Statement Of Senator Patrick Leahy
The War In Iraq
Senate Floor
October 25, 2005
[Following
is Sen. Patrick Leahy’s address on Iraq, delivered Tuesday
morning on the Senate Floor. Leahy (D-Vt.) is the ranking
member of the Appropriations panel that handles the Senate’s
work in funding the State Department and U.S. foreign
operations and aid, and he also is a senior member of the
Appropriations panel with jurisdiction over the annual
defense budget bill. Leahy was one of 23 senators who voted
against the resolution that authorized the invasion of
Iraq.]
MR. LEAHY. Three years ago when
the Congress and the country debated the resolution to give
President Bush the authority to launch a preemptive war against
Iraq, reference was often made to the lessons of Vietnam.
Unheeded Lessons
There are many lessons, both of
that war and of the efforts to end it. But one that made a deep
impression on me came from former Secretary of Defense Robert
McNamara, the architect of that war, who said our greatest
mistake was not understanding our enemy.
Vietnam
was a relatively simple country that had changed little in the
preceding 3,000 years. It was, for the most part, racially,
ethnically, linguistically and religiously homogenous. One
would have thought it would have been easy for U.S. military and
political leaders to understand.
Apparently it was not. The White
House and the Pentagon, convinced that no country, particularly
not a tiny impoverished land of rice farmers, could withstand
the military might of the United States, never bothered to study
and understand the history or culture of Vietnam, and they made
tragic miscalculations. They lacked the most basic knowledge of
the motivation, the capabilities and the resolve of the people
they were fighting.
At the start of the Iraq war,
those who drew some analogies to Vietnam were ridiculed by the
Pentagon and the White House. Iraq is not Vietnam, they
insisted. Our troops would be greeted as liberators. Troop
strength was not a concern. Our mission would be quickly
accomplished. Democracy would spread throughout the Middle
East. Freedom was on the march.
It is true that Vietnam and Iraq
are vastly different societies. But the point was not that they
are similar, but that some of the same lessons apply. We did
not understand Vietnam -- a simple country -- and we paid a huge
price for our ignorance and our arrogance.
Iraq -- a complex country
comprised of rival clans, tribes and ethic and religious
factions who have fought each other for centuries -- we
understand even less.
If this were not apparent to many
at the start of this ill-conceived and politically motivated war
-- a war I opposed from the beginning -- it should be obvious
today. Yet to listen to the Secretary of Defense, or to the
President or the Vice President, one would never know it.
Misled Into War
We know today that President Bush
decided to invade Iraq without evidence to support the use of
force and well before Congress passed the resolution giving him
the authority to do so -- authority he did not even believe he
needed -- despite the Constitution which invests in the Congress
the power to declare war. Twenty-three Senators voted against
that resolution, and I was proud to be one of them.
We know today that the motivation
for a plan to attack Iraq, hatched by a handful of political
operatives, had taken hold within the White House even before
9/11, and without any connection to the war on terrorism that
came later.
We know that the key public
justifications for the war -- to stop Saddam Hussein from
developing nuclear weapons and supporting al Qaeda -- were based
on faulty intelligence and outright distortions and have been
thoroughly discredited. United Nations weapons inspectors, who
were dismissed by the White House as naïve and ineffective,
turned out to have gathered far better information with a tiny
fraction of the budget than our own intelligence agencies.
And we know that the insurgency is
continuing to grow along with American casualties -- 1,999
killed and at least 15,220 wounded, as of yesterday -- despite
the same old light at the end of the tunnel assertions and
clichés by the White House and top officials in the Pentagon.
The sad but inescapable truth,
which the President either does not see or refuses to believe or
admit, is that the Iraqi insurgency has steadily grown, in part
because of our presence there.
‘Bring Them On’
After baiting the insurgents to
“bring them on,” we got what the President asked for. More than
two years later, the pendulum swung against us, and the question
is no longer whether we can stop the insurgency, but how to
extricate ourselves.
According to soldiers who
volunteered for duty in Iraq believing in the mission and who
have returned home, many Iraqis who detest the barbaric tactics
of the insurgents have grown to despise us. They blame us for
the lack of water and electricity, for the lack of jobs and
health care, for the hardships and violence they are suffering
day in and day out.
Unlike our troops and their
families who make great sacrifices, most Americans have been
asked to sacrifice nothing for this war. The bills are being
sent to our children and grandchildren, by way of our rapidly
escalating national debt and annual deficits. Yet as the
hundreds of billions dollars to pay for the war continue to pile
up and domestic programs like Medicaid, job training and
programs for needy students are cut, the sacrifices will be felt
today as well.
Slogans have become little more
than political rallying cries for the White House. Slogans as
empty and unfulfilled as “mission accomplished.” Our troops
were sent to fight an unnecessary war without sufficient armor
against these ruthless and barbaric bombing attacks, without
adequate reinforcements, without a plan to win the peace, and
without adequate medical care and other services when they
return home on stretchers or crutches or with eye patches,
unable to walk, to work, to pay their mortgages, or to support
their families.
Many of our veterans have been
treated shamefully by their government when it sent them into
harm’s way under false pretences, and again after they returned
home.
Today I worry about places like
Ramadi, where more than 300 members of the Army National Guard
from my State of Vermont are currently serving valiantly
alongside their comrades in the Marine Corps and the
Pennsylvania National Guard. Dozens of other citizen-soldiers
from the Vermont Guard are serving across Iraq, while hundreds
are deployed throughout the Persian Gulf region.
Many Vermonters have been killed
in Ramadi and elsewhere by roadside bombs and all-too accurate
sniper attacks.
The insurgents too often seem to
attack and then escape with impunity. You can open a newspaper
and see photos of armed insurgents walking the streets in broad
daylight. Many of these cold-blooded attacks are by people who
are willing to trade their own lives to kill civilians, security
guards, and our soldiers who have no way of knowing who they can
trust among the general population.
‘More Of The Same’ Is Not Working
The President has no plan to deal
with Ramadi, let alone the rest of Iraq, except doing more of
what we have been doing for more than two years, at a cost of $5
billion a month -- money we do not have and that future
generations of Americans will have to repay. Nor has he
proposed a practical alternative to our wasteful energy policy
that guarantees our continued dependence on Persian Gulf oil for
decades to come.
I am sure that what our military
is doing to train the Iraqi Army and what our billions of
dollars are doing to help rebuild Iraq -- whatever is not stolen
or wasted by profiteering contractors -- are making a
difference. Iraq is no longer governed by a corrupt, ruthless
dictator, and there have been halting but important steps toward
representative government.
I applaud the Iraqis who
courageously stood in long lines and cast their ballots for a
new constitution, despite the insurgents’ threats. There are
many profiles in courage among the Iraqi people, just as there
are in the heroic daily endeavors of U.S. soldiers there.
But this progress masks deeper
troubles and may be short lived, threatened by a widening
insurgency and a divisive political process that is increasingly
seen as leading to a Shiite dominated theocracy governed by
Islamic law and aligned with Iran, or the dissolution of Iraq
into separate Kurdish, Sunni and Shiite states.
Escalating Toll, Escalating Costs
Mr. President, this war has been a
costly disaster for our country. More than half of the American
people now say they have lost confidence in the President’s
handling of it.
Far from making us safer from
terrorists, in fact it has turned Iraq into a haven and
recruiting ground for terrorists and deflected our attention and
resources away from the fight against terrorism. If anything,
it has emboldened our enemies, as it has become increasingly
apparent that the most powerful army in the world cannot stop a
determined insurgency.
Regrettably, it is no longer a
secret how vulnerable we are, and Hurricane Katrina showed how
tragically unprepared we are to respond to a major disaster --
four years after 9/11 and after wasting billions on an
unnecessary war.
Our cities are little further than
the drawing board when it comes to developing workable
evacuation plans for a terrorist attack or other emergency, not
to mention how to feed, house and provide for millions of
displaced people.
This war has caused immense damage
to our relations with the world’s Muslims, a religion practiced
by some 1.2 billion people and about which most Americans know
virtually nothing. We cannot possibly mount an effective
campaign against terrorism without the trust, the respect and
the active support of Muslims, particularly in the Middle East
where our image has been so badly damaged. Our weakened
international reputation is another heavy price that our country
has paid for this war.
Each day, as more and more Iraqi
civilians, often children, lose their lives and limbs from
suicide bombers and also from our bombs, the resentment and
anger toward us intensifies.
And every week, the number of U.S.
service men and women who are killed or wounded creeps higher,
will soon pass 2000, and shows no sign of diminishing.
This war has isolated us from our
allies, most of whom want no part of it, and if we continue on
the course the President has set it could also divide our
country.
Course Correction
Other Senators and
Representatives, Republicans and Democrats, have expressed
frustration and alarm with the President’s failure to
acknowledge that this war has been a costly mistake, that more
of the same is not a workable policy, and that we need to change
course. My friend Senator Hagel, a Vietnam veteran, has pointed
out the increasing similarities with Vietnam. We learned this
week that the Administration has even resumed the discredited
Vietnam-era practice of measuring progress by reporting body
counts.
White House and Pentagon
officials, and their staunchest supporters in Congress, warn of
a wider civil war if we pull our troops out. They could be
right. In fact, it could be the first thing they are right
about since the beginning of this reckless adventure.
My question to them is, when and
how then do we extract ourselves from this mess? What does the
President believe needs to happen before our troops can come
home, and what is his plan for getting to that point?
If we cannot overcome the
insurgency, what can we realistically expect to accomplish in
Iraq, and at what cost, that requires the continued deployment
of our troops?
What is it that compels us to
spend billions of dollars to rebuild the Iraqi military, when
our own National Guard is stretched to the breaking point and
can’t even get the equipment it needs?
Unfortunately I doubt that the
President or the Secretary of Defense will answer these
questions. Instead of answers, we get rhetoric that conflicts
with just about everything we hear or read, including from some
of this country’s most distinguished retired military officers
who served under both Republican and Democratic presidents.
Six months ago the Vice President
said the insurgency was in its last throes. That was just the
latest in a long string of grossly inaccurate statements and
predictions and false expectations about Iraq.
Secretary Rice, when asked
recently when U.S. forces could begin to come home assuming the
Administration’s rosy predictions come true, could not, or would
not, even venture a guess.
Without answers -- real answers,
honest answers -- to these questions, I will not support the
open-ended deployment of our troops in a war that was based on
falsehoods and justified with hubris.
Even though I opposed this war, I
have prayed, like other Americans, that it would weaken the
threat of terrorism and make the world safer, that our troops’
sacrifices would prove to have been justified and that the
President had a plan for completing the mission.
Instead, it has turned Iraq into a
training ground for terrorists, it is fueling the insurgency, it
is causing severe damage to the reputation and readiness of the
U.S. military, and it is preventing us from addressing the
inexcusable weaknesses in our homeland security.
The Iraqi people, at least the Shiites and Kurds, have voted for
a new constitution, as hastily drafted, flawed and potentially
divisive as it may be.
Saddam Hussein, whose capacity for cruelty was seemingly
limitless, is finally facing trial for his heinous crimes.
And elections for a new national government are due by the end
of the year.
By then, it will be more than two and a half years since
Saddam’s overthrow, and we will have given the Iraqi people a
chance to chart their own course. The sooner we reduce our
presence there, the sooner they will have to make the difficult
decisions necessary to solve their own problems.
Our military commanders say that Iraq’s problems increasingly
need to be solved through the political process, not through
military force. We must show Iraq and the world that we are
not an occupying force, and that we have no designs on their
country or their oil. The American people need to know that the
President has a plan that will bring our troops home.
Once a new Iraqi government is in place, I believe the President
should consult with Congress on a flexible plan that includes
pulling our troops back from the densely populated areas where
they are suffering the worst casualties and to bring them home.
Those consultations should begin in earnest as soon as Iraq’s
new government is in place.
It is also long overdue for the
White House and the Congress to reassess our policy towards the
region. The President has declared that democracy is taking
root throughout the Middle East, and there have been small,
positive steps. But they are dwarfed by the ongoing threat
posed by Iran, Syria’s continued meddling in Iraq and Lebanon,
repression and corruption in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, the danger
that the momentum for peace from Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza
will be lost as settlement construction accelerates in the West
Bank, and the widespread -- albeit mistaken -- belief among
Muslims that the United States wants to destroy Islam itself.
Just as the White House’s
obsession with Iraq has diverted our resources and impeded our
efforts to strengthen our defenses against terrorism at home, so
has it made it more difficult to work constructively with our
allies to address these regional threats.
Mr. President, as I have said, I
did not support this war, and I believe that history will not
judge kindly those who got us into this debacle by attacking a
country that did not threaten us, after deceiving the American
people and ridiculing those who appealed for caution and for
instead mobilizing our resources directly against the threat of
terrorism.
I worry that many of our young
veterans who have gone to Iraq
and experienced the brutality and trauma of war and who may
already feel guilty for having survived, will increasingly
question its purpose. As the architects of this war move on to
other jobs, I fear that we are going to see another generation of
veterans, many of them physically and psychologically scarred
for life, who feel a deep sense of betrayal by their
government.
Mounting Trade-Offs
If President Bush will not say
what remains to be done before he can declare victory and bring
our troops home, then the Congress should start voting on what
this war is really costing this Nation.
We should vote on paying for the
war versus cutting Medicaid, as some of those across the aisle
are proposing.
Or versus cutting VA programs that
are already unable to pay the staggering costs of treatment and
rehabilitation for our injured veterans.
Or versus rebuilding our National
Guard.
Or rebuilding FEMA.
Or securing our ports and our
borders.
Or investing in our intelligence
so we can finally capture Osama bin Laden.
Or investing in health care for
the tens of millions of Americans who can not afford to get
sick.
Or fixing our troubled schools, so
our children can learn to do a better job than we have of making
the world a safer place for all people.
Mr. President, these, and the
tarnished reputation of a country that so many once admired as
not only powerful but also good and just, are the real costs of
this war.
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