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Dec-10-2006 13:34printcomments

Oregon Senator Calls Deaths of US Military Members Fighting in Iraq Criminal

"But winning a battle, winning a war, is different than winning a peace," says Oregon Senator Gordon Smith.

Oregon U.S. Senator Gordon Smith
Oregon U.S. Senator Gordon Smith.

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - Republican Oregon Senator Gordon Smith's comments on Iraq on Senate Floor Thursday:

Mr. SMITH.

"Mr. President, I know it is probably appropriate to speak of our colleagues, and I will do that on the record. I rise tonight, however, to speak about a subject heavy on my mind. It is the subject of the war in Iraq.

I have never worn the uniform of my country. I am not a soldier or a veteran. I regret that fact. It is one of the regrets of my life.

But I am a student of history, particularly military history, and it is that perspective which I brought to the Senate 10 years ago as a newly elected Member of this Chamber.

When we came to the vote on Iraq, it was an issue of great moment for me. No issue is more difficult to vote on than war and peace, because it involves the lives of our soldiers, our young men and women.

It involves the expenditure of our treasure, putting on the line the prestige of our country. It is not a vote taken lightly.

I have tried to be a good soldier in this Chamber.

I have tried to support our President, believing at the time of the vote on the war in Iraq that we had been given good intelligence and knowing that Saddam Hussein was a menace to the world, a brutal dictator, a tyrant by any standard, and one who threatened our country in many different ways, through the financing and fomenting of terrorism. For those reasons and believing that we would find weapons of mass destruction, I voted aye.

I have been rather silent on this question ever since. I have been rather quiet because, when I was visiting Oregon troops in Kirkuk in the Kurdish area, the soldiers said to me: "Senator, don't tell me you support the troops and not our mission." That gave me pause.

But since that time, there have been 2,899 American casualties. There have been over 22,000 American men and women wounded.

There has been an expenditure of $290 billion a figure that approaches the expenditure we have every year on an issue as important as Medicare. We have paid a price in blood and treasure that is beyond calculation by my estimation.

Now, as I witness the slow undoing of our efforts there, I rise to speak from my heart.

I was greatly disturbed recently to read a comment by a man I admire in history, one Winston Churchill, who after the British mandate extended to the peoples of Iraq for 5 years, wrote to David Lloyd George, Prime Minister of England:

At present we are paying 8 millions a year for the privilege of living on an ungrateful volcano.

When I read that, I thought, not much has changed. We have to learn the lessons of history and sometimes they are painful because we have made mistakes.

Even though I have not worn the uniform of my country, I, with other colleagues here, love this Nation.

I came into politics because I believed in some things. I am unusually proud of the fact of our recent history, the history of our Nation since my own birth. At the end of the Second World War, there were 15 nations on earth that could be counted as democracies that you and I would recognize.

Today there are 150 nations on earth that are democratic and free.

That would not have happened had the United States been insular and returned to our isolationist roots, had we laid down the mantle of world leadership, had we not seen the importance of propounding and encouraging the spread of democracy, the rule of law, human rights, and the values of our Bill of Rights.

It is a better world because of the United States of America, and the price we have paid is one of blood and treasure.

Now we come to a great crossroads. A commission has just done some, I suppose, good work.

I am still evaluating it. I welcome any ideas now because where we are leaves me feeling much like Churchill, that we are paying the price to sit on a mountain that is little more than a volcano of ingratitude.

Yet as I feel that, I remember the pride I felt when the statue of Saddam Hussein came down.

I remember the thrill I felt when three times Iraqis risked their own lives to vote democratically in a way that was internationally verifiable as well as legitimate and important. Now all of those memories seem much like ashes to me.

The Iraq Study Group has given us some ideas. I don't know if they are good or not.

It does seem to me that it is a recipe for retreat. It is not cut and run, but it is cut and walk. I don't know that that is any more honorable than cutting and running, because cutting and walking involves greater expenditure of our treasure, greater loss of American lives.

Many things have been attributed to George Bush. I have heard him on this floor blamed for every ill, even the weather.

But I do not believe him to be a liar. I do not believe him to be a traitor, nor do I believe all the bravado and the statements and the accusations made against him. I believe him to be a very idealistic man.

I believe him to have a stubborn backbone. He is not guilty of perfidy, but I do believe he is guilty of believing bad intelligence and giving us the same.

I can't tell you how devastated I was to learn that in fact we were not going to find weapons of mass destruction. But remembering the words of the soldier--don't tell me you support the troops but you don't support my mission--I felt the duty to continue my support.

Yet I believe the President is guilty of trying to win a short war and not understanding fully the nature of the ancient hatreds of the Middle East.

Iraq is a European creation.

At the Treaty of Versailles, the victorious powers put together Kurdish, Sunni, and Shia tribes that had been killing each other for time immemorial. I would like to think there is an Iraqi identity.

I would like to remember the purple fingers raised high. But we can not want democracy for Iraq more than they want it for themselves. And what I find now is that our tactics there have failed.

Again, I am not a soldier, but I do know something about military history. And what that tells me is when you are engaged in a war of insurgency, you can't clear and leave.

With few exceptions, throughout Iraq that is what we have done.

To fight an insurgency often takes a decade or more.

It takes more troops than we have committed. It takes clearing, holding, and building so that the people there see the value of what we are doing.

They become the source of intelligence, and they weed out the insurgents. But we have not cleared and held and built.

We have cleared and left, and the insurgents have come back.

I, for one, am at the end of my rope when it comes to supporting a policy that has our soldiers patrolling the same streets in the same way, being blown up by the same bombs day after day. That is absurd.

It may even be criminal. I cannot support that anymore. I believe we need to figure out how to fight the war on terror and to do it right.

So either we clear and hold and build, or let's go home.

There are no good options, as the Iraq Study Group has mentioned in their report. I am not sure cutting and walking is any better.

I have little confidence that the Syrians and the Iranians are going to be serious about helping us to build a stable and democratic Iraq. I am at a crossroads as well.

I want my constituents to know what is in my heart, what has guided my votes.

What will continue to guide the way I vote is simply this: I do not believe we can retreat from the greater war on terror. Iraq is a battlefield in that larger war.

But I do believe we need a presence there on the near horizon at least that allows us to provide intelligence, interdiction, logistics, but mostly a presence to say to the murderers that come across the border: We are here, and we will deal with you.

But we have no business being a policeman in someone else's civil war.

I welcome the Iraq Study Group's report, but if we are ultimately going to retreat, I would rather do it sooner than later.

I am looking for answers, but the current course is unacceptable to this Senator.

I suppose if the President is guilty of one other thing, I find it also in the words of Winston Churchill. He said:

After the First World War, let us learn our lessons. Never, never believe that any war will be smooth and easy or that anyone who embarks on this strange voyage can measure the tides and the hurricanes.

The statesman who yields to war fever must realize that once the signal is given, he is no longer the master of policy but the slave of unforeseeable and uncontrollable events.

That is a lesson we are learning again. I am afraid, rather than leveling with the American people and saying this was going to be a decade-long conflict because of the angst and hatred that exists in that part of the world, that we tried to win it with too few troops in too fast a time.

Lest anyone thinks I believe we have failed militarily, please understand I believe when President Bush stood in front of "mission accomplished'' on an aircraft carrier that, in purely military terms, the mission was accomplished in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

But winning a battle, winning a war, is different than winning a peace.

We were not prepared to win the peace by clearing, holding, and building. You don't do that fast and you don't do it with too few troops.

I believe now that we must either determine to do that, or we must redeploy in a way that allows us to continue to prosecute the larger war on terror. It will not be pretty. We will pay a price in world opinion.

But I, for one, am tired of paying the price of 10 or more of our troops dying a day. So let's cut and run, or cut and walk, or let us fight the war on terror more intelligently than we have, because we have fought this war in a very lamentable way.

Those are my feelings. I regret them. I would have never voted for this conflict had I reason to believe that the intelligence we had was not accurate.

It was not accurate, but that is history. Now we must find a way to make the best of a terrible situation, at a minimum of loss of life for our brave fighting men and women.

So I will be looking for every opportunity to clear, build, hold, and win or how to bring our troops home.




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Henry Ruark December 13, 2006 5:33 am (Pacific time)

Al et al: Yr bitterness understood, but yr history since '76 'way off... We-the-people have been well and truly manipulated when "the media" were part of the gamesters. "We" have prevailed part of the time, to world acclaim, whenever we followed Founders sanely,sensibly, solidly. "We" can do it again !!


Albert Marnell December 12, 2006 8:08 pm (Pacific time)

Dear terryreport.com, You are absolutely correct but I just want to highlight one thing. All our wars have been created for the benefit of industry profit. There has never been a war for a real moral cause that I can think of that did not have an economic motive. It is always the fact that we the shareholders of the United States hold these truths to be self evident that all men are entitled to raise the value of their corporate stock. I feel this is wrong and that in the United States we were brainwashed from first grade to think that our country is controlled by the people. It is not. It has always been controlled by corporations with their limited liablility and their ownership of the people we elect. It has all been a fraud since 1776.... and even before that.


terryreport.com December 12, 2006 4:50 pm (Pacific time)

This speech is very strong, very striking for a Republican Senator. The tide has clearly turned, not only in Iraq, but in American opinion, top to bottom. The Senator should not, however, by at all regretful of not serving in the military. Patriotism is not measured by the uniform or the number of medals pinned to it. Patriotism is not owned by either party and it resides in the heart and mind, ready for appropriate action. We have not had a war where the nation was fully mobilized since WW II and no president since Eisenhower has called on our people to step forward, as a nation, in the cause of defending our country. Aside from 9-11, the threats we have faced are the presumptive threats that military and political thinkers believe we must face to assert American power around the world. No one can prove whether these theories are right or wrong, because it takes the long sweep of history to reveal underlying truths. I believe our main concern, first and foremost, in any war should be the conditions under which we ask men and women to fight and to die. In Iraq, our soldiers face an enemy around every corner and one against whom they cannot respond in kind. It seems to me that everyone in public office who has supported this war needs to offer and explanation of why they earlier took that position. Saying you were trying to be "a good soldier" in the Senate is not enough, by a long shot.


Albert Marnell December 11, 2006 1:45 pm (Pacific time)

Dear Tim. I may not know everything (who does?) but I am not stupid...only sometimes. I know what the real deal is overseas in the military and corporate America. The blurr between the two has been less and less and as far as I am concerned they are one. I am looking forward to your report. I hope that more and more Amercians start to boycott products like Nike that are assembled in Indonesia by girls under 16 at sweatshop wages. As you know the headquarters are in Portland Oregon. Globalization means that one day your children will may have to work in service sweatshops domestically or abroad just to survive. The worst landmines are in the attitudes of our government and military and the fact that they never tell the small guy the truth. Many of these corporations are backed by brutal regimes. The Indonesian military has already killed over 200,OOO of it's own citizens. How many Americans know that when they make airline reservations, call a tourist bureau, or dial for information that they are talking to an inmate at a domestic prison that used to have a living wage job? Soon half of the jobs available will be in law enforcement, the military, prisons and low paying security. This is the same as Germany once President Hindenburg gave up his powers to the dictatorial powers of Hitler in February 1933. All of this was because of the Twin Tower, oops, sorry, Reichstag Fire in Berlin. For those of you who do not know, The Reichstag was the German Parlimentary building and it was one of the reasons to get the German people worked up so that they would support a dictatorship, even though it was done by Hitler's men and then blamed on foreign powers. Hmmmm, sounds just like 9/11.


Tim King December 11, 2006 11:14 am (Pacific time)

Creed and Al- thanks, and isn't it fitting that I was standing by an active minefield just yesterday. That report should be out in a few days.


Albert Marnell December 11, 2006 10:22 am (Pacific time)

Thanks for the added input Creed. I am sure there are many other "landmines" of one sort or another that they (higher ups) do not tell the public or the people on the bottom layers of the military.


Creed December 11, 2006 8:37 am (Pacific time)

Tim! Be sure to carry a Geiger Counter around with your entourage to detect elevated levels of radiation! Be careful Tim!


Creed December 11, 2006 6:22 am (Pacific time)

al: And don't forget the du ammunitions that are killing the troops from radiation poisoning and the DU shells laying around all over the place comtaminating the population over there.


Henry Ruark December 10, 2006 11:20 pm (Pacific time)

For solid background, see March 06 HARPERS: "The Case For Impeachment", Lewis H. Lapham. End-sentence: "It is the business of the Congress to prevent the President from doing more damage than he's already done to the people, interests, health, well-being, safety, good name and reputation of the Unitd States --to cauterize the wound and stem the flows of money, stupidity, and blood."


Don't be so polite. December 10, 2006 4:29 pm (Pacific time)

George W. Bush is nothing but a liar and sociopath. I am glad that someone knows history....this is more important than military service and finally someone who knows how to spell "The Treaty of Versailles."


Albert Marnell December 10, 2006 4:20 pm (Pacific time)

Bravo Senator Smith! And don't forget the over 650,000 Iraqi civilians that have died as we liberate them? I guess if you are dead you must be liberated too? Also do not forget the injured and permanently injured and disfigured.

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