-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.truthout.org/docs_02/10.11A.leahy.iraq.htm

t r u t h o u t | Address
Patrick Leahy Chairman Senate Judiciary Committee
Delivered on the Floor of the US Senate

On The Iraq War Resolution

Wednesday, 9 October, 2002

Mr. President, on September 26th I spoke at length in this chamber about the important
issue before us. I voiced my concerns and the concerns of a great many Vermonters as
well as Americans across this country, about the President's plan to send Americans 
into
battle to overthrow Saddam Hussein.

Many Senators have expressed their views on the difficult decision we face. As I 
prepared
to speak two weeks ago, I listened to Senator Bingaman urge the Administration to
seriously consider a proposal for "coerced inspections." After I finished speaking, 
Senator
Johnson voiced his support for providing the President with the broad authority he 
seeks to
use military force against Iraq.

The opportunity, and the responsibility, to have this debate is one of the 
cornerstones on
which this institution, and indeed this country, is built. Some have suggested that
expressing misgivings or asking questions about the President's plan to attack Iraq is
somehow unpatriotic. Others have tried to make it an election year issue on bumper-
stickers or in TV advertisements.

These attempts could not be more misguided. As I and others have said over and over,
declaring war is the single most important responsibility given to Congress. 
Unfortunately,
at times like this, it is a responsibility we often shirk. Too often, the Congress has 
abdicated
its responsibility and deferred to the Executive Branch on such matters. It should not.

We in the United States Senate have a duty to the Constitution, to our consciences, 
and to
the American people, especially our men and women in uniform, to ask questions, discuss
the benefits, the risks, the costs - to have a thorough debate, and to vote to declare 
war -
or not.

In my 28 years in the Senate, I can think of many instances when asking questions, and
taking the time to study the facts, led to significant improvements in what we have 
done
here. I can also remember times when Senators wished they had taken more time to
carefully consider the issues before them, asked hard questions, or made changes to the
legislation, despite public pressure to pass the first thing that came along.

I know that following the Constitution is not always the most politically expedient or 
popular
thing to do, but there is no question that this debate, which really began some months 
ago,
has helped move the Administration in the right direction.

Today we are considering a resolution offered by Senator Lieberman to authorize the use
of force. Article I of the Constitution gives the Congress the sole power to declare 
war. Yet
instead of exercising this responsibility and voting up or down on a declaration of 
war, we
have chosen to delegate this authority to the Executive Branch.

This resolution, like others before it, does not declare anything. It tells the 
President "you
decide." This resolution, when you get through the pages of whereas clauses, is nothing
more than a blank check. The President can decide when to use military force, how to 
use
it, and for how long.

Mr. President, back in August the President's advisors insisted that there was not 
even any
need for authorization from Congress to go to war. They said past resolutions sufficed.
Others in the Administration argued that the United States should attack Iraq 
preemptively
and unilaterally, without bothering to seek the support of the United Nations, even 
though it
is Iraq's violations of UN resolutions which is used to justify military action.

Eventually, the President listened to those who urged him to change course on both 
counts.
He went to the United Nations and he has since come to the Congress. I commended him
for it then and I do so again today.

I fully support the efforts of Secretary Powell to negotiate a strong, new Security 
Council
resolution for the return of weapons inspectors to Iraq, backed up - if necessary to
overcome Iraqi resistance - with force.

Two weeks ago, when the President sent Congress his proposed resolution authorizing the
use of force, I said that I hoped his proposal was the beginning of a consultative, 
bipartisan
process to produce a sensible resolution to be acted on at the appropriate time. I 
also said
that I could envision circumstances which would cause me to support sending U.S. armed
forces to Iraq. But I also made it clear that I could never support the kind of blank 
check
resolution that the President proposed.

I commend Senator Daschle, Senator Hagel, and others who tried hard to work with the
Administration to craft a bi-partisan resolution that we could all support. Their 
contributions
have been important.

But while the resolution that we are considering today is an improvement from the 
version
that the President first sent to Congress, it is fundamentally the same. It is still a 
blank
check. The concerns that I outlined in my speech last week have not been addressed. I
intend to vote against this resolution.

I want to explain my reasons in detail.

Mr. President, there is no dispute that Saddam Hussein is a menace to his people and to
Iraq's neighbors. He is a tyrant who the world would be far better without.

Saddam Hussein has also made no secret of his hatred of the United States, and should 
he
acquire a nuclear weapon and the means to deliver it, he would pose a grave threat to 
the
lives of all Americans, as well as to our closest allies.

The question is not whether Saddam Hussein should be disarmed; it is how imminent is 
this
threat and how should we deal with it? Do we go it alone, as some in the Administration
are eager to do because they see Iraq as their first opportunity to apply the 
President's
strategy of preemptive military force?

Do we do that, potentially jeopardizing the support of those nations we need to combat
terrorism and further antagonizing Muslim populations who already deeply resent our
policies in the Middle East?

Or, do we work with other nations to disarm Saddam, using force if other options fail?

The resolution now before the Senate leaves the door open to act alone, even absent an
imminent threat.

It surrenders to the President authority which the Constitution explicitly reserves 
for the
Congress.

And as I said two weeks ago, it is premature.

I have never believed, nor do I think that any Senator believes, that U.S. foreign 
policy
should be hostage to any nation, nor to the United Nations. Ultimately, we must do 
what we
believe is right and necessary to protect our security, whenever it is called for. But 
going to
war alone is rarely the answer.

On Monday night, the President spoke about working with the United Nations: "To 
actually
work, any new inspections, sanctions, or enforcement mechanisms will have to be very
different. America wants the UN to be an effective organization that helps keep the 
peace.
That is why we are urging the Security Council to adopt a new resolution setting out 
tough,
immediate requirements."

I could not agree more.

The status quo is unacceptable. Past UN resolutions have not worked. Saddam Hussein and
other Iraqi officials have lied to the world over and over and over. As the President 
points
out, an effort is underway in the UN Security Council - led by the United States - to 
adopt a
strong resolution requiring unconditional, unimpeded access for UN weapons inspectors,
backed up with force if necessary.

That effort is making steady progress. There is wide acceptance that a new resolution 
is
necessary before the inspectors can return to Iraq, and this has put pressure on the 
other
nations, especially Russia and France, to support our position.

If successful, it could achieve the goal of disarming Saddam without putting thousands 
of
American and innocent Iraqi lives at risk or spending tens of billions, or hundreds of 
billions,
of dollars at a time when the U.S. economy is weakening, the Federal deficit is 
growing,
and the retirement savings of America's senior citizens have been decimated.

Diplomacy is often tedious. It does not usually make the headlines or the evening 
news, and
much has been made of past diplomatic failures. But history has shown over and over 
that
diplomatic pressure can not only protect our national interests, it can also enhance 
the
effectiveness of military force when force becomes necessary.

The negotiations are at a sensitive stage. By authorizing the use of force today, the
Congress will be saying that regardless of what the Security Council does, we have 
already
decided to go our own way. As Chairman and sometimes Ranking Member of the Foreign
Operations Subcommittee for over a decade, I have received countless letters from
Secretaries of State - from both Democratic and Republican Administrations - urging
Congress not to adopt legislation because it would upset ongoing negotiations. Why is 
this
different?

Some say the President's hand will be strengthened by Congress passing this 
resolution. In
1990, when the United States successfully assembled a broad coalition to fight the Gulf
War, the Congress passed a resolution only after the UN had acted. The world already
knows that President Bush is serious about using force against Iraq, and the votes are 
there
in Congress to declare war if diplomatic efforts fail and war becomes unavoidable.

More importantly, the resolution now before the Senate goes well beyond what the
President said on Monday about working through the United Nations. It would permit the
Administration to take precipitous, unilateral action without following through at the 
UN.

Many respected and knowledgeable people - former senior military officers and diplomats
among them - have expressed strong reservations about this resolution. They agree that 
if
there were credible evidence that Saddam Hussein were planning to use weapons of mass
destruction against the United States or one of our allies, the American people and the
Congress would overwhelmingly support the use of American military power to stop him.
But they have not seen that evidence, and neither have I.

We have heard a lot of bellicose rhetoric, but what are the facts? I am not asking for 
100
percent proof. But the Administration is asking Congress to make a decision to go to 
war
based on conflicting statements, angry assertions, and assumptions based on 
speculation.

The Administration has also been vague, evasive and contradictory about its plans.
Speaking here in Washington, the President and his advisors continue to say this issue 
is
about disarming Saddam Hussein; that he has made no decision to use force. But the
President paints a different picture when he is on the campaign trail, where he often 
talks
about regime change. The Vice President said on national television that "The 
President's
made it clear that the goal of the United States is regime change. He said that on many
occasions."

Proponents of this resolution argue that it does put diplomacy first. They point to 
section 3,
which requires the President to determine that further diplomatic or other peaceful 
means
alone will not adequately protect the national security, before he resorts to military 
force.
They say that this ensures that we will act only in a deliberative way, in concert 
with our
allies.

But they fail to point out that the resolution permits the President to use unilateral 
military
force if he determines that reliance on diplomacy alone "is not likely to lead to 
enforcement
of all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq . . .."

Unfortunately, we have learned that the phrase "not likely" can be used to justify 
just about
anything. So let us not pretend we are doing something we are not. This resolution 
permits
the President to take whatever military action he wants, whenever he wants, for as 
long as
he wants. It is a blank check.

We have the best trained, best equipped armed forces in the world, and I have no doubt
that they can defeat Iraq. I hope, as we all do, that if force is used the Iraqi 
military
surrenders quickly.

But if we have learned anything from history, it is that wars are unpredictable. They 
can
trigger consequences that none of us would intend or expect. Is it fair to the American
people, who have become accustomed to wars waged from 30,000 feet lasting a few
weeks with few casualties, that we not discuss what else could happen? We could be
involved in urban warfare where large numbers of our troops are killed.

And what of the critical issue of rebuilding a post-Saddam Iraq, about which the
Administration has said virtually nothing? As I have said over and over again, it is 
one thing
to topple a regime, but it is equally important, and sometimes far more difficult, to 
rebuild a
country to prevent it from becoming engulfed by factional fighting.

If these nations cannot successfully rebuild, then they will once again become havens 
for
terrorists. To ensure that does not happen, does the Administration foresee basing
thousands of U.S. troops in Iraq after the war, and if so, for how many years and for 
how
many billions of dollars? Are the American people prepared to spend what it will take 
to
rebuild Iraq even when the Administration is failing to budget what is needed to 
rebuild
Afghanistan? Or to budget what is needed here at home for homeland defense, drought aid
for farmers, and other domestic priorities, for that matter.

And who will replace Saddam Hussein? The leading coalition of opposition groups, the 
Iraqi
National Congress, is divided, has questionable support among the Iraqi people, and has
made little headway in overthrowing Saddam. While Iraq has a strong civil society, in 
the
chaos of a post-Saddam Iraq another dictator could rise to the top or the country could
splinter along ethnic or religious lines.

These are the questions the American people are asking and these are the issues we
should be debating. They are difficult issues of war and peace, but the 
Administration, and
the proponents of this resolution, would rather leave them for another day. They say: 
Vote!
And let the President decide. Don't give the UN time to do its job. Don't worry that 
the
resolution is a blank check.

Mr. President, I can count votes, and I can see that the Senate will pass this 
resolution and
give the President the authority to send U.S. troops to Iraq, if he chooses. But 
before he
takes that step, I hope he will consider the questions that have been asked here. I 
hope he
will consider the concerns raised by former Generals, senior diplomats, and 
intelligence
officers in testimony before Congress. Above all, I hope that he will listen to the 
American
people who are urging him to proceed cautiously, and to not act alone.

Despite disagreements on our policy toward Iraq, there is no question that if a 
decision is
made to send troops into battle every Member of Congress will unite behind the 
President
and our armed forces.

But that time has not come, and based on what I know today, I believe that in order to
solve this problem without potentially creating more terrorists, and more enemies, we 
must
act deliberately, not precipitously. The way the United States responds to the threat 
posed
by Iraq will have consequences for our country and the world for years to come.

Authorizing a United States attack to overthrow another government, while negotiations 
at
the United Nations are ongoing, and before exhausting other options, could damage our
standing in the world as a country that recognizes the importance of international 
solutions
to global problems and that respects international law. It would be, I am afraid, what 
the
world has come to expect of a super power that seems increasingly disdainful of world
opinion, or cooperation and collective diplomacy.

What a dramatic shift from just one year ago, when the world was united in its 
expressions
of sympathy toward the United States and would have welcomed the opportunity to work
with us on a wide agenda of common problems.

I remember the Star-Spangled Banner being played and sung by crowds of people outside
Buckingham Palace. The leading French newspaper, Le Monde, declared "We are all
Americans." And, China's President Jiang Zemin was one of the first world leaders to 
call
Washington and express his sympathies.

Why squander this goodwill and this unity? Why not build on it?

If September 11th taught us anything, it is that protecting our security involves much 
more
than military might. It involves cooperation with other nations to break up terrorist 
rings,
dry up the sources of funding, and address the conditions of ignorance and despair that
create breeding grounds for terrorists. We are far more likely to achieve these goals 
by
working with the rest of the world, than by going it alone.

I am optimistic that the Administration's efforts at the UN will succeed and that the 
Security
Council will adopt a strong resolution. If Saddam Hussein refuses to comply, then 
force may
be justified and it may be required. But we are a great nation, with a wide range of
resources available to us and with the goodwill of most of the world.

Let us proceed deliberately, moving as close to our goal as we can by working with our
allies and the United Nations, rather than writing a blank check today that is 
premature for
us to write, and which would continue the trend of abdicating our constitutional 
authority
and responsibility.

Mr. President, that trend started many years ago, and I have gone back and read some of
the speeches Senators made. For example, and I quote:

"The resolution now pending is an expression of American unity in this time of crisis."

"It is a vote of confidence . . . but is not a blank check for policies that might in 
the future
be carried on by the executive branch of the Government . . . without full 
consultation by
the Congress."

Those quotes were not about Iraq. They were spoken thirty-eight years ago, when I was
still a prosecutor in Vermont. At the end of that debate, the Senate passed the Tonkin 
Gulf
resolution by a vote of 88 to 2.

That resolution was used by both the Johnson and Nixon Administrations as carte blanche
to wage war in Vietnam, ultimately involving more than half a million American troops, 
and
resulting in the deaths of more than 58,000 Americans.

This is not to say that the Administration is trying to mislead the Congress about the
situation in Iraq. Nor am I comparing a possible war in Iraq to the Vietnam War. They 
are
very different countries with different histories and different military capabilities.

But the key words in the resolution we are considering today are remarkably similar to 
that
infamous resolution of 38 years ago, which so many Senators came to regret.

Let us not make that mistake again.

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