Plans,
rumors, and war propaganda for attacking Syria and deposing Assad
have been around for many months.
This past
week however, it was reported that the Pentagon indeed has finalized
plans to do just that. In my opinion, all the evidence to justify
this attack is bogus. It is no more credible than the pretext given
for the 2003 invasion of Iraq or the 2011 attack on Libya.
The total
waste of those wars should cause us to pause before this all-out
effort at occupation and regime change is initiated against Syria.
There are
no national security concerns that require such a foolish escalation
of violence in the Middle East. There should be no doubt that our
security interests are best served by completely staying out of
the internal strife now raging in Syria.
We are already
too much involved in supporting the forces within Syria anxious
to overthrow the current government. Without outside interference,
the strife now characterized as a civil war would
likely be non-existent.
Whether or
not we attack yet another country, occupying it and setting up a
new regime that we hope we can control poses a serious Constitutional
question: From where does a president get such authority?
Since World
War II the proper authority to go to war has been ignored. It has
been replaced by international entities like the United Nations
and NATO, or the President himself, while ignoring the Congress.
And sadly, the people don't object.
Our recent
presidents explicitly maintain that the authority to go to war is
not the U.S. Congress. This has been the case since 1950 when we
were taken into war in Korea under UN Resolution and without Congressional
approval.
And once again,
we are about to engage in military action against Syria and at the
same time irresponsibly reactivating the Cold War with Russia. We're
now engaged in a game of "chicken" with Russia which presents
a much greater threat to our security than does Syria.
How would
we tolerate Russia in Mexico demanding a humanitarian solution to
the violence on the U.S.-Mexican border? We would consider that
a legitimate concern for us. But, for us to be engaged in Syria,
where the Russian have a legal naval base, is equivalent to the
Russians being in our backyard in Mexico.
We are hypocritical
when we condemn Russian for protecting their neighborhood interests
for exactly what we have been doing ourselves, thousands of miles
away from our shores. There's no benefit for us to be picking sides,
secretly providing assistance and encouraging civil strife in an
effort to effect regime change in Syria.
Falsely charging
the Russians with supplying military helicopters to Assad is an
unnecessary provocation. Falsely blaming the Assad government for
a so-called massacre perpetrated by a violent warring rebel faction
is nothing more than war propaganda.
Most knowledgeable
people now recognize that the planned war against Syria is merely
the next step to take on the Iranian government, something the neo-cons
openly admit.
Controlling
Iranian oil, just as we have done in Saudi Arabia and are attempting
to do in Iraq, is the real goal of the neo-conservatives who have
been in charge of our foreign policy for the past couple of decades.
War is inevitable
without a significant change in our foreign policy, and soon. Disagreements
between our two political parties are minor. Both agree the sequestration
of any war funds must be canceled. Neither side wants to abandon
our aggressive and growing presence in the Middle East and South
Asia.
This
crisis building can easily get out of control and become a much
bigger war than just another routine occupation and regime change
that the American people have grown to accept or ignore.
It's time
the United States tried a policy of diplomacy, seeking peace, trade,
and friendship. We must abandon our military effort to promote and
secure an American empire.
Besides, we're
broke, we can't afford it, and worst of all, we're fulfilling the
strategy laid out by Osama bin Laden whose goal had always been
to bog us down in the Middle East and bring on our bankruptcy here
at home.
It's time
to bring our troops home and establish a non-interventionist foreign
policy, which is the only road to peace and prosperity.
This week I
am introducing legislation to prohibit the Administration, absent
a declaration of war by Congress, from supporting directly
or indirectly any military or paramilitary operations in
Syria. I hope my colleagues will join me in this effort.