Beware the Consequences of Pre-Emptive War
by
Ron Paul
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Last year more
US troops died by suicide
than died in combat in Afghanistan. More than 20 percent of military
personnel deployed to combat will develop post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). Some 32 percent of US soldiers reported depression
after deployments. More than 20 percent of active-duty military
are on potentially dangerous psychotropic drugs; many are on multiple
types. Violent crime among active duty military members increased
31 percent between 2006-2011.
The statistics,
compiled
by the military last year, are as telling as they are disturbing.
The Defense Department scrambles to implement new programs to better
treat the symptoms. They implement new substance abuse and psychological
counseling programs while they continue to prescribe more dangerous
psychotropic drugs. Unfortunately, most often ignored are the real
causes of these alarming statistics.
The sharp rise
in military suicides, drug and alcohol abuse, and domestic and other
violence, is the unintended consequence of a violent foreign policy
of an endless and indefinable “global war on terrorism.”
Particularly
in the past decade or so, we have lived in a society increasingly
marked by belief in the use of force as a first and only option.
We have seen wars of preemption and aggression, everywhere from
Iraq to Pakistan to Libya, Yemen, and elsewhere. We have seen an
unprecedented increase in the use of drones to kill overseas, often
resulting in civilian deaths, which we call “collateral damage.”
We have seen torture and assassination (even of American citizens)
become official US policy. When asked
by Senator Ron Wyden last week if the president has the right to
assassinate American citizens on US soil, President Obama’s nominee
to head the CIA, John Brennan, could not even give a straight answer.
The warning
that "he who lives by the sword dies by the sword" goes not only
for individuals but for entire societies. It is a warning to all
of us. A country or a society that lives with the violence of pre-emptive
war in fact self-destructs.
Let us not
forget that this endless war is brought to us primarily by the neo-conservatives
who dominate foreign policy in both political parties and who never
cease agitating for US military deployments overseas. Of course
with very few exceptions they have declined to serve in the military
themselves. These endless wars would not be possible, we should
also remember, without the Federal Reserve printing the money out
of thin air to finance our overseas empire. We are speeding toward
national bankruptcy while at the same time turning the rest of the
world against us with our aggressive foreign policy. Does anyone
really believe this will make us safer and more secure?
Many
who claim to support the military look the other way when the service-members
return home broken in mind and body after years of deployments abroad.
I served five years as a US military doctor in the difficult 1960s
and even then saw some of this first-hand. During the 1960s the
consequence of an unwise prolonged war tragically resulted in violence
in our streets, and even students being shot by our military at
Kent State University.
The truth is,
killing strangers in unconstitutional and senseless wars causes
guilt to the participant no matter what kind of military indoctrination
is attempted. Those afflicted may attempt to bury the pain in alcohol
or drugs or other destructive behaviors, but we see that only leads
to more problems. It may not be popular to point this out, but it
goes against human nature to kill a fellow human being for retaliating
against those who initiate a war of aggression on their soil.
Who cares most
for those in military service, those who agitate for more of what
is destroying their lives and weakening our national defense, or
the many of us who are urging a foreign policy of non-intervention
and peace? If we are to survive, we must beware the seen and unseen
consequences of pre-emptive war.
See
the Ron Paul File
February
11, 2013
Dr. Ron
Paul was a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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