[Congressional Record Volume 149, Number 75 (Tuesday, May 20, 2003)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6642-S6643]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                            REBUILDING IRAQ

  Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I rise today to say a few words about the 
rebuilding of Iraq and, more importantly, the creation of a democratic 
Iraq.
  Iraq is situated in the very cradle of civilization. It has an 
ancient and colorful history. And although it is easy to overlook now, 
Baghdad itself was once viewed as a center of learning and cultural 
activity until it was hijacked by the fascist regime of Saddam Hussein.
  Today, Iraq is a hive of clan warfare, looting, and violent chaos. 
There are competing political groups, armed criminal gangs, and street 
thugs. The Iraqi people are free of Saddam, but they are not yet free 
of fear.
  The situation is complex, delicate, and decidedly unpleasant. But 
unless America and our coalition partners act quickly and decisively, 
self-government will be recalled years from now as only a fleeting 
dream for the people of Iraq.
  I believe there is still hope and opportunity--hope that the free 
people of Iraq can conquer the anarchy that controls their streets, and 
opportunity to fulfill the promise of a thriving democratic Iraq.
  That dream may seem far off in Baghdad today, but as John Adams once 
said: ``People and nations are forged in the fires of adversity.''
  In order for Iraq to grow and blossom from the rubble, it requires 
security. It requires order. It requires the rule of law.
  First, we must begin by ensuring the basic security of the Iraqi 
people. People must be able to buy food at the market without fearing 
armed robbery or kidnapping. They must be able to worship without 
fearing snipers or skirmishes. Their children must be able to go to 
school without hearing the sound of gunfire nearby.
  The Middle East looks like the Old West right now, and we need lawmen 
to help restore the peace. We must eliminate the threats posed by what 
remains

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of the Baathist Party and the common criminals who control the streets 
and highways. We must end the looting and restore the property rights 
of the Iraqi people. We simply cannot construct the foundation of a 
peaceful and just society when there is still no security in Iraq.
  Dr. Karim Hassan, director general of Iraq's electricity commission 
put it this way: ``Give me security, and I will give you electricity.''
  The brave men and women of our Armed Forces have done heroic work in 
Iraq. I know I speak for the people of my State of Texas, for all 
Americans, and indeed for all freedom-loving people when I give thanks 
that the operation in Iraq was concluded swiftly with a minimum loss of 
coalition lives. But it would be a grave mistake to burden our military 
alone with the job of ensuring security for the Iraqi people. Indeed, 
that is not their principal mission.
  After security is restored, a functioning legal system must be 
established. There is the immediate problem of establishing a police 
force. Under Saddam's regime, the police were nothing more than shock 
troops bent on fulfilling the dictator's tyrannical bidding. Now they 
must act to protect and defend the people they formerly dominated and 
abused. The police in Iraq are no longer the law, violently expressed; 
they must now enforce and be held accountable to the law.
  No system of justice can survive long in the absence of law and 
order, and there can be no democratic Iraqi state as long as 
lawlessness reigns.
  Secondly, we must help the Iraqi people forge a nation governed by 
laws, not men. There are multiple proposals being considered for the 
Iraqi Constitution. While Iraq is clearly in a state of transition, it 
has a rich and ancient legal history. These traditions should be the 
foundation for the laws of this reborn nation, the constitution for a 
reborn Iraq.
  We should not kid ourselves that we will see a mirror image of 
Jeffersonian America circa 1787. The Iraqis will build on their own 
historical traditions, a history that stretches all the way back to the 
Code of Hammurabi.
  Despite our relatively short history, America has one of the longest 
uninterrupted political traditions of any nation in the world. The late 
Allan Bloom once pointed out that what sets America apart is the 
unambiguous nature of that tradition: ``[I]t's meaning is articulated 
in simple, rational speech, that is immediately comprehensible and 
powerfully persuasive to all normal human beings. America tells one 
story: the unbroken, ineluctable progress of freedom and equality.''
  There are clear differences between America, where government from 
its inception existed to preserve and protect freedom, and Iraq, where 
government, until recently, existed to limit freedom and serve as the 
instrument of oppression.
  Iraq's government must undergo a fundamental change, and a 
constitution that guarantees basic human rights will go a long way 
towards changing it. The constitution of Iraq must, like the 
constitution of America, tell one story.
  The Japanese constitution of 1947 is one example that can show the 
way. Following World War II, Japan's new constitution placed sovereign 
authority with the people and their representatives, in place of the 
longstanding authoritarian system under rule of the emperor. It 
renounced war as a sovereign right, and required that the country 
maintain armed forces for purposes of defense and police functions 
alone, not for purposes of aggression.
  If there is to be a reasonable chance of success for this national 
democratic experiment, similar measures must be included in the new 
Iraqi constitution.
  At the inception of this country, George Washington, instead of 
seeking to rule as an emperor, a king, a president for life, returned 
to his Virginia farm, handing over the reins of the fledgling American 
nation at the end of two terms in office. The act was astounding at the 
time, a political humility unknown since the era of Cincinnatus. It 
prompted his old foe, King George the Third, to call Washington ``the 
greatest character of the age.''
  But Washington's actions were no accident. Washington recognized that 
for America to truly be a nation where the people were sovereign, it 
must first be a nation of laws.
  We do not yet know which leader Iraqis will choose. But the identity 
of the democratic leader is far less important in the long term than 
the establishment of the rule of law, and not men. While leaders come 
and go, it is the law that makes a nation.
  Third, the Iraqis need a strong and independent judicial system. This 
process will be difficult and slow going, but we ignore its importance 
at our peril.
  Chief Justice Rehnquist has called an independent judiciary ``one of 
the crown jewels of our system of government.'' With tireless effort by 
freedom-loving Iraqis and their friends dedicated to the cause, I 
believe that the same can be true for the new Iraq.
  The central authority in Baghdad currently exists in a vague and 
indeterminate form, and it is likely that the political climate there 
will fluctuate frequently over the next few years. The judiciary must 
exist as an independent actor in this process, to enforce basic human 
rights, protect private property, and ensure stable conditions that 
will lay the foundation for the prosperity and happiness of the Iraqi 
people.
  To understand the full measure of Iraq's cruel and inhumane regime, 
you need look no further than Iraq's mass graves and the packed prisons 
of Baghdad, where the children of Saddam's political opponents were 
imprisoned and viciously abused. Under Saddam Hussein, prisoners were 
routinely starved, tortured, and murdered. The new government of Iraq 
must be just and humane, carrying out the duly rendered penalties of a 
civilized society based on the rule of law.
  The rule of law will foster and facilitate prosperity that will 
improve the quality of life for all Iraqis. There is great promise in a 
nation where 60% of the population is under the age of 25, and more 
than 40 per cent under the age of 14. All that most have known is 
brutal dictatorship, fear and poverty. Soon, they will know freedom, 
security, and a better life.
  With the foundation of legally enforced rights in place, Iraq will no 
longer be a place of fear for travelers or economic investors. As a 
nation, they will once again fulfill the true calling of the Qur'an, 
where it is written: ``Be kind . . . unto the neighbor who is of kin, 
and to the neighbor who is a stranger, and to the companion at your 
side, and to the traveler.''
  The Iraqi people will be free to start businesses and open shops, to 
speak and to assemble, to experiment and study--all in pursuit of 
better lives, rather than the interest of Saddam Hussein or any other 
despot. Iraq will flourish as a nation of law and order, where the 
invisible hand of the free market will benefit both the society of Iraq 
and the entire region of the Middle East.
  The world is watching Iraq closely. And in order for Iraq to grow and 
blossom, in order to ensure the freedom of the Iraqi people, the new 
Iraq must be founded on security and the rule of law.
  I am thankful--as I know my colleagues are--that the armed conflict 
in Iraq reached such a swift end, with so few coalition lives lost. The 
tasks that lie before us in Iraq are in many ways are more complex and 
intricate, and their end is not yet in sight.
  For the sake of those who risked and lost their lives so that the 
Iraqi people might know the blessings of liberty--for the sake of the 
promise of peace in the Middle East--and for the sake of the children 
of Iraq--we must not fail.
  Thank you, Mr. President. I yield the floor and suggest the absence 
of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.

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