[Congressional Record Volume 148, Number 116 (Friday, September 13, 2002)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8594-S8595]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IRAQ
Mr. LIEBERMAN. Mr. President, I rise today to voice my strong support
for the convincing call to action against Iraq that President Bush
issued yesterday at the United Nations to discuss the unique dangers
created by Saddam Hussein's regime and to argue that it is imperative
that the international community, led by the United States of America,
mobilize now to eliminate those dangers.
On September 11, 2001, a foreboding new chapter in American history
began. On that day, our Government was reawakened in this new century
to its oldest and most solemn responsibility: protecting the lives and
liberty of the American people.
As we survey the landscape of threats to our security in the years
ahead, the greatest are terrorists--al-Qaida and rogue regimes such as
Saddam Hussein's.
Saddam hates America and Americans and is working furiously to
accumulate deadly weapons of mass destruction and the missiles, planes,
and unmanned aerial vehicles to use in attacking distant targets.
Every day Saddam remains in power is a day of danger for the Iraqi
people, for Iraq's neighbors, for the American people, and for the
world. As long as Saddam remains in power, there will be no genuine
security and no lasting peace in the Middle East, among the Arab
nations or among the Arabs, Israelis, and Christians who live there.
The threat Saddam poses has been articulated so often that some may
have grown numb to the reality of his brutality. But after September
11, we must reacquaint ourselves with him because if we do not
understand and act, his next victims, like Osama bin Laden's, could be
innocent Americans.
President Bush advanced that process with great effectiveness in his
speech at the U.N. yesterday, albeit after a season long on the beating
of drums of war and short on explaining why war may now be necessary.
But the President did that yesterday in New York. Now we, in Congress,
must go forward together with him as the Constitution's competing
clauses require us to do. Each of us must decide what actions will best
advance America's values and secure the future of the American people.
The essential facts are known. We know of the weapons in Saddam's
possession--chemical, biological, and nuclear in time. We know of his
unequaled willingness to use them. We know his history, his invasions
of his neighbors, his dreams of achieving hegemonic control over the
Arab world, his record of anti-American rage, his willingness to
terrorize, to slaughter, to suppress his own people and others. And we
need not stretch to imagine nightmare scenarios in which Saddam makes
common cause with the terrorists who want to kill Americans and destroy
our way of life.
Indeed, 2 days ago on September 11, 2002, the state-owned newspaper
in Iraq showed a picture of the World Trade Center's Twin Towers in
flames with the headline ``God's Punishment.''
This man--Saddam Hussein--is a menace to the people and the peace of
the world. It was his brutal invasion of his peaceful neighbor, Kuwait,
in August 1990 that first and finally convinced America and the world
that Saddam had become a tyrant, like so many before him in world
history, who had to be stopped before he did terrible damage to his
people, his region, and the wider world. I was privileged in January of
1991 to join with my colleague from Virginia, Senator John Warner, in
sponsoring the Senate resolution that authorized the first President
Bush to go to war against Saddam.
The American military fought bravely and brilliantly, in that
conflict and won an extraordinary victory in rolling back Saddam's
invasion of Kuwait. But we did not achieve total victory. On April 9,
1991, I came to the Senate floor and expressed my disappointment that
our forces in Desert Storm had not been authorized to remove Saddam
from power, while his military was in disarray.
I said then: ``The United States must pursue final victory over
Saddam. We must use all reasonable diplomatic, economic, and military
means to achieve his removal from power. Until that end is realized,
the peace and stability of the region will not have been fully
accomplished.''
In 1997 and 1998, I joined with Senators Bob Kerrey, Trent Lott, and
John McCain to introduce the Iraq Liberation Act, which established in
law for the first time that it is U.S. policy to change the regime in
Baghdad, not just contain it, and authorized specific assistance,
including military training and equipment, to the Iraqi opposition in
furtherance of that goal. That declaration was based on Saddam's record
of barbarism before, during and after the gulf war, and his repeated
violations of U.N. resolutions.
On November 13, 1998, after Saddam ejected the U.N. weapons
inspectors, I said, ``If we let him block the inspections and the
monitoring that he agreed to as a condition of the cease-fire in the
gulf war, then there is no doubt that one day soon, he will use weapons
of mass destruction, carried by ballistic missiles, against Americans
in the Middle East or against our allies.''
Since then, months and years have passed and the danger from Baghdad
has only grown greater. International pressure--legal, diplomatic,
economic, and political--has failed to change Saddam's behavior.
Growing stockpiles of Iraqi weapons, toxins, and delivery systems have
accumulated. So too has a growing pile of U.N. resolutions which Saddam
has persistently defied. They testify to the repeated opportunities the
international community has given him to prove he has changed and to
his determination nonetheless to remain a recidivist international
outlaw.
As President Bush made clear yesterday, this must end. The hour of
truth and decision has arrived. This is Saddam's last chance, and the
United Nations' best chance to show that its declarations of
international law stand for something more than the paper on which they
are written. It is time for all nations, law abiding and peace loving,
to make clear that, after September 11, the world will not hesitate or
equivocate while a tyrant stocks his arsenal and builds alliances with
terrorists.
I am grateful that President Bush has effectively begun the critical
work of educating the American people, the Congress, and the world
about why. Our cause is just. The facts are on our side.
``Making this case'' is not a burden. It is the vital responsibility
of a democracy's leaders when they have decided that our Nation's
security may necessitate war.
It is an extraordinary opportunity, as well, to engage our allies in
meeting the greatest security threat of our generation before it is too
late--not just for us but for them. An opportunity to make the
consequences of repeated defiance of the United Nations painfully clear
to Iraq, and to any other government that might follow in its criminal
path. An opportunity to show the world's law-abiding, peace-loving
Muslim majority--who share the same values we do, the same aspirations
we have for our families, and, I might add, the same extremist foes--
that as we oppose tyranny and terror, we will actively support them in
their fight for freedom and a better life.
President Bush has acted wisely and decisively in asking the United
Nations to lead this noble effort, to insist that Iraq obey its
resolutions, and to be prepared to enforce them militarily if Iraq does
not comply. But if Saddam does not comply, and the United Nations
proves itself unwilling or unable to take decisive action, then the
United States surely can and must assemble and lead an international
military coalition to enforce the United Nations resolutions and
liberate the Iraqi people, the Middle East and the world from Saddam
Hussein. If we lead, I am confident many other nations will come to our
side.
For more than 11 years now, since the early spring of 1991, I have
supported the use of military force to disarm Iraq and to remove Saddam
Hussein from power. In fact, since the Iraq Liberation Act was passed
by Congress and signed by President Clinton in 1998, that has been the
law of our land. Therefore, I am fully supportive of such military
action now.
I know that many of my colleagues in the Senate believe thoughtfully
and
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sincerely that it would be preferable to give support to the President
in two stages, first to endorse yesterday's call for U.N action, and
then to return later, if the U.N. does not act, to authorize the use of
America's military power against Iraq. Other Members of the Senate are
understandably concerned that a debate on the question of war against
Iraq may be unnecessarily politicized if it occurs in the more heated
environment of this fall's congressional elections.
But the White House has made it clear it will ask for a resolution of
support and authorization in the very near future. Each member of the
Senate must, and I am confident will, face that reality in a spirit of
non-partisanship, going where their hearts and heads take them, in
deciding how best to fulfill our Constitutional responsibility to
provide for the common defense in the current circumstances. For my
part, I intend to work with Members of both parties in the Senate with
the White House to draft a Senate resolution that will receive the
broadest possible bipartisan support for the President, as Commander in
Chief, as he works to protect our Nation and the world from Saddam
Hussein.
On October 22, 1962, as nuclear weapons were being amassed in Cuba,
President, Kennedy spoke to the Nation and warned Americans of the need
to act in the face of the rising threat. President Kennedy's courageous
and eloquent words can guide us now. He said on that occasion.
My fellow citizens, let no one doubt that this is a
difficult and dangerous effort on which we have set out. No
one can see precisely what course it will take or what costs
or casualties will be incurred. Many months of sacrifice and
self-discipline lie ahead, months in which many threats and
denunciations will keep us aware of our dangers. But the
greatest danger of all would be to do nothing.
The path we have chosen for the present is full of hazards,
as all paths are, but it is the one most consistent with our
character and courage as a nation and our commitments around
the world. The cost of freedom is always high, and Americans
have always paid it but there is one path we shall never
choose, and that is the path of surrender or submission.
Our goal is not the victory of might, but the vindication
of right--not peace at the expense of freedom, but both peace
and freedom, here . . . and, we hope, around the world. God
willing, that goal will be achieved.
I yield the floor.
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