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Mr. President, I have seen the television reports and the newspaper
articles, and I have spoken with people who recently returned from
Iraq. I have seen the escalating violence and the chaos that has
engulfed parts of that country.
And like all Americans I have watched the death toll of our young
men and women in uniform pass 1000. It is now more than 1050, with
many thousands more who have been grievously wounded.
Yet to hear the President and Vice President talk, one would think
that everything is going well. The President uses words like
"freedom is winning" and "we’re making steady progress."
There is no question that all of us here wish that were true, but
unfortunately the rosy picture that the President paints on the
campaign trail is misleading and wildly off base.
Even worse, the President’s statements are contradicted by
knowledgeable officials in his Administration, by leading
Republicans in the Senate, and by a growing number of national
security experts within his own Administration.
Here are a few examples:
– Secretary of State Powell said that the situation in Iraq is
"getting worse." – General Abizaid, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, said "[w]e’re
going to have to fight our way all the way through elections," he
said, "and there'll be a lot of violence between now and then."
– Senator Hagel said "The fact is, we're in trouble. We're in deep
trouble in Iraq." -- And, according to a recent article in the Washington Post, a
lengthening list of career military, intelligence and State
Department officials believe that Iraq is a mess and things are
getting even worse, raising the specter of civil war.
Faced with mounting evidence that things are going from bad to worse
in Iraq, what does the President do?
First, he attacks the messenger of the bad news by calling the
National Intelligence Estimate "just guessing." Next, he ignores the
problem by repeating the same old platitudes and wildly-optimistic
rhetoric. Then he and his political allies accuse those who dare to
disagree of giving aid and comfort to the terrorists. When all else
fails, the President engages in a time-honored tradition here in
Washington: He changes the subject and deflects attention.
This President and Vice-President are masters at changing the
subject. They have attacked John Kerry’s distinguished military
record, even though neither of them saw combat and many others in
the Administration used family connections or deferments to avoid
military service altogether. In fact, when asked about serving in
Vietnam Vice President Cheney said that he "had other priorities in
the ’60s than military service." Imagine what the President’s campaign would be saying if John Kerry
had said that.
Why do the President and Vice-President constantly change the
subject when asked to explain why things are going so badly in Iraq?
The answer is simple. They have been consistently wrong about Iraq,
and the results speak for themselves.
The President was wrong about weapons of mass destruction, which cut
short the UN weapons inspections and got us into Iraq in the first
place. The Duelfer report found that Iraq got rid of its weapons of
mass destruction more than a decade ago, that Saddam Hussein did not
have the means to develop a nuclear weapon, and that the UN
inspections were working. Yet the White House insists that this
devastating report by its own export somehow supports the
President’s decision to go to war. The Vice President was wrong about our being greeted as liberators.
Think about that statement, and compare it to the daily – actually,
hourly – attacks against our troops in Iraq today.
The President was wrong about "Mission Accomplished." More than 900
Americans have died since that famous photo op on the aircraft
carrier.
The President was not only wrong, but it is hard to imagine what he
was thinking, when he told the insurgents in Iraq to "bring it on."
The President was wrong about Iraqi oil revenues paying for the
reconstruction. It is American taxpayers who are paying most of the
costs.
And the President acts as if everything is on track for Iraqi
elections in January even as the insurgency grows steadily worse and
Secretary Rumsfeld is talking about holding elections in only parts
of the country.
Despite being consistently wrong, the President’s strategy stays the
same – put the best face on it, insist that everything is going
according to plan even though there is no plan, and attack the
patriotism of anyone who dares to question or to criticize. They have tried to keep the media from publishing photographs of the
planeloads of flag-draped coffins of Americans who have died in
Iraq.
They rarely even mention the casualties – American or Iraqi -- since
that, of course, would mean having to acknowledge the terrible price
that is being paid day after day.
They treated the Abu Ghraib prison scandal as an aberration – the
work of a few rogue recruits.
They have done their best to hide the policies to subvert the law
that were approved at the highest levels of government, and the fact
that Abu Ghraib was only one of several locations where foreign
prisoners were humiliated, tortured, denied the most basic human
rights, and even murdered.
They shut down distribution of a key security report, issued daily
by a U.S. contractor -- which U.S. personnel in Iraq have relied on
for their own safety -- because the news of escalating violence in
these reports did not square with the spin being put out by the
Pentagon and the White House.
Just as the President ignored those who predicted the widening
anti-American insurgency, he has sugar-coated the rebuilding of
Iraq.
A year ago, he asked the Congress to appropriate $19 billion
immediately, in fact so immediately that he resisted every amendment
designed to ensure the aid dollars would be well spent.
The President opposed my amendment to put Secretary Powell in charge
of the reconstruction in Iraq, causing the Department of Defense to
run the biggest nation-building venture since the Marshall Plan. And
they bungled it miserably.
The President opposed an amendment that would have at least required
that the aid be paid for out of the President’s tax cuts for the
wealthiest Americans – not left for our children and grandchildren.
The President opposed an amendment that would have created tough
criminal penalties for war profiteering in Iraq.
The President refused to consider any alternative approaches. His
attitude was ‘my way or the highway.’ And look at what a mess it has
gotten us into. It has been nearly a year since the Iraq
supplemental was signed into law, and only $1 billion of the $19
billion has been spent.
Of those funds, it is estimated that only 27 cents of every dollar
has gone to benefit the Iraqi people. The rest has ended up in the
pockets of high-priced contractors and consultants, and to pay for
insurance and security and other overhead costs.
Mr. President, there are serious consequences resulting from this
Administration's handling of the chaos in Iraq. One, which all
Senators are increasingly hearing about from our constituents, is
the possibility of a return to the draft. If Iraq continues on its
downward spiral, there is growing concern that it may be necessary
at some point to reinstate military conscription. I oppose returning
to a military draft, I do not believe it is necessary, and I believe
it would lessen our military effectiveness.
Yet the President needs to acknowledge to the American people that
our entire military forces, including the active Army, the Reserves,
and the National Guard, are stretched very thin right now because of
the choices the President has made. The military is finding it
difficult to get new recruits and has resorted to a backdoor draft,
forcing personnel to remain in the service through so-called
stop-loss orders.
The Pentagon at some point might decide that the only way to find
new recruits — unless we pursue more sensible policies — would be
through a draft. I sincerely hope not. This is only one of the many
examples of the life-and-death choices that the nation faces in
prudently allocating our resources to combat terrorism.
Mr. President, a lot has been said about President’s Bush’s
consistency. His campaign advertisements boast that he is a strong
leader because he ‘says what he means and he does what he says.’
What good is consistency when it means sending 140,000 Americans
into a guerrilla war in a foreign land fueled by religious and
ethnic hatred, without justification?
What good is consistency when it means spending upwards of $200
billion on a policy that has not made us any safer, and that has
turned Iraq into a haven for terrorists eager to kill Americans who
they see as foreign invaders out to destroy Islam itself?
What good is consistency when it squanders the good will that we
need to effectively fight terrorism, to build a real coalition so
the United States is not paying 90 percent of the cost and suffering
90 percent of the casualties?
What good is consistency, when all it really amounts to is hollow
rhetoric that bears no relationship to the facts? The President and Vice-President have been consistent alright –
consistently wrong. There is no value in that.
The President and Vice President constantly assert that we need to
‘stay the course.’ My answer to that is that if you are captain of
the ship and you are heading for an iceberg, you change course. You
want to get to the same destination, but you do not want to plow
into the iceberg to get there.
It is this President’s rigid adherence to a misguided ideology that
has gotten us into deep, deep trouble in Iraq.
Mr. President, the American people deserve better. They deserve
competence and they deserve honesty. They deserve leaders who know
the difference between a political decision, and the right decision.
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