[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 150 (2004), Part 6]
[Senate]
[Pages 8048-8050]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                       PLAYING POLITICS WITH IRAQ

  Mr. STEVENS. Mr. President, as President pro tempore and presiding 
over the Senate, I have found the overheated rhetoric on Iraq over the 
last few days at best disappointing and at worst misleading, harshly 
partisan, and motivated by election year politics. I have simply had 
enough of this. I have come to the floor to ask my Senate colleagues to 
restore the level of debate that this institution demands. I urge the 
Senate to not play politics with Iraq.
  Do not seek to gain some slim, fleeting advantage at the ballot box 
by making our country appear divided, and by making reckless 
accusations.
  Our troops in Iraq deserve better than this. They deserve much 
better. If there is debate, let it be reasoned and measured, and 
focused on the way forward in this war on terrorism.
  When our forces are deployed and in the field, they deserve nothing 
less than our absolute, unwavering commitment to their success. Nothing 
less.
  I take strong issue with three particular themes: First, the analogy 
that Iraq is somehow like Vietnam. This analogy is wrong, and simply 
inflammatory; second, that the President was wrong when he made his 
speech on the USS Abraham Lincoln a year ago on May 1; and third, that 
somehow our action to remove the brutal regime of Saddam Hussein was in 
any regard ``unprovoked.'' That is simply and plainly not true.
  Iraq is not Vietnam. It is wildly irresponsible--even reckless--to 
compare the situation in Iraq to the war in Vietnam. Those who make 
that false claim are engaging in dangerous rhetoric, and are ill 
informed about history and facts of the two conflicts.
  Comparing Iraq to Vietnam does not advance the debate, it simply 
inflames the issue, obscures the facts and, unfortunately, misleads the 
American people.
  My colleague, the senior Senator from Massachusetts, started this 
Iraq is Vietnam spin in a speech a few weeks ago. Of all people, he 
knows better than to make that bogus comparison.
  I encourage my colleagues to turn down the rhetoric on Vietnam, and 
get

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the facts right. Here are some of those facts:
  In Vietnam, President Kennedy sent ``advisers'' to Vietnam in 1961, 
but they were not authorized to use force until 1964, 3 years later. 
Then, in 1971, Congress repealed that authority.
  In Iraq, this very Congress approved a resolution that authorized the 
use of force in October, 2002, well in advance of any forces being 
deployed. That resolution still stands today.
  In Vietnam, eight nations joined with the United States.
  In Iraq, over 30 nations are in our coalition, including 16 of 26 
NATO allies.
  In Vietnam, Ho Chi Minh violated zero U.N. Security Council 
resolutions--none.
  In Iraq, Saddam Hussein violated seventeen--seventeen--U.N. Security 
Council resolutions, beginning immediately after the 1991 Gulf war 
cease fire agreement.
  In Vietnam, how many draftees were sent to that country? About two 
million draftees, all young men.
  In Iraq, how many draftees are there? Zero, none. We have an all-
volunteer force. They know the risks, they know their duty, and they 
volunteer to step forward and serve our country.
  I have yet to meet one at the hospitals here who hasn't asked me the 
question: How can I go back to my unit? How can I go back to Iraq? They 
ask that despite the many serious wounds they have.
  In Vietnam, against how many Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Laotians did 
Ho Chi Minh use chemical and biological weapons? Were there chemical 
and biological weapons used by North Vietnam? No, none.
  In Iraq, against how many Iraqis, Iranians, and Kurds did Saddam 
Hussein use chemical and biological weapons? Thousands and thousands of 
people--the Kurds, the Iraqis, and Iranians--were the subject of 
chemical and biological weapons used by Saddam Hussein.
  I have an article here from last Sunday's Providence Journal-
Bulletin, and the headline of that article is this: ``Historians, 
Soldiers Hesitant to Call Iraq another Vietnam: the purposes, strategy, 
terrain and players in the Vietnam war were far different than those in 
Iraq, many experts say.''
  Far different than those in Iraq, indeed.
  That is a true statement by the Providence Journal-Bulletin. In this 
article, Anthony Cordesman, a military expert and former diplomat, says 
``I really worry about the analogy between Vietnam and Iraq, where 
we're not really fighting a foreign enemy.''
  Mr. Cordesman, who is now at the Center for Strategic and 
International Studies, goes on to say:

       There is as yet no massive insurgency [confronting 
     coalition forces]. We're not dealing with massive external 
     powers supporting the insurgents. We do not have a situation 
     where we have lost a majority of the population as we did in 
     Vietnam when we lost the Buddhists. We are not attempting to 
     get around the reality of a need to create a legitimate 
     government, which we did after the fall of the South 
     Vietnam's Diem regime.

  I hope that cooler heads and cooler rhetoric will prevail here in the 
Senate. My colleague from Delaware, the ranking member of the Senate 
Foreign Relations committee, has found the Vietnam analogy, 
``misleading'' because, as he says, ``The vast majority of Iraqis share 
our vision for a participatory, representative democracy.''
  President Bush is absolutely right when he says that the Vietnam-Iraq 
analogy is false. And he is right that brandishing that false analogy 
as a rhetorical weapon, ``sends the wrong message to our troops and 
sends the wrong message to the enemy.''
  With regard to President Bush's speech on the USS Abraham Lincoln, 
some have chosen to make a great issue about it. They have endlessly 
taunted the Commander in Chief for words on a banner, and have twisted 
his words to suit their purposes.
  What the President said is this:

       Major combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the battle 
     of Iraq, the United States and our allies have prevailed. And 
     now our coalition is engaged in securing and reconstructing 
     that country.

  The President was dead-on right. He spoke clearly and plainly, yet 
some refuse to listen to what he said.
  He went on to say that ``major combat operations in Iraq have 
ended.'' The President was and is absolutely correct today in making 
that statement.
  Saddam's regime of oppression and torture was gone. The Hussein Baath 
Party regime was disbanded, and no longer in power. Baghdad had fallen, 
and was under the control of the coalition of which we were the leader.
  Active, organized military resistance had collapsed. Saddam's 
military forces were not resisting; their will to fight had been 
destroyed; they had no ability to command and control the few forces 
they had left.
  The mission was to remove a threatening, brutal dictator from power, 
to bring to an end the ruthless oppression of the Iraqi people--and 
that mission was accomplished.
  President Bush made it abundantly clear that he recognized the 
challenges that would face America and confront our troops. He said, 
``And now our coalition is engaged in securing and reconstructing that 
country.''
  He said:

       We have difficult work to do in Iraq. We're bringing order 
     to parts of that country that remain dangerous. The 
     transition from dictatorship to democracy will take time, but 
     it is worth the effort. Our coalition will stay until our 
     work is done.

  That could not be clearer or more truthful. There are those in this 
body who should listen to these words and hear them accurately.
  Let me state that again. He said:

       We have difficult work to do in Iraq. We're bringing order 
     to parts of that country that remain dangerous. The 
     transition from dictatorship to democracy will take time, but 
     it is worth the effort. Our coalition will stay until our 
     work is done.

  The clear and compelling meaning of the President's words on May 1, 
2003 was that Saddam Hussein had been removed from power, Iraq's 
military defeated, and the work of stabilizing and reconstructing Iraq 
had begun--and that such work would be both difficult and costly.
  The President was right when he spoke on the carrier a year ago, and 
he is still right today.
  What has happened in recent weeks and months is an emerging 
insurgency, and the appearance of foreign fighters in Iraq who will do 
anything--anything--to see the coalition fail, and see Iraq revert back 
to a brutal dictatorship, and become a breeding ground for radical 
Islamic terrorists.
  These terrorists have joined with former regime elements, and have 
chosen to make Iraq a full-blown battlefield in the war on terrorism.
  This is not a war against Saddam Hussein. This is a war on terrorism. 
What these terrorists and their sympathizers fear most is Iraq becoming 
a stable, functioning democracy that benefits the Iraqi people, joins 
the world community, and serves as a source of democratic influence on 
the people of the region.
  They have no regard for the will of the Iraqi people, for their 
safety, for their security or for their future. They are simply using 
Iraqi soil, and taking innocent Iraqi lives, in their ruthless Jihad, 
in their desire to spread chaos and foment hate across the Islamic 
world, and in their hatred of freedom, moderation and democracy.
  I urge those who are twisting the President's words of now almost a 
year ago to listen carefully to what he said, to end the personal 
attack, to stop the spin. Stop parsing words and stop mocking plastic 
banners. We can and we must do better than that in the Senate.
  And unprovoked? I heard the word ``unprovoked.'' My third point is, I 
say to those who claim the war to liberate Iraq was somehow 
``unprovoked,'' that is wrong. It is absolutely wrong. Could that 
statement be more preposterous? Could anything be more disconnected 
from the truth in Iraq? Can anyone say with a straight face Saddam 
Hussein did nothing to provoke the international community?
  Here is a sampling of some of the ways that Saddam Hussein provoked 
this conflict, how he provoked the United States, and how he provoked 
the world. In 1980, Iraq invaded Iran and used chemical weapons against 
the

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Iranian people. In 1988, Saddam's forces killed 5,000 innocent 
civilians in a chemical weapons attack against the Kurdish villages of 
Halabja. In 1990, Saddam's forces invaded another neighbor, this time 
Kuwait. We all know in the Gulf War thousands of innocent Kuwaiti 
civilians were raped, tortured, and murdered during the occupation. In 
1991, Iraq was poised to march on other nations but was stopped by a 
U.S.-led coalition of forces. We call that the Gulf War. Iraq has 
launched ballistic missiles at four of its neighbors. Remember that, 
``unprovoked''? It launched ballistic missiles at four of its 
neighbors: Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Israel. I might say, I was 
in Israel when one of those was launched.
  Saddam's Iraq was, at a minimum, engaged in clandestine research and 
development activities to develop, refine, and employ chemical and 
biological weapons. From 1991 to 2003, Saddam's Iraq fired more than 
1,000 missiles at our aircraft as they patroled Iraq's U.N.-sanctioned 
no-fly zones. We went over to Kuwait. We met the pilots who were flying 
day after day--what we call the CAP, the constant air patrol--at the 
request of the U.N. in compliance with the U.N. resolution. They told 
us how they were fired at again and again and again. Saddam Hussein was 
firing at U.S. planes daily. Provocation? I can't think of another 
provocation. As a matter of fact, we should have gone to war when 
President Clinton said he was about ready to go to war in 1998.
  For more than a decade, Saddam's Iraq steadfastly ignored the will of 
the United Nations and the civilized world and ignored no fewer than 17 
U.N. resolutions.
  I could continue with the list, but the point is the same: To say 
that Saddam Hussein is not responsible for his fate and Iraq's current 
status and did nothing to provoke that change is ludicrous. It is 
plainly untrue.
  Let me conclude by saying this: The tone of the debate on Iraq must 
change. With our troops under daily attack, we cannot make Iraq a 
political football in an election year or any year.
  Representative Jim Marshall, a freshman Democrat from Georgia, wrote 
a compelling column in the Washington Post last October. The title of 
his column was ``Don't Play Politics on Iraq.'' A decorated Army Ranger 
who served in Vietnam, Congressman Marshall was right then and he is 
right today. His observations were wise then and even wiser today: 
Don't play politics on Iraq.
  Let me quote from that article Congressman Marshall wrote:

       Many in Washington view the contest for the presidency and 
     the control of Congress as a zero-sum game without external 
     costs or benefits. Politicians and activists in each party 
     reflexively celebrate, spread and embellish the news bad for 
     the opposition. But to do that now with regard to Iraq harms 
     our troops and our effort. Concerning Iraq, this normal 
     political tripe can impose a heavy external cost.

  I continue with the article written by Congressman Marshall:

       For now, responsible Democrats should carefully avoid using 
     the language of failure. It is false. It endangers our troops 
     and our effort. It can be unforgivably self-fulfilling.

  That Congressman gets it. He really gets it. You do not play politics 
on Iraq. You do not play politics with national security. You do not 
play politics with the defense of this country. You do not play 
politics with troops deployed. You do not let seeking partisan 
advantage drive a wedge between Americans when troops are in harm's 
way.
  I urge our colleagues to end this divisive practice of using the 
floor of this Senate and this issue on Iraq to bash the administration 
to try to score political points. We can do better than that. For those 
who persist on this practice, reflect on Congressman Marshall's words: 
It endangers our troops and our effort. It is simply wrong, election 
year or not. Those who irresponsibly endanger or use Iraq for partisan 
advantage should be warmed: You must understand and take responsibility 
for the message you send to the enemies of freedom, democracy, and 
liberty through the world.
  This country should be united when we have troops abroad. We should 
be united when we have people trying to assist Iraqis to find freedom 
and defeat the terrorists who persist to bring the war on terrorism to 
Iraq after we won the war against Saddam Hussein. I urge my colleagues 
to follow Congressman Marshall's injunction: Do not play politics 
anymore on Iraq.
  I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.

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