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I rise
today to voice my concern about the disastrous turn which the fortunes
of this nation have taken. The Bush Administration, in a scant 2 ½
years, has imperiled our country in the gravest of ways, and set us up
for a possible crisis of mammoth proportions.

I urge my colleagues
to think long and hard about the growing quagmire in Iraq. I urge
members of the President's own party to warn him about the quicksand he
asks America to wade in.

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Instead
of linking arms with a world which offered its heart in sympathy after
the brutality of the terrorist attack in September of 2001, this White
House, through hubris and false bravado, has slapped away the hand of
assistance. This Administration has insulted our allies and friends
with its bullying, and go-it-alone frenzy to attack the nation of Iraq.
In order to justify such an attack, it was decided somewhere in the
White House to blur the images of Saddam Hussein and Osama Bin Laden.
Blurred images notwithstanding, what is becoming increasingly clear to
many Americans is that they are going to be asked to carry a heavy,
heavy load for a long, long time. Let
me be clear. We are presently engaged in not one, but two wars. There
is the war begun by Osama Bin Laden who attacked this nation on the
11th of September, 2001. Then there is the war begun by George W. Bush
when he directed U.S. forces to attack the city of Baghdad on March 19,
2003. The first war was thrust upon us. The bombing of Afghanistan
was a just retaliation against that attack. The second war was a war
of our choosing. It was an unnecessary attack upon a sovereign nation.
This President and this Administration have tried mightily to convince
the people of America that attacking Iraq was critical to protecting
them from terrorism. The case they make is false, flimsy, and, the
war, I believe, was unwise. The
war against Iraq has crippled the global effort to counter terrorism.
The war in Iraq has made a peace agreement between Israel and its
adversaries harder to obtain. The obsession with Iraq has served to
downplay the resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan. The focus on
Saddam Hussein has diverted attention from Bin Laden, who is apparently
still on the loose and threatening to attack again. The war in Iraq
has alienated our traditional allies and fractured the cohesive
alliance against terrorism which existed after 9-11. It has made the
United States appear to the world to be a bellicose invader. It has
called our motives into question. It has galvanized the worldwide
terrorism movement against us. The war in Iraq has cost us lives and
treasure. Yet, this President will shortly request $87 billion more
for his ill-fated adventure. He says we will spend whatever it takes. Prudence
dictates that we consider the risks. This nation has suffered massive
job losses amounting to 93,000 in August alone and approximately
600,000 since January of this year. Job loss of this magnitude means
less money coming into the treasury and more money going out. U.S.
manufacturing jobs continue to disappear overseas as companies relocate
operations on other shores. There seems no end to the job hemorrhage.
The manufacturing sector has lost jobs for 37 months in a row. The
weak job market threatens to sap strength from our domestic economy.
Should inflation begin to creep up, as some worry it will, higher
energy costs and lower consumer confidence may slow the economy
further. Suppose another massive al Quaeda attack were to occur here
at home, killing thousands and delivering another devastating blow to
the U.S. economy? Could we still afford to continue to send billions
to Iraq? At best our future economic growth is uncertain. There are
too many unknowns. Our
deficit is growing. When the $87 billion 2004 Iraq Supplemental is
included, the deficit for 2004 alone is expected to total $535 billion.
That number will only grow if we continue to experience massive job
loss and the economy takes a turn for the worse. We can ill afford to
finance the rebuilding of Iraq alone. Yet, President Bush steadfastly
resists doing what it takes to involve the international community. It
should be obvious that we need assistance. The United States cannot
even continue to supply the troops to secure Iraq without more help. A
recent CBO study which I requested makes it clear that to maintain the
level of troops we now have in Iraq will stretch us very thin, should
something happen in Korea or elsewhere on this troubled globe. Our
National Guard is being asked to stay longer and longer in Iraq to help
backfill the shortage in regular troops. These are men and women with
jobs and families and key roles to play in their own communities. We
cannot continue to utilize their skills in Iraq without suffering the
consequences at home. Even now, as a hurricane lurks off of our
shores, there are worries about shortages of emergency personnel
because so many national guardsmen and women are serving in Iraq. But,
the Bush Administration continues to spend our treasure and our troop
strength in a single-focused obsession with the fiasco in Iraq. Are we
to mortgage the future of our nation to years of financing this
adventure? Surely we cannot ask American families for sacrifice
indefinitely. We must come to grips with our limits. We must
acknowledge risks and realities. Yet,
on last Sunday, Vice President Cheney dug his heels in at the
suggestion of rethinking our policy in Iraq. In a television
interview, Cheney said that he saw no reason to "think that the
strategy is flawed or needs to be changed." He
went on to try to convince the American public that Iraq was "the
geographic base" for the perpetrators of 9-11 - - a claim that this
humble Senator has never heard before, and that flies in the face of
U.S. intelligence agencies which repeatedly have said that they have
found no links between the 9-11 attacks and Saddam Hussein or Iraq. We
may come to rue the day when we took our eye off of Bin Laden and
sapped our energies and our credibility in this quagmire in Iraq. Yet,
there seems to be no soul searching in this White House about the
consequences of this war. While
Bush's aides talk of "generational commitments" and the President talks
of "sacrifice," I wonder if the American people fully comprehend what
they are being urged to forego. They have already sacrificed loved
ones with 158 troops killed and 856 wounded just since President Bush
declared the end of major combat on May 1. How many more families must
"sacrifice" while we occupy Iraq? A
generation of "sacrifice" may also mean a slow sapping of key national
priorities, including repairing the infrastructure which fuels our
economic engine and funding the institutions and programs which benefit
all Americans. Compare the latest request for the Iraq Supplemental
with the commitment in dollars to other vital programs and the picture
becomes clear. President Bush is asking for $87 billion for Iraq, but
only $34.6 billion for Homeland Security. He wants $87 billion for
Iraq, but only $66.2 billion for the Department of Health and Human
Services. The President seeks $87 billion to secure Iraq, but only
$52.1 billion for the Department of Education. He wants $87 billion to
shore up Iraq but only $29.3 billion for America's highways and road
construction. For
the State Department and foreign aid for the entire world, President
Bush sees a need for only $27.4 billion, yet Iraq is worth over three
times that much to this White House. Remember that that $87 billion is just for 2004 alone. Does anyone really believe that it will be the last request for Iraq?
The
President asked America for a generation of "sacrifice," but that noble
sounding word does not reveal the true nature of what this President
demands from the American people. He asks them to supply the fighting
men and women to prosecute his war. He implores our people to
sacrifice adequate health care; he asks them to settle for less than
the best education for their children; he asks them to sacrifice
medical research that could prolong and save lives; he asks them to put
up with unsafe highways and dangerous bridges; he asks them to live
with substandard housing and foul water; he asks them to forego better
public transportation, and not just for now, for generations, and all
of it for his folly in Iraq. Most puzzling to this Senator is this
President's stubborn refusal to guard against the terror threat here at
home by adequately funding Homeland Security. Is he asking us all to
risk the safety of our homeland, too? And
to further insult the hard working people of this nation, George Walker
Bush proposes to lay this sacrifice not only on the adult population of
this great country, but on their children, by increasing the deficit
with nary a thought to the consequences. Yet
not a peep can be heard from this White House about paying for some of
this "sacrifice" by foregoing a portion of future tax cuts - - tax cuts
that mainly benefit those citizens who don't need so many of the
services government provides. Our
reputation around the globe has already been seriously damaged by this
Administration. Are the dreams and hopes of millions of Americans to
be "sacrificed" as well on the altar of Iraq? I urge my colleagues to
think long and hard about the growing quagmire in Iraq. I urge members
of the President's own party to warn him about the quicksand he asks
America to wade in. We need a long and thorough debate about the
future of this country. We need a serious discussion about the kind of
America we will leave to our children. We need to renew our efforts to
negotiate a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians. Are
we fighting a war in Iraq when pushing the peace might better serve our
cause? We must think again about worldwide terrorism and the best ways
to combat it. Let us not continue to simply wage the wrong war in
Iraq. |