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July
14, 2007
Bring Our
Troops Home Now
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Before
the U.S. House of Representatives on July 12,
2007:
I rise in opposition to HR 2956 which, while a
well-intended attempt to reduce our nation's
seemingly unlimited military commitment in Iraq, is
in so many respects deeply flawed.
I have been one of the strongest opponents of
military action against Iraq. I voted against the
initial authorization in 2002 and I have voted
against every supplemental appropriations bill to
fund the war. I even voted against the initial
"Iraq regime change" legislation back in 1998. I
believe our troops should be brought back to the
United States without delay. Unfortunately, one of
the reasons I oppose this legislation is that it
masquerades as a troop withdrawal measure but in
reality may well end up increasing US commitments
in the Middle East.
Mr. Speaker, this is precisely the debate we
should have had four years ago, before Congress
voted to abrogate its Constitutional obligation to
declare war and transfer that authority to the
president. Some in this body were rather glib in
declaring the constitution antiquated while voting
to cede the ability to initiate hostilities to the
President. Now we see the result of ignoring the
Constitution, and we are bringing even more mayhem
to the process with this legislation.
To those who believe this act would some how end
the war, I simply point to the title for Section 3
of the bill, which states, "REQUIREMENT TO REDUCE
THE NUMBER OF ARMED FORCES IN IRAQ AND TRANSITION
TO A LIMITED PRESENCE OF THE ARMED FORCES IN IRAQ."
However the number of troops are limited, this
legislation nevertheless will permit an ongoing
American military presence in Iraq with our
soldiers continuing to be engaged in
hostilities.
I also wish to draw attention to Section
4(b)(1), which mandates the President to submit a
"Strategy for Iraq" by the beginning of next year.
This "strategy" is to include:
- "A discussion of United States national
security interests in Iraq and the broader
Middle East region and the diplomatic,
political, economic, and military components of
a comprehensive strategy to maintain and advance
such interests as the Armed Forces are
redeployed from Iraq pursuant to section 3 of
this Act."
In other words, far from extricating ourselves
from the debacle in Iraq, this bill would set in
motion a policy that could lead to a wider regional
commitment, both financially and militarily. Such a
policy would be disastrous for both our
overextended national security forces and
beleaguered taxpayers. This could, in fact, amount
to an authorization for a region-wide "surge."
Congress' job is to change the policy on Iraq,
not to tell the military leaders how many troops
they should have. I have attempted to do this with
HR 2605, a bill to sunset after a six month period
the authorization for military activity in Iraq.
During this period a new plan for Iraq could be
discussed and agreed. Plan first, authorization
next, execution afterward. That is what we should
be doing in Iraq.
In summary, Mr. Speaker, this legislation brings
us no closer to ending the war in Iraq. It brings
us no closer to bringing our troops home. It says
nothing about withdrawal, only about redeployment.
It says nothing about reducing US presence in the
Middle East, and may actually lead to an expanded
US presence in the region. We have no guarantee the
new strategy demanded by this legislation would not
actually expand our military activities to Iran and
Syria and beyond. I urge my colleagues to reject
this legislation and put forth an effective
strategy to end the war in Iraq and to bring our
troops home.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
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