This resolution is an exercise in propaganda that
serves one purpose: to move us closer to initiating a war against Iran. Citing
various controversial statements by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, this
legislation demands that the United Nations Security Council charge Ahmadinejad
with violating the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide.
Having already initiated a disastrous war against Iraq citing UN resolutions
as justification, this resolution is like déja-vu. Have we forgotten
2003 already? Do we really want to go to war again for UN resolutions? That
is where this resolution, and the many others we have passed over the last several
years on Iran, is leading us. I hope my colleagues understand that a vote for
this bill is a vote to move us closer to war with Iran.
Clearly, language threatening to wipe a nation or a group of people off the
map is to be condemned by all civilized people. And I do condemn any such language.
But why does threatening Iran with a pre-emptive nuclear strike, as many here
have done, not also deserve the same kind of condemnation? Does anyone believe
that dropping nuclear weapons on Iran will not wipe a people off the map? When
it is said that nothing, including a nuclear strike, is off the table on Iran,
are those who say it not also threatening genocide? And we wonder why the rest
of the world accuses us of behaving hypocritically, of telling the rest of the
world do as we say, not as we do.
I strongly urge my colleagues to consider a different approach to Iran, and
to foreign policy in general. General William Odom, President Reagans
director of the National Security Agency, outlined a much more sensible approach
in a recent article titled Exit
From Iraq Should Be Through Iran. General Odom wrote: Increasingly
bogged down in the sands of Iraq, the U.S. thrashes about looking for an honorable
exit. Restoring cooperation between Washington and Tehran is the single most
important step that could be taken to rescue the U.S. from its predicament in
Iraq. General Odom makes good sense. We need to engage the rest of the
world, including Iran and Syria, through diplomacy, trade, and travel rather
than pass threatening legislation like this that paves the way to war. We have
seen the limitations of force as a tool of U.S. foreign policy. It is time to
try a more traditional and conservative approach. I urge a no vote
on this resolution.