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Note from
MaximsNews:
We are
publishing this earlier speech by Senator Kennedy
in response
to numerous requests from our readers.
SENATOR
EDWARD M. KENNEDY DISCUSSES AMERICA'S FUTURE IN IRAQ AT THE
JOHNS HOPKINS SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
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January
27, 2005
For
Immediate Release
CONTACT: Melissa Wagoner
(202) 224-2633
Address
Delivered at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International
Studies
Thank
you Dr. Fukuyama for that generous introduction.
I'm
honored to be here at the School of Advanced International Studies.
Many
of the most talented individuals in foreign policy have benefited
from your outstanding graduate program, and I welcome the
opportunity to meet with you on the issue of Iraq.
Forty
years ago, America was in another war in a distant land.
At
that time, in 1965, we had in Vietnam the same number of troops and
the same number of casualties as in Iraq today.
We
thought in those early days in Vietnam that we were winning.
We
thought the skill and courage of our troops was enough.
We
thought that victory on the battlefield would lead to victory in the
war, and peace and democracy for the people of Vietnam.
We
lost our national purpose in Vietnam.
We
abandoned the truth.
We
failed our ideals.
The
words of our leaders could no longer be trusted.
In
the name of a misguided cause, we continued the war too long.
We
failed to comprehend the events around us.
We
did not understand that our very presence was creating new enemies
and defeating the very goals we set out to achieve.
We
cannot allow that history to repeat itself in Iraq. //
We
must learn from our mistakes.
We
must recognize what a large and growing number of Iraqis now
believe.
The
war in Iraq has become a war against the American occupation.
We
have reached the point that a prolonged American military presence
in Iraq is no longer productive for either Iraq or the United
States.
The
U.S. military presence has become part of the problem, not part of
the solution.
We
need a serious course correction, and we need it now.
We
must make it for the American soldiers who are paying with their
lives.
We
must make it for the American people who cannot afford to spend our
resources and national prestige protracting the war in the wrong
way.
We
must make it for the sake of the Iraqi people who yearn for a
country that is not a permanent battlefield and for a future free
from permanent occupation.
The
elections in Iraq this weekend provide an opportunity for a fresh
and honest approach.
We
need a new plan that sets fair and realistic goals for
self-government in Iraq, and works with the Iraqi government on a
specific timetable for the honorable homecoming of our forces.
The
first step is to confront our own mistakes.
Americans
are rightly concerned about why our 157,000 soldiers are there
-- when they will come home -- and how our policy could have
gone so wrong.
No
matter how many times the Administration denies it, there is no
question they misled the nation and led us into a quagmire in Iraq.
President
Bush rushed to war on the basis of trumped up intelligence and a
reckless argument that Iraq was a critical arena in the global war
on terror, that somehow it was more important to start a war with
Iraq than to finish the war in Afghanistan and capture Osama bin
Laden, and that somehow the danger was so urgent that the U.N.
weapons inspectors could not be allowed time to complete their
search for weapons of mass destruction.
As
in Vietnam, truth was the first casualty of this war.
Nearly
1400 Americans have died.
More
than 10,000 have been wounded, and tens of thousands of Iraqi men,
women, and children have been killed.
The
weapons of mass destruction weren't there, but today 157,000
Americans are.
As
a result of our actions in Iraq, our respect and credibility around
the world have reached all-time lows.
The
President bungled the pre-war diplomacy on Iraq and wounded our
alliances.
The
label "coalition of the willing" cannot conceal the fact
that American soldiers make up 80% of the troops on the ground in
Iraq and more than 90% of the casualties.
The
Administration also failed to prepare for the aftermath of "victory"
-- and so the post-war period became a new war, with more
casualties, astronomical costs, and relentless insurgent attacks.
The
Administration failed to establish a basic level of law and order
after Baghdad fell, and so massive looting occurred.
The
Administration dissolved the Iraqi army and dismissed its troops,
but left their weapons intact and their ammunition dumps unguarded,
and they have become arsenals of the insurgency.
The
Administration relied for advice on self-promoting Iraqi exiles who
were out of touch with the Iraqi people and resented by them -- and
the result is an America regarded as occupier, not as liberator.
The
President recklessly declared "Mission Accomplished" when
in truth the mission had barely begun.
He
and his advisors predicted and even bragged that the war would be a
cakewalk, but the expected welcoming garlands of roses became an
endless bed of thorns.
The
Administration told us the financial costs would be paid with Iraqi
oil dollars, but it is being paid with billions of American tax
dollars.
Another
$80 billion bill for the black hole that Iraq has become has just
been handed to the American people.
The
cost is also being paid in shame and stain on America's good name as
a beacon of human rights.
Nothing
is more at odds with our values as Americans than the torture of
another human being.
Do
you think that any Americans tell their children with pride that
America tortures prisoners?
Yet,
high officials in the Administration in their arrogance strayed so
far from our heritage and our belief in fundamental human decency
that they approved the use of torture-- and they were wrong, deeply
wrong, to do that.
The
Administration's willful disregard of the Geneva Conventions led to
the torture and flagrant abuse of the prisoners at Guantanamo and
Abu Ghraib and that degradation has diminished America in the eyes
of the whole world.
It
has diminished our moral voice on the planet.
Never
in our history has there been a more powerful, more painful example
of the saying that those who do not learn from history are condemned
to repeat it.
The
tide of history rises squarely against military occupation.
We
ignore this truth at our peril in Iraq.
The
nations in the Middle East are independent, except for Iraq, which
began the 20th century under Ottoman occupation and is now beginning
the 21st century under American occupation.
Iraq
could very well be another Algeria, where the French won the
military battle for Algiers, but ultimately lost the political
battle for Algeria.
Despite
the clear lesson of history, the President stubbornly clings to the
false hope that the turning point is just around the corner.
The
ending of the rule of Saddam Hussein was supposed to lessen violence
and bring an irresistible wave of democracy to the Middle East.
It
hasn't.
Saddam
Hussein's capture was supposed to quell the violence.
It
didn't.
The
transfer of sovereignty was supposed to be the breakthrough.
It
wasn't.
The
military operation in Fallujah was supposed to break the back of the
insurgency.
It
didn't.
The
1400 Americans killed in Iraq and the 10,000 American casualties are
the equivalent of a full division of our Army -- and we only have
ten active divisions.
The
tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians killed last year included
nearly a thousand members of the new Iraqi security forces, and a
hundred more have been lost this year.
The
recent killing of a senior Iraqi judge was the 170th assassination
of an Iraqi official since June of 2003.
We
all hope for the best from Sunday's election.
The
Iraqis have a right to determine their own future.
But
Sunday's election is not a cure for the violence and instability.
Unless
the Sunni and all the other communities in Iraq believe they have a
stake in the outcome and a genuine role in drafting the new Iraqi
constitution, the election could lead to greater alienation, greater
escalation, and greater death -- for us and for the Iraqis.
In
fact, the Central Intelligence Agency's top official in Baghdad
warned recently that the security situation is deteriorating and is
likely to worsen, with escalating violence and more sectarian
clashes.
How
could any President have let this happen?
General
Brent Scowcroft, who until recently served as Chairman of President
Bush's National Intelligence Advisory Board and who also served as
the first President Bush's National Security Adviser, recently
warned of an "incipient civil war" in Iraq.
He
said, "the [Iraqi] elections are turning out to be less about a
promising transformation, and it has great potential for deepening
the conflict."
President
Bush's Iraq policy is not, as he said during last fall's campaign, a
"catastrophic success."
It
is a catastrophic failure.
The
men and women of our armed forces are serving honorably and with
great courage under extreme conditions, but their indefinite
presence is fanning the flames of conflict.
The
American people are concerned.
They
recognize that the war with Iraq is not worth the cost in American
lives, prestige, and credibility.
They
understand that this misbegotten war has made America more hated in
the world, created new breeding grounds and support for terrorists,
and made it harder to win the real war against terrorism -- the war
against Al Qaeda and radical jihadist terrorists.
Conservative
voices are alarmed as well. As Paul Weyrich, founder of the
Heritage Foundation, said last November, we are "stuck in a
guerrilla war with no end in sight."
As
former Coalition Provisional Authority adviser Larry Diamond
recently said, "There is a fine line between Churchillian
resolve and self-defeating obstinacy."
We
must recognize that line and end the obstinate policy of the
Administration.
A
new Iraq policy must begin with acceptance of hard truths.
Most
of the violence in Iraq is not being perpetrated -- as President
Bush has claimed -- "by a handful of folks that fear freedom"
and "people who want to try to impose their will on
people ... just like Osama bin Laden."
The
war has made Iraq a magnet for terrorism that wasn't there before.
President
Bush has opened an unnecessary new front in the war on terror, and
we are losing ground because of it.
The
CIA's own National Intelligence Council confirmed this assessment in
its report two weeks ago.
The
insurgency is not primarily driven by foreign terrorists.
General
Abizaid, head of our Central Command, said last September, "I
think the number of foreign fighters in Iraq is probably below
1,000 ... ".
According
to the Department of Defense, less than two percent of all the
detainees in Iraq are foreign nationals.
The
insurgency is largely home-grown.
By
our own government's own count, its ranks are large and growing
larger.
Its
strength has quadrupled since the transfer of sovereignty six months
ago – from 5,000 in mid-2004, to 16,000 last October, to more than
20,000 now.
The
Iraqi intelligence service estimates that the insurgency may have
30,000 fighters and up to 200,000 supporters.
It's
clear that we don't know how large the insurgency is.
All
we can say with certainty is that the insurgency is growing.
It
is also becoming more intense and adaptable.
The
bombs are bigger and more powerful.
The
attacks have greater sophistication.
Anthony
Cordesman, the national security analyst for the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, recently wrote:
"There
is no evidence that the number of insurgents is declining as a
result of Coalition and Iraqi attacks to date."
An
Army Reservist wrote the stark truth:
"The
guerillas are filling their losses faster than we can create them
.... For every guerilla we kill with a smart bomb, we kill
many more innocent civilians and create rage and anger in the Iraqi
community. This rage and anger translates into more recruits
for the terrorists and less support for us."
Our
troops understand that.
The
American people understand it.
And
it's time the Administration understand it.
Beyond
the insurgency's numbers, it has popular and tacit support from
thousands of ordinary Iraqis who are aiding and abetting the attacks
as a rejection of the American occupation.
It
is fueled by the anger of ever-larger numbers of Iraqis -- not just
Saddam loyalists -- who have concluded that the United States is
either unable or unwilling to provide basic security,
jobs, water, electricity and other services.
Anti-American
sentiment is steadily rising.
CDs
that picture the insurrection have spread across the country.
Songs
glorify combatants.
Poems
written decades ago during the British occupation after World War I
are popular again.
The
International Crisis Group, a widely respected conflict prevention
organization, recently reported,
"These
post-war failings gradually were perceived by many Iraqis as
purposeful,… designed to serve Washington's interests to remain
for a prolonged period in a debilitated Iraq."
We
have the finest military in the world.
But
we cannot rely primarily on military action to end politically
inspired violence.
We
can't defeat the insurgents militarily if we don't effectively
address the political context in which the insurgency flourishes.
Our
military and the insurgents are fighting for the same thing --
the hearts and minds of the people -- and that is a battle we are
not winning.
The
beginning of wisdom in this crisis is to define honest and realistic
goals.
First,
the goal of our military presence should be to allow the creation of
a legitimate, functioning Iraqi government, not to dictate it.
Creating
a full-fledged democracy won't happen overnight.
We
can and must make progress, but it may take many years for the
Iraqis to finish the job. We have to adjust our time horizon.
The
process cannot begin in earnest until Iraqis have full ownership of
that transition.
Our
continued, overwhelming presence only delays that process.
If
we want Iraq to develop a stable, democratic government, America
must assist -- not control -- the newly established
government.
Unless
Iraqis have a genuine sense that their leaders are not our puppets,
the election cannot be the turning point the Administration hopes.
To
enhance its legitimacy in the eyes of the Iraqi people, the new
Iraqi Government should begin to disengage politically from America,
and we from them.
The
reality is that the Bush Administration is continuing to pull the
strings in Iraq, and the Iraqi people know it.
We
picked the date for the transfer of sovereignty.
We
supported former CIA operative Iyad Allawi to lead the Interim
Government.
We
wrote the administrative law and the interim constitution that now
governs Iraq.
We
set the date for the election, and President Bush insisted that it
take place, even when many Iraqis sought delay.
It
is time to recognize that there is only one choice.
America
must give Iraq back to the Iraqi people.
We
need to let the Iraqi people make their own decisions, reach their
own consensus, and govern their own country.
We
need to rethink the Pottery Barn rule.
America
cannot forever be the potter that sculpts Iraq's future.
President
Bush broke Iraq, but if we want Iraq to be fixed, the Iraqis must
feel that they, not we, own it.
The
Iraqi people are facing historic issues -- the establishment of a
government, the role of Islam, and the protection of minority
rights.
The
United States and the international community have a clear interest
in a strong, tolerant and pluralistic Iraq, free from chaos and
civil war.
The
United Nations, not the United States, should provide assistance and
advice on establishing a system of government and drafting a
constitution.
An
international meeting -- led by the United Nations and the new
Iraqi Government -- should be convened immediately in Iraq or
elsewhere in the Middle East to begin that process.
For
our part, America must accept that the Shiites will be the majority
in whatever government emerges.
Sixty
percent of the population in Iraq is Shiite, and a Shiite majority
is the logical outcome of a democratic process in Iraq.
But
the Shiites must understand that Iraq's stability and security will
be achieved only by safeguarding minority rights.
The
door to drafting the Constitution and to serving in government must
be left open -- even to those who were unwilling or unable or too
terrified to participate in the elections.
The
Shiites must also understand that America's support is not open-ended
and that America's role is not to defend an Iraqi government that
excludes or marginalizes important sectors of Iraqi society.
It
is far too dangerous for the American military to take sides in a
civil war.
America
must adjust to the reality that not all former Baathists will be
excluded from Iraqi political life in the new Iraq.
After
the Iron Curtain fell in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, many
former communists went on to participate in the political process.
The
current Polish President -- a strong ally of President Bush in Iraq
-- is a former active member of the Communist Party who served under
Poland’s martial law government during the 1980's.
If
communists can change in this way, there is no reason why some
former members of the Baath party cannot do so.
If
Iraqis wish to negotiate with insurgents who are willing to renounce
their violence and join the political process, we should let them do
so.
Persuading
Sunni insurgents to use the ballot, not the bullet, serves the
interests of the Shiites too.
Second,
for democracy to take root, the Iraqis need a clear signal that
America has a genuine exit strategy.
The
Iraqi people do not believe that America intends no long-term
military presence in their country.
Our
reluctance to make that clear has fueled suspicions among Iraqis
that our motives are not pure, that we want their oil, and that we
will never leave.
As
long as our presence seems ongoing, America's commitment to their
democracy sounds unconvincing.
The
President should do more to make it clear that America intends no
long-term presence.
He
should disavow the permanence of our so-called "enduring"
military bases in Iraq.
He
should announce that America will dramatically reduce the size of
the American Embassy -- the largest in the world.
Once
the elections are behind us and the democratic transition is under
way, President Bush should immediately announce his intention to
negotiate a timetable for a drawdown of American combat forces with
the new Iraqi Government.
At
least 12,000 American troops and probably more should leave at once,
to send a stronger signal about our intentions and to ease the
pervasive sense of occupation.
As
Major General William Nash, who commanded the multinational force in
Bosnia, said in November, a substantial reduction in our forces
following the Iraqi election "would be a wise and judicious
move" to demonstrate that we are leaving and "the absence
of targets will go a long way in decreasing the violence."
America's
goal should be to complete our military withdrawal as early as
possible in 2006.
President
Bush cannot avoid this issue.
The
Security Council Resolution authorizing our military presence in
Iraq can be reviewed at any time at the request of the Iraqi
Government, and it calls for a review in June.
The
U.N. authorization for our military presence ends with the election
of a permanent Iraqi government at the end of this year.
The
world will be our judge.
We
must have an exit plan in force by then. //
While
American troops are drawing down, we must clearly be prepared to
oppose any external intervention in Iraq or the large-scale revenge
killing of any group.
We
should begin now to conduct serious regional diplomacy with the Arab
League and Iraq's neighbors to underscore this point, and we will
need to maintain troops on bases outside Iraq but in the region.
The
United Nations could send a stabilization force to Iraq if it is
necessary and requested by the Iraqi government.
But
any stabilization force must be sought by the Iraqis and approved by
the United Nations, with a clear and achievable mission and clear
rules of engagement.
Unlike
the current force, it should not consist mostly of Americans or be
led by Americans.
All
nations of the world have an interest in Iraq's stability and
territorial integrity.
Finally,
we need to train and equip an effective Iraqi security force.
We
have a year to do so before the election of the permanent Iraqi
government.
The
current training program is in deep trouble, and Iraqi forces are
far from being capable, committed, and effective.
In
too many cases, they cannot even defend themselves, and have fled at
the first sign of battle.
It
is not enough to tell us -- as the Administration has -- how many
Iraqis go through training. The problem is not merely
the numbers.
The
essential question is how many are prepared to give their lives if
necessary, for a future of freedom for their country.
The
insurgents have been skilled at recruiting Iraqis to participate in
suicide attacks.
But
too often, the trained Iraqi forces do not have a comparable
commitment to the Iraqi government.
Recruits
are ambivalent about America, unsure of the political transition,
and skeptical about the credibility of their military and political
institutions.
The
way to strengthen their allegiance is to give them a worthy cause to
defend as soon as possible -- a truly free, independent and
sovereign Iraq.
We
now have no choice but to make the best we can of the disaster we
have created in Iraq.
The
current course is only making the crisis worse.
We
need to define our objective realistically and redefine both our
political and our military presence.
President
Bush has left us with few good choices.
There
are costs to staying, and costs to leaving.
There
may well be violence as we disengage militarily from Iraq and Iraq
disengages politically from us.
But
there will be much more serious violence if we continue our present
dangerous and reckless course.
It
will not be easy to extricate ourselves from Iraq, but we must
begin.
Error
is no excuse for its own perpetuation.
Mindless
determination doesn't make a better outcome likely.
Setting
a firm strategy for withdrawal may not guarantee success, but not
doing so will almost certainly guarantee failure.
Casualties
are increasing.
America
is tied down.
Our
military is stretched to the breaking point.
Our
capacity to respond to crises and threats elsewhere in the world has
been compromised.
The
book of Proverbs in the Bible teaches us that, "Pride goes
before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall."
It’s
time for President Bush to swallow his pride and end our country's
continuing failures in Iraq and in the eyes of the world.
When
the President delivers the State of the Union Address next week, I
hope he will demonstrate his intention to do that.
The
danger is very real that if he does not, our leadership in the world
will be permanently lost. We cannot let that happen.
There
is a wiser course we can take in keeping with the best in our
heritage and history -- a course that will help America, at long
last, to regain our rightful place of respect in the world and bring
our troops home with honor.
Let's
take that course, and take it now.
Thank
you very much.
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