Rep. Ron Paul on War, Peace and the News Media
Rick Stanley
Constitutional Activist
E-mail: rick@stanley2002.org
 Constitutional Activist
E-mail: rick@stanley2002.org
We the People Scoop 3/27/07
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OPINION RELEASE: Rep. Ron Paul on War, Peace, and the News Media
Rep. Ron Paul on War, Peace, and the News  Media
 by Michael Shank
 Congressman Ron Paul is a Republican from Texas. An  obstetrician by profession, Paul is noted for never voting for legislation  unless it is authorized by the U.S. Constitution. He is an advocate of limited  government. He has also opposed U.S. military interventions overseas, including  Iraq.
 Michael Shank: You've said that "It's nothing more than  a canard to claim that those of us who struggled to prevent the bloodshed and  now want it stopped are somehow less patriotic and less concerned about the  welfare of our military personnel." During wartime this is often the case.  How can one work to counter this tendency to claim that those who question or  work to stop a war are unpatriotic?
 Rep. Ron Paul: It's very difficult because the executive  branch, and particularly the president, always has the bully pulpit. He can say  it over and over and over again, and it's always heard: "If you don't vote for  the money and you don't support the policy, you don't support the troops." And  that's not true because if you're spending money to support a policy that puts  the troops in harm's way, performing a task that's unachievable, then you're  doing everything in the world to hurt the troops. You're doing everything you  can to undermine the rule of law because it's an undeclared illegal war and it's  very detrimental economically. So to argue that you're unpatriotic because you  don't support the troops, because you don't support the policy, is a canard,  it's just not true.
 Even the strong opponents to the war, in the Congress  here, are intimidated by that. Not so much that they believe it, but they're  intimidated, they say "when I go home the people are going to say that I'm  unpatriotic and I don't support the troops and I don't support national  defense and I might lose my congressional seat." As political pragmatists they  back away from doing what I'm quite sure a lot of them would know would be the  right thing to do. And that is
to change the policy and de-fund the war.
 to change the policy and de-fund the war.
Shank: And what role does the media play in reinforcing  the idea that opposition to the war is unpatriotic?
 Paul: They repeat everything the president says and they  don't ask tough questions. They would very rarely give those of us that have  opposed the war from the very beginning any credibility. For very special  reasons, I think, they aren't interested in having an anti-war policy. They  have other reasons for wanting us to be there and they're not hesitant at all to  continue that policy and they don't want their policy undermined.
 Shank: For political or economic reasons?
 Paul: There are a lot [of reasons]. There is something  to the old saying about the military industrial complex and the banking system  and that some countries in the Middle East like us to be there. It's not only  Israel. Saudi Arabia likes us to prop them up. We've been doing that for a  long, long time. There's a lot of special interest there and a lot of people who  are deceived into believing that we couldn't drive our cars if we weren't over  there, because we wouldn't
have the oil supply protected. They don't realize that since we've been there the price of oil has tripled. It isn't very practical.
 have the oil supply protected. They don't realize that since we've been there the price of oil has tripled. It isn't very practical.
Shank: In a House floor speech you noted the  "misinformation given the American people to justify our invasion" in Iraq. In  perhaps the world's most free democracy, where free speech prevails, how does  misinformation like this go unchallenged?
 Paul: Fortunately it always gets challenged; the  unfortunate thing is that it's always very late. We're getting to the bottom of  the truth. People spoke out in elections. Now there's a different party in  charge. There are going to be more investigations. But the real tragedy is  that a lot of people die in the meantime. We finally found out that the Gulf of  Tonkin was all fudged, and yet we lost 60,000 men. Now we have the  misinformation, that's a generous term, about getting us involved in Iraq. We've  lost a lot of people, and literally hundreds of thousands are applying for  disability. And it goes on and on.
 To me, it is a real tragedy. The media, if they're not  in conspiracy to promote war, they're not doing a very good job by asking  questions. And nobody knows what their intent really is. Sometimes the media and  big industry are very often the same company.
 Intellectually, if you want to stay strictly on an  intellectual level, our society has been engrained with the attitude that we  have a moral obligation to intervene. Some people don't think in terms of  non-intervention versus intervention. The debate here in Washington is always:  we intervene this way, this way, or that way, with whom and how far and how  long. It's always the technicalities of intervention. But we're never taught in  school what our traditions have been and what the founders advised and what the  constitution allows. Even the UN charter talks more about peace; they don't even  authorize war in the UN charter. And we ignore that too.
 There's a lot of ignorance out there, and a lot of it is  perpetuated in our universities. Except today we're getting a broader education  through the Internet. More people are understanding some of our views. So I  think in spite of all the pessimism, we're much better off today than we  were 20 years ago when our voices were not heard at all. Today, our voices are  being heard a lot easier because of the Internet.
 Shank: In one of your speeches, titled "Don't Do It, Mr.  President", you urged the president to not bomb Iran. Why are you so against a  military invasion of Iran?
 Paul: Because I'm against military activity in almost  every circumstance when war isn't declared. I recognize there are a few times  our president could act but I think I pointed out in one of my speeches that I  can't remember a time that the president was required to act, i.e. that it  was so necessary: the tanks were landing, there was a landing on our beach, the  missiles were flying. It's never happened.
 The president has the authority to repel an invasion or  an attack. But going into Iran doesn't make any sense whatsoever. It's going to  expand the war, spread the war, and probably close down the Straits of Hormuz.  We don't have the authority nationally or internationally. It's just the most  foolish thing I could conceive of. And yet it looks like there's bipartisan  consensus that we can't take anything off the table. We can't even take off the  table that we might use a nuclear first strike to go after Iran. They don't  even have a weapon and our CIA says they probably can't get one for 10 years.  And even if they did have one, what are they going to do with it? Are they going  to attack us? They wouldn't do that.
 Yet at the same time we stood up against the Soviet  system. They probably had 30,000 nuclear warheads and they had the capability of  launching missiles at us. We didn't have to have a nuclear war to finally win  the cold war. We talked to them and there were negotiations.
 Their system was a failed system, and it failed. The  Iranian [system] will fail too if we just leave them alone. They can never  become a power capable of attacking us. They don't have an air force, they don't  have a navy. It's an unbelievable, hysterical reaction on our part to become so  frightened that we have to attack people like Saddam Hussein. It just bewilders  me how people can fall into a trap of believing these stories that are put out  and that the media propagates.
 Shank: In your words, "if you don't have a nuke, we'll  threaten to attack you, if you do have a nuke, we'll leave you alone." How do  you explain this policy?
 Paul: The North Koreans exploded [weapons] minimally,  and yet it seemed to get respect. All of the sudden we're talking to them and  offering them deals. We knew the Chinese had them. We knew the Russians had  them, and we treated them differently. We treat Pakistan differently, we give  them money. We treat India differently, and they got their nuclear weapons  outside international law. But if you don't have a weapon we threaten you, as if  you did, with the idea that we're going to go in and take over. And we do. We  went into Iraq, and we're getting ready to do something with Iran.
 We give them a tremendous incentive to have a nuclear  weapon and that's why Saddam Hussein was betting on the fact that "if I can  convince them I have a nuclear weapon they won't come in." But we knew he didn't  have one, that's why we went in.
 Shank: Has the policy of intervention in the name of  nation-building  in Afghanistan, Iraq and possibly now Iran  ultimately served  or undermined US interests?
 Paul: It all undermines our interests. I don't see how  anything we've done in the last 50 years has served our interests. You can go  back longer than that. I'd go back all the way to Wilson. The unnecessary  involvement in World War I gave us Hitler and World War II and on. But if  you want to start with more recent ones, I think Roosevelt's promise to protect  Saudi Arabia and prop up secular governments that offended and annoyed the more  fundamentalist Arabs and Muslims has been a real thorn in our side. Then  with the Cold War going on, there was a tremendous incentive for our government  to use our CIA and our funding to literally set these schools up, the Wahhabi  schools, to teach them to fight communism in the name of radical  Islam.
 I think the term blowback is a very accurate term. Our  policies are ill-advised, maybe well intended. Some people think we need to do  this to have oil, I don't. Once we start to intervene it comes back to haunt us.  Osama bin Laden was an ally and now he's our enemy. Saddam Hussein was an  ally, now he's our enemy.
 I think the founders were right about minding our own  business. Try to get along with people, trade with them, talk to them. But I  don't believe in isolating ourselves. It's ironic that they accuse people like  me of being isolationist, but yet they have isolated us. Our current  administration has isolated us from the world. We have fewer friends and more  enemies than ever before. It's ironic.
 Shank: How will the rising defense budget and Iraq war  spending undermine our economic and political security?
 Paul: It's a major contributing factor to our deficit,  and it's going to be a big factor in the dollar crisis that I anticipate is  coming. We're not talking about a few dollars; we're talking about hundreds of  billions of dollars. In the pipeline this year there's close to $700 billion  dollars, supposedly in the defense of this country. Yet if you talk to generals  you find that the military operation is in shambles, they don't have enough  personnel, the morale is low, and the equipment is in bad shape. All this money  is doing the opposite of what it should be doing: it hurts our defense,  antagonizes our allies, and creates new enemies. And it's very, very costly. We  have to depend, literally, on borrowing from countries like China and Japan. And  that'll come to an end.
 We can't tax, borrow, and inflate forever. That's what  we've been doing, and our obligations are overwhelming. Although most of the  military [spending] is more or less immediate, the policy is indefinite and  overwhelming. We've committed ourselves to policing the world. But if you  combine this with the pressure of the entitlements, we're talking about $5060  trillion dollars that we don't have enough wealth [to cover]. We're not  producing enough wealth to maintain our standard of living. We have to borrow  almost $3 billon a day to keep this going.
 I think financially it's going to lead to problems worse  than the 1970s, coming out of Vietnam. They pretended they had guns and butter,  and it's the same story again. Even today's statistics show that inflation is  alive and well, probably much more alive than the government will admit. So  I think we're going to have inflation, a weak dollar, interest rates will  eventually go up, the economy is going to remain sluggish, and the only  alternative here in Washington is to
spend more money. And I think it's going to lead to a disaster.
 spend more money. And I think it's going to lead to a disaster.
Shank: You've said the war on terrorism is "deliberately  vague and non-definable to justify and permit perpetual war anywhere." Why has  the "war on terrorism" received so much traction in Washington, and is this  "war" any different from, for example, our "war on communism"? Is it more  dangerous than any war we've concocted before?
 Paul: The war on terrorism is broader and more vague.  Before, the war against communism was a little more concrete. The Soviets were a  powerhouse, and they had missiles. But today, with the war on terrorism.you  always have to have a war to frighten the people, to get the people to rally  around the flag and sacrifice their liberties and allow the state to do a lot  more than they should be doing. That's why I would say that the war on terrorism  looks like it's going to have a longer life unless somebody can point out the  fallacies of the [administration's] thinking.
 To me the war on terrorism is like saying the war on  crime. Of course we're all against crime, we're all against terrorists. But if  you have a literal war and you send troops all around the world  and since  terrorism is not very often committed by the state itself, it's just thugs  out there, bands of individuals who are killing other people  this justifies  anything and everything forever.
 That, I think, is very dangerous. We have accepted this  notion that you can make this vague declaration. It's not a real declaration.  You don't know who the enemy is. For people who like the state to grow during  wartime, it's easy just to declare a war. Whether it's a war on drugs, a war  on illiteracy, or a war on whatever, people say "well, it's a war; we have to be  willing to sacrifice our liberties and let the government take care of us." It's  a contest between those
who want to or enjoy being dependent on the government  or are frightened into it both physically and economically  versus those who believe and understand how a free society is safer and wealthier.
 who want to or enjoy being dependent on the government  or are frightened into it both physically and economically  versus those who believe and understand how a free society is safer and wealthier.
Right now, for most of my lifetime, those who want to be  safe and secure and believe government can provide have won out over those of us  who believe that we would be safer and we would be more economically secure if  we assumed responsibility for ourselves. Who is going to win that debate? We're  making inroads but we're not on the verge of victory.
 March 24, 2007
 Michael Shank is the government relations officer at  George Mason University's Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution and a  contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus.
 Disclaimer: Information shared in the Stanley Scoop is  not necessarily the opinion of the editor or staff.  It is shared for  information purposes only and it is recommended that you come to your own  conclusions.
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