
the breakup of the ruthless Soviet and Yugoslavian systems rather well,
even as certain national and ethnic groups demanded self-determination
and independence.
This principle is the source of the solution for Iraq. We should suggest
and encourage each of the three groups – the Sunnis, the Shiites,
and the Kurds – to seek self-government and choose voluntarily
whether they want to associate with a central government.
Instead of the incessant chant about us forcing democracy on
others, why not read our history and see how thirteen nations joined
together to form a loose-knit republic with emphasis on local
self-government. Part of the problem with our effort to re-order
Iraq is that the best solution is something we have essentially
rejected here in the United States. It would make a lot more sense
to concentrate on rebuilding our Republic, emphasizing the
principles of private property, free markets, trade, and personal
liberty here at home rather then pursuing war abroad. If this were
done, we would not be a militaristic state spending ourselves into
bankruptcy, and government benefits to the untold thousands of
corporations and special interest would be denied.
True defense is diminished when money
and energy are consumed by activities outside the scope of
specifically protecting our national security. Diverting resources
away from defense and the protection of our borders while
antagonizing so many around the world actually serves to expose us
to greater danger from more determined enemies.
A policy of non-intervention and strategic independence is the course
we should take if we’re serious about peace and prosperity. Liberty
works!
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.