Our country faces major problems. No longer can
they remain hidden from the American people. Most Americans are aware the federal
budget is in dismal shape. Whether it's Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid,
or even the private pension system, most Americans realize we're in debt over
our heads.
The welfare state is unmanageable and severely overextended. In spite of hopes
that supposed reform would restore sound financing and provide for all the needs
of the people, it's becoming more apparent every day that the entire system
of entitlements is in a precarious state and may well collapse. It doesn't take
a genius to realize that increasing the national debt by over $600 billion per
year is not sustainable. Raising taxes to make up the shortfall is unacceptable,
while continuing to print the money needed will only accelerate the erosion
of the dollar's value.
Our foreign policy is no less of a threat to us. Our worldwide military presence
and our obsession with remaking the entire Middle East frightens a lot of people
both here and abroad. Our role as world policeman and nation-builder places
undue burdens on the American taxpayer. Our enormous overseas military expenditures–
literally hundreds of billion of dollars– are a huge drain on the American
economy.
All wars invite abuses of civil liberties at home, and the vague declaration
of war against terrorism is worse than most in this regard. As our liberties
here at home are diminished by the PATRIOT Act and national ID card legislation,
we succumb to the temptation of all empires to neglect habeas corpus, employ
torture tactics, and use secret imprisonment. These domestic and foreign policy
trends reflect a morally bankrupt philosophy, devoid of any concern for liberty
and the rule of law.
The American people are becoming more aware of the serious crisis this country
faces. Their deep concern is reflected in the current mood in Congress. The
recent debate over Iraq shows the parties are now looking for someone to blame
for the mess we're in. It's a high-stakes political game. The fact
that a majority of both parties and their leadership endorsed the war, and accept
the same approach toward Iran and Syria, does nothing to tone down the accusatory
nature of the current blame game.
The argument in Washington is over tactics, quality of intelligence, war management,
and diplomacy, except for the few who admit that tragic mistakes were made and
now sincerely want to establish a new course for Iraq. Thank goodness for those
who are willing to reassess and admit to these mistakes. Those of us who have
opposed the war all along welcome them to the cause of peace.
If we hope to pursue a more sensible foreign policy, it is imperative that
Congress face up to its explicit constitutional responsibility to declare war.
It's easy to condemn the management of a war one endorsed, while deferring
the final decision about whether to deploy troops to the president. When Congress
accepts and assumes its awesome responsibility to declare war, as directed by
the Constitution, fewer wars will be fought.
Sadly, the acrimonious blame game is motivated by the leadership of both parties
for the purpose of gaining, or retaining, political power. It doesn't approach
a true debate over the wisdom, or lack thereof, of foreign military interventionism
and preemptive war.
Polls indicate ordinary Americans are becoming uneasy with our prolonged war
in Iraq, which has no end in sight. The fact that no one can define victory
precisely, and most Americans see us staying in Iraq for years to come, contribute
to the erosion of support for this war. Currently, 63 percent of Americans disapprove
of the handling of the war, and 52 percent say it's time to come home. Forty-two
percent say we need a foreign policy of minding our own business. This is very
encouraging.
The percentages are even higher for the Iraqis. Eighty-two percent want us
to leave, while 67 percent claim they are less secure with our troops there.
Ironically, our involvement has produced an unusual agreement among the Kurds,
Shi'ites, and Sunnis, the three factions at odds with each other. At the recent
22-member Arab League meeting in Cairo, the three groups agreed on one issue:
they all want foreign troops to leave. At the end of the meeting, an explicit
communiqué was released: "We demand the withdrawal of foreign forces
in accordance with a timetable, and the establishment of a national and immediate
program for rebuilding the armed forces … that will allow them to guard
Iraq's borders and get control of the security situation." Since the administration
is so enamored with democracy, why not have a national referendum in Iraq to
see if the people want us to leave?
After we left Lebanon in the 1980s, the Arab League was instrumental in brokering
an end to that country's 15-year civil war. Its chances of helping to stop
the fighting in Iraq are far better than depending on the UN, NATO, or the United
States. This is a regional dispute that we stirred up but cannot settle. The
Arab League needs to assume a lot more responsibility for the mess that our
invasion has caused. We need to get out of the way and let them solve their
own problems.
Remember, once we left Lebanon, suicide terrorism stopped and peace finally
came. The same could happen in Iraq.
Everyone is talking about the downside of us leaving, and the civil war that
might erupt. Possibly so, but no one knows with certainty what will happen.
There was no downside when we left Vietnam. But one thing is for sure: after
a painful decade of killing in the 1960s, the killing stopped and no more Americans
died once we left. We now trade with Vietnam and enjoy friendly relations with
them. This was achieved through peaceful means, not military force. The real
question is how many more Americans must be sacrificed for a policy that is
not working? Are we going to fight until we go broke and the American people
are impoverished? Common sense tells us it's time to reassess the politics of
military intervention and not just look for someone to blame for falling once
again into the trap of a military quagmire.
The blame game is a political event, designed to avoid the serious philosophic
debate over our foreign policy of interventionism. The mistakes made by both
parties in dragging us into an unwise war are obvious, but the effort to blame
one group over the other confuses the real issue. Obviously, Congress failed
to meet its constitutional obligation regarding war. Debate over prewar intelligence
elicits charges of errors, lies, and complicity. It is now argued that those
who are critical of the outcome in Iraq are just as much at fault, since they
too accepted flawed intelligence when deciding to support the war. This charge
is leveled at previous administrations, foreign governments, members of Congress,
and the United Nations– all who made the same mistake of blindly accepting
the prewar intelligence. Complicity, errors of judgment, and malice are hardly
an excuse for such a serious commitment as a preemptive war against a nonexistent
enemy.
Both sides accepted the evidence supposedly justifying the war, evidence that
was not credible. No weapons of mass destruction were found. Iraq had no military
capabilities. Al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein were not allies (remember, we were
allies of both Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden), and Saddam Hussein posed
no threat whatsoever to the United States or his neighbors.
We hear constantly that we must continue the fight in Iraq, and possibly in
Iran and Syria, because "It's better to fight the terrorists over there
than here." Merely repeating this justification, if it is based on a major
analytical error, cannot make it so. All evidence shows that our presence in
Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and other Muslim countries benefits al-Qaeda in its recruiting
efforts, especially in its search for suicide terrorists. This one fact prompts
a rare agreement among all religious and secular Muslim factions; namely, that
the U.S. should leave all Arab lands. Denying this will not keep terrorists
from attacking us, it will do the opposite.
The fighting and terrorist attacks are happening overseas because of a publicly
stated al-Qaeda policy that they will go for soft targets– our allies whose
citizens object to the war like Spain and Italy. They will attack Americans
who are more exposed in Iraq. It is a serious error to conclude that "fighting
them over there" keeps them from fighting us "over here," or
that we're winning the war against terrorism. As long as our occupation continues,
and American forces continue killing Muslims, the incentive to attack us will
grow. It shouldn't be hard to understand that the responsibility for violence
in Iraq – even violence between Iraqis – is blamed on our occupation.
It is more accurate to say, "the longer we fight them over there the longer
we will be threatened over here."
The final rhetorical refuge for those who defend the war, not yet refuted,
is the dismissive statement that "the world is better off without Saddam
Hussein." It implies no one can question anything we have done because
of this fact. Instead of an automatic concession, it should be legitimate, though
politically incorrect, to challenge this disarming assumption. No one has to
like or defend Saddam Hussein to point out that we won't know whether the world
is better off until someone has taken Saddam Hussein's place.
This argument was never used to justify removing murderous dictators with much
more notoriety than Saddam Hussein, such as our ally Stalin; Pol Pot, whom we
helped get into power; or Mao Tse Tung. Certainly the Soviets, with their bloody
history and thousands of nuclear weapons aimed at us, were many times over a
greater threat to us than Saddam Hussein ever was. If containment worked with
the Soviets and the Chinese, why is it assumed without question that deposing
Saddam Hussein is obviously and without question a better approach for us than
containment?
The "we're all better off without Saddam Hussein" cliché doesn't
address the question of whether the 2,100 troops killed or the 20,000 wounded
and sick troops are better off. We refuse to acknowledge the hatred generated
by the deaths of tens of thousands of Iraqi citizens who are written off as
collateral damage. Are the Middle East and Israel better off with the turmoil
our occupation has generated? Hardly! Honesty would have us conclude that conditions
in the Middle East are worse since the war started: the killing never stops,
and the cost is more than we can bear – both in lives and limbs lost and
in dollars spent.
In spite of the potential problems that may or may not come with our withdrawal,
the greater mistake was going in the first place. We need to think more about
how to avoid these military encounters, rather than dwelling on the complications
that result when we meddle in the affairs of others with no moral or legal authority
to do so. We need less blame game and more reflection about the root cause of
our aggressive foreign policy.
By limiting the debate to technical points over intelligence, strategy, the
number of troops, and how to get out of the mess, we ignore our continued policy
of sanctions, threats, and intimidation of Iraq's neighbors, Iran and Syria.
Even as Congress pretends to argue about how or when we might come home, leaders
from both parties continue to support the policy of spreading the war by precipitating
a crisis with these two countries.
The likelihood of agreeing about who deliberately or innocently misled Congress,
the media, and the American people is virtually nil. Maybe historians at a later
date will sort out the whole mess. The debate over tactics and diplomacy will
go on, but that only serves to distract from the important issue of policy.
Few today in Congress are interested in changing from our current accepted policy
of intervention to one of strategic independence: No nation-building, no policing
the world, no dangerous alliances.
But the results of our latest military incursion into a foreign country should
not be ignored. Those who dwell on pragmatic matters should pay close attention
to the results so far.
Since March 2003 we have seen:
- Death and destruction: 2,100 Americans killed and nearly 20,000 sick or
wounded, plus tens of thousands of Iraqis caught in the crossfire;
- A Shi'ite theocracy has been planted;
- A civil war has erupted;
- Iran's arch nemesis, Saddam Hussein, has been removed;
- Osama bin Laden's arch nemesis, Saddam Hussein, has been removed;
- Al-Qaeda now operates freely in Iraq, enjoying a fertile training field
not previously available to them;
- Suicide terrorism, spurred on by our occupation, has significantly increased;
- Our military-industrial complex thrives in Iraq without competitive bids;
- True national defense and the voluntary army have been undermined;
- Personal liberty at home is under attack: assaults on free speech and privacy,
national ID cards, the PATRIOT Act, National Security letters, and challenges
to habeas corpus all have been promoted;
- Values have changed, with more Americans supporting torture and secret prisons;
- Domestic strife, as recently reflected in arguments over the war on the
House floor, is on the upswing;
- Preemptive war has been codified and accepted as legitimate and necessary,
a bleak policy for our future;
- The Middle East is far more unstable, and oil supplies are less secure,
not more;
- Historic relics of civilization protected for thousands of years have been
lost in a flash while oil wells were secured;
- U. S. credibility in the world has been severely damaged; and
- The national debt has increased enormously, and our dependence on China
has increased significantly as our federal government borrows more and more
money.
How many more years will it take for civilized people to realize that war has
no economic or political value for the people who fight and pay for it? Wars
are always started by governments, and individual soldiers on each side are
conditioned to take up arms and travel great distances to shoot and kill individuals
that never meant them harm. Both sides drive their people into an hysterical
frenzy to overcome their natural instinct to live and let live. False patriotism
is used to embarrass the goodhearted into succumbing to the wishes of the financial
and other special interests who agitate for war.
War reflects the weakness of a civilization that refuses to offer peace as
an alternative.
This does not mean we should isolate ourselves from the world. On the contrary,
we need more rather than less interaction with our world neighbors. We should
encourage travel, foreign commerce, friendship, and exchange of ideas –
this would far surpass our misplaced effort to make the world like us through
armed force. And this can be achieved without increasing the power of the state
or accepting the notion that some world government is needed to enforce the
rules of exchange. Governments should just get out of the way and let individuals
make their own decisions about how they want to relate to the world.
Defending the country against aggression is a very limited and proper function
of government. Our military involvement in the world over the past 60 years
has not met this test, and we're paying the price for it.
A policy that endorses peace over war, trade over sanctions, courtesy over
arrogance, and liberty over coercion is in the tradition of the American Constitution
and American idealism. It deserves consideration.