Like all Americans I have been wrestling with the question
of what our country needs to do to defend itself from the kind of intense,
focused and enabled hatred that brought about September 11th, and which at this
moment must be presumed to be gathering force for yet another attack. I'm
speaking today in an effort to recommend a specific course of action for our
country which I believe would be preferable to the course recommended by
President Bush. Specifically, I am deeply concerned that the policy we are
presently following with respect to
To begin with, I believe we should focus our efforts first
and foremost against those who attacked us on September 11th and have thus far
gotten away with it. The vast majority of those who sponsored, planned and
implemented the cold blooded murder of more than 3,000 Americans are still at
large, still neither located nor apprehended, much less
punished and neutralized. I do not believe that we should allow
ourselves to be distracted from this urgent task simply because it is proving
to be more difficult and lengthy than predicted. Great nations persevere and
then prevail. They do not jump from one unfinished task to another.
We are perfectly capable of staying the course in our war
against Osama Bin Laden and his terrorist network,
while simultaneously taking those steps necessary to build an international
coalition to join us in taking on Saddam Hussein in a timely fashion.
I don't think that we should allow anything to diminish
our focus on avenging the 3,000 Americans who were murdered and dismantling the
network of terrorists who we know to be responsible for it. The fact that we
don't know where they are should not cause us to focus instead on some other
enemy whose location may be easier to identify.
Nevertheless, President Bush is telling us that the most
urgent requirement of the moment - right now - is not to redouble our efforts
against Al Qaeda, not to stabilize the nation of
Moreover, he is demanding in this high political season
that Congress speedily affirm that he has the necessary authority to proceed immediately against
Nevertheless,
We also need to look at the relationship between our
national goal of regime change in
I was one of the few Democrats in the U.S. Senate who
supported the war resolution in 1991. And I felt betrayed by the first Bush
administration's hasty departure from the battlefield, even as Saddam began to
renew his persecution of the Kurds of the North and the Shiites of the South -
groups we had encouraged to rise up against Saddam. It is worth noting,
however, that the conditions in 1991 when that resolution was debated in
Congress were very different from the conditions this year as Congress prepares
to debate a new resolution. Then, Saddam had sent his armies across an
international border to invade
Secondly, in 1991, the first President Bush patiently and
skillfully built a broad international coalition. His task was easier than that
confronted his son, in part because of Saddam's invasion of
Third, in 1991, a strong United Nations resolution was in
place before the Congressional debate ever began; this year although we have
residual authority based on resolutions dating back to the first war in Iraq,
we have nevertheless begun to seek a new United Nations resolution and have
thus far failed to secure one.
Fourth, the coalition assembled in 1991 paid all of the significant
costs of the war, while this time, the American
taxpayers will be asked to shoulder hundreds of billions of dollars in costs on
our own.
Fifth, President George H. W. Bush purposely waited until after
the mid-term elections of 1990 to push for a vote at the beginning of the new
Congress in January of 1991. President George W. Bush, by contrast, is pushing
for a vote in this Congress immediately before the election. Rather than making
efforts to dispel concern at home an abroad about the role of politics in the
timing of his policy, the President is publicly taunting Democrats with the
political consequences of a "no" vote - even as the Republican
National Committee runs pre-packaged advertising based on the same theme -- in
keeping with the political strategy clearly described in a White House aide's
misplaced computer disk, which advised Republican operatives that their
principal game plan for success in the election a few weeks away was to "focus
on the war." Vice President Cheney, meanwhile indignantly described
suggestions of political motivation "reprehensible." The following
week he took his discussion of war strategy to the Rush Limbaugh show.
The foreshortening of deliberation in the Congress robs
the country of the time it needs for careful analysis of what may lie before
it. Such consideration is all the more important because of the
Administration's failure thus far to lay out an assessment of how it thinks the
course of a war will run - even while it has given free run to persons both
within and close to the administration to suggest that this will be an easy
conquest. Neither has the Administration said much to clarify its idea of what
is to follow regime change or of the degree of engagement it is prepared to
accept for the
By shifting from his early focus after September 11th on
war against terrorism to war against
The doctrine of preemption is based on the idea that in
the era of proliferating WMD, and against the background of a sophisticated
terrorist threat, the
The problem with preemption is that in the first instance
it is not needed in order to give the
The Bush Administration may now be realizing that national
and international cohesion are strategic assets. But it is a lesson long
delayed and clearly not uniformly and consistently accepted by senior members
of the cabinet. From the outset, the Administration has operated in a manner
calculated to please the portion of its base that occupies the far right, at
the expense of solidarity among Americans and between
On the domestic front, the Administration, having delayed
almost ---months before conceding the need to create an institution outside the
White House to manage homeland defense, has been willing to see progress on the
new department held up, for the sake of an effort to coerce the Congress into
stripping civil service protections from tens of thousands of federal
employees.
Far more damaging, however, is the Administration's attack
on fundamental constitutional rights. The idea that an American citizen can be
imprisoned without recourse to judicial process or remedies, and that this can
be done on the say-so of the President or those acting in his name, is beyond
the pale.
Regarding other countries, the Administration's disdain
for the views of others is well documented and need not be reviewed here. It is
more important to note the consequences of an emerging national strategy that
not only celebrates American strengths, but appears to be glorifying the notion
of dominance. If what
At this fateful juncture in our history it is vital that
we see clearly who are our enemies, and that we deal
with them. It is also important, however, that in the process we preserve not
only ourselves as individuals, but our nature as a people dedicated to the rule
of law.
Moreover, if we quickly succeed in a war against the
weakened and depleted fourth rate military of Iraq and then quickly abandon
that nation as President Bush has abandoned Afghanistan after quickly defeating
a fifth rate military there, the resulting chaos could easily pose a far
greater danger to the United States than we presently face from Saddam. We know
that he has stored secret supplies of biological and chemical weapons
throughout his country.
We have no evidence, however, that he has shared any of
those weapons with terrorist group. However, if
If we end the war in
During one of the campaign debates in 2000 when then
Governor Bush was asked if
The events of the last 85 years provide ample evidence
that our approach to winning the peace that follows war is almost as important
as winning the war itself. The absence of enlightened nation building after
World War I led directly to the conditions which made
Two decades ago, when the
What is a potentially even more serious consequence of
this push to begin a new war as quickly as possible is the damage it can do not
just to America's prospects to winning the war against terrorism but to
America's prospects for continuing the historic leadership we began providing
to the world 57 years ago, right here in this city by the bay.
I believe, therefore, that the resolution that the
President has asked Congress to pass is much too broad in the authorities it
grants, and needs to be narrowed. The President should be authorized to take
action to deal with Saddam Hussein as being in material breach of the terms of
the truce and therefore a continuing threat to the security of the region. To
this should be added that his continued pursuit of weapons of mass destruction
is potentially a threat to the vital interests of the
Specifically, Congress should establish why the president
believes that unilateral action will not severely damage the fight against
terrorist networks, and that preparations are in place to deal with the effects
of chemical and biological attacks against our allies, our forces in the field,
and even the home-front. The resolution should also require commitments from
the President that action in Iraq will not be permitted to distract from
continuing and improving work to reconstruct Afghanistan, an that the United
States will commit to stay the course for the reconstruction of Iraq.
The Congressional resolution should make explicitly clear
that authorities for taking these actions are to be presented as derivatives
from existing Security Council resolutions and from international law: not
requiring any formal new doctrine of pre-emption, which remains to be discussed
subsequently in view of its gravity.
Last week President Bush added a troubling new element to
this debate by proposing a broad new strategic doctrine that goes far beyond
issues related to
This is because President Bush is presenting us with a
proposition that contains within itself one of the most fateful decisions in
our history: a decision to abandon what we have thought was America's mission
in the world - a world in which nations are guided by a common ethic codified
in the form of international law -- if we want to survive.
We have faced such a choice once before, at the end of the
second World War. At that moment,
So it is reasonable to conclude that we face a problem
that is severe, chronic, and likely to become worse over time.
But is a general doctrine of pre-emption necessary in
order to deal with this problem? With respect to weapons of mass destruction,
the answer is clearly not. The Clinton Administration launched a massive series
of air strikes against
Does Saddam Hussein present an imminent threat, and if he
did would the
If Saddam Hussein does not present an imminent threat,
then is it justifiable for the Administration to be seeking by every means to
precipitate a confrontation, to find a cause for war, and to attack? There is a
case to be made that further delay only works to Saddam Hussein's advantage,
and that the clock should be seen to have been running on the issue of
compliance for a decade: therefore not needing to be reset again to the
starting point. But to the extent that we have any concern
for international support, whether for its political or material value,
hurrying the process will be costly. Even those who now agree that
Saddam Hussein must go, may divide deeply over the
wisdom of presenting the
At the same time, the concept of pre-emption is accessible
to other countries. There are plenty of potential imitators: India/Pakistan;
China/Taiwan; not to forget Israel/Iraq or Israel/Iran.
I believe that we can effectively defend ourselves abroad and at home without dimming our principles. Indeed, I believe that our success in defending ourselves depends precisely on not giving up what we stand for.