Why We're In Iraq
By Ernest F. Hollings
With 760 dead in Iraq and more
than 3,000 maimed for life, folks continue to argue over why we are in
Iraq — and how to get out.
Now everyone knows what was not
the cause of this war. Even President Bush acknowledges that Saddam
Hussein had nothing to do with 9/11. Listing the 45 countries where al
Qaeda was operating on Sept. 11 (70 cells in the United States), the State
Department did not list Iraq.
Richard Clarke, in Against All
Enemies, tells how the United States had not received any threat of
terrorism for 10 years from Saddam at the time of our invasion. On page
231, John McLaughlin of the CIA verifies this to Paul Wolfowitz. In 1993
President Clinton responded to Saddam’s attempt on the life of President
George Herbert Walker Bush by putting a missile down Saddam’s
intelligence headquarters in Baghdad. Not a big kill, but Saddam got the
message: Monkey around with the United States and a missile lands on his
head.
Of course there were no weapons
of mass destruction. Israel’s intelligence, Mossad, knows what’s going
on in Iraq. It is the best. It has to know; Israel’s survival depends on
knowing. Israel long since would have taken us to the weapons of mass
destruction if there were any, or if they had been removed. With Iraq no
threat, why invade a sovereign country? The answer: President Bush’s
policy to secure Israel.
Led by Richard Perle, Paul
Wolfowitz and Charles Krauthammer, for years there has been a domino
school of thought that the way to guarantee Israel’s security is to
spread democracy in the area. Wolfowitz wrote: “The United States may
not be able to lead countries through the door of democracy, but where
that door is locked shut by a totalitarian deadbolt, American power may be
the only way to open it up.” And on another occasion: Iraq as “the
first Arab democracy.. would cast a very large shadow, starting with Syria
and Iran but across the whole Arab world.”
Three weeks before invasion
President Bush stated: “A new regime in Iraq would serve as a dramatic
and inspiring example for freedom for other nations in the region.”
Every president since 1947 has
made a futile attempt to help Israel negotiate peace. But no leadership
has surfaced among the Palestinians that can make a binding agreement.
President Bush realized his chances at negotiation were no better. He came
to office imbued with one thought — re-election. Bush felt tax cuts
would hold his crowd together and spreading democracy in the Mideast to
secure Israel would take the Jewish vote from the Democrats.
You don’t come to town and
announce your Israel policy is to invade Iraq. But George W. Bush, as
stated by former Secretary Paul O’Neill and others, started laying the
groundwork to invade Iraq days after inauguration. And, without any Iraq
connection to 9/11, within weeks he had the Pentagon outlining a plan to
invade Iraq. He was determined.
President Bush thought taking
Iraq would be easy. Wolfowitz said it would take only seven days. Cheney
believed we would be greeted as liberators. But Cheney’s man, Ahmed
Chalabi, made a mess of the de-Baathification of Iraq by dismissing
Republican Guard leadership and Sunni leaders, who soon joined with the
insurgents.
Worst of all, we tried to secure
Iraq with too few troops. In 1966 in South Vietnam with a population of
16.5 million, Gen. William C. Westmoreland with 535,000 U.S. troops was
still asking for more. In Iraq with a population of 24.6 million, Gen.
John Abizaid with only 135,000 troops can barely secure the troops, much
less the country. If the troops are there to fight, they are too few. If
there to die, they are too many.
To secure Iraq we need more
troops — at least 100,000 more. The only way to get the United Nations
back in Iraq is to make the country secure. Once back, the French, Germans
and others will join with the United Nations to take over.
With President Bush’s domino
policy in the Mideast gone awry, he keeps shouting “War on Terror.”
Terrorism is a method, not a war. We don’t call the Crimean War, with
the Charge of the Light Brigade, the Cavalry War. Or World War II the
Blitzkrieg War. There is terrorism in Ireland against the Brits. There is
terrorism in India and in Pakistan. In the Mideast, terrorism is a
separate problem to be defeated by diplomacy and negotiation, not
militarily. Here, might does not make right — right makes might. Acting
militarily, we have created more terrorism than we have eliminated.
U.S.
Senator Ernest "Fritz" Hollings
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Performance is better than promise. That's
the creed by which United States Senator Fritz Hollings has modeled his
lifetime of public service. A native of Charleston, S.C., Hollings
graduated from The Citadel in 1942 and was immediately commissioned as a
U.S. Army officer in World War II. He was decorated with the Bronze Star
Medal and received seven campaign ribbons for his service in the North
African and European campaigns. When Hollings returned from the war, he
entered the University of South Carolina School of Law. Working through
holidays and summers, he graduated in 1947 -- less than three years after
he began. |
The following year, Hollings began his
career in public service and was elected to the South Carolina House of
Representatives. In his second term, Hollings' peers elected him Speaker
Pro Tempore, a post to which he was reelected two years later. In 1955, he
became South Carolina's lieutenant governor, and in 1958, at age 36, he
was the youngest man in the 20th century to be elected governor of South
Carolina. In 1966, Hollings was elected to the United States Senate to
fill the unexpired term of Olin Johnson, an office to which he has been
elected seven times. Currently, he is the fourth most senior member of the
Senate.
Senator Hollings is the Ranking Member of
the Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee, where he champions a
wide range of issues such as telecommunications, transportation security,
consumer protection, coastal preservation and research, and trade policy.
As a principal author of the 1996 Telecommunications Act, Hollings has
worked throughout his career to promote competition within the
telecommunications industry and to ensure that consumers benefit from
innovative technologies at reasonable prices. As a result of the September
11th attacks, Hollings led the effort in Congress to improve America's
transportation security, authoring legislation for our nation's aviation,
port, and railroad systems to bolster national security, protect American
citizens, and safeguard the economy. In terms of U.S. trade policy,
Senator Hollings seeks to reinvigorate economic competitiveness and
protect American jobs, while improving U.S. manufacturing and production
capabilities. Finally, Hollings believes that a greater understanding and
improved management of ocean and coastal ecosystems are essential to
maintain healthy coasts and to prepare for and protect communities from
natural hazards such as hurricanes. He continues to work to better the
lives of South Carolinians and all Americans.
Senator Hollings also serves as the
longest serving member of the Senate Budget Committee where he works to
lead the nation's finances toward "true surplus." He was the
first voice in the Senate to decry the practice of looting Social
Security, Medicare and other Trust Funds to camouflage the size of the
deficit. Today, Hollings continues to fight for fiscal responsibility, and
he constantly presses Congress to put the nation back on a
"pay-as-you-go" basis rather than burdening future generations
with escalating federal deficits and debt.
As the third most senior Democrat on the
Senate Appropriations Committee and the Ranking Member of the Commerce,
Justice and State Appropriations Subcommittee, Senator Hollings uses his
seniority, experience and know-how to fight for responsible government and
South Carolina's fair share. With his help, South Carolina has obtained
the funds necessary to complete new infrastructure projects, improve
public education, attract new businesses, enhance public safety and
protect the environment.
Senator Hollings has dedicated his life to
generating economic growth for South Carolina, promoting education and
equal opportunity, and advocating progressive national public policy. An
independent leader who tells it like it is, Senator Hollings does not rely
on rhetoric. His record speaks for itself.
Source: Senator
Fritz Hollings' Web site