[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 151 (2005), Part 19] [Senate] [Pages 25486-25488] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]RATIFICATION OF IRAQ CONSTITUTION Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, normally I don't get an opportunity to hear my good friend from Illinois, but I am glad I was here as he gave one of his appraisals of the situation in Iraq. As Paul Harvey often says, I would like to provide the rest of the story; arguably, a more balanced view of what is going on in that very important country. In fact, freedom has taken another giant step forward in Iraq. On October 15 the Iraqi people voted overwhelmingly to ratify their Constitution. Iraqis turned out in stunning numbers to embrace democracy, tolerance, and a just rule under law. In fact, they turned out in greater numbers than we turned out here last November, which was a very high turnout by U.S. standards--and, of course, most Americans were not afraid they would get shot when they went to the polls. Iraqis created a constitutional republic in the heart of the Middle East. This is an unequivocal victory in the war on terror. It is the only way we can assess it. With their votes, millions of brave Iraqis rejected dictatorship and created a republic. They rejected rule by fear and terror and embraced rule by the consent of the governed. They stood together as a country under one motto: ``we the people.'' Nearly 10 million Iraqis turned out to vote, a turnout rate of 63 percent. That was up from 60 percent last January when they elected their interim government. That was 3 percent higher than our own turnout here last November, 60 percent, which was 10 percent higher than our turnout here in 2000, which was 50 percent. Again, I say, those Iraqis, many of them, might have been concerned about their safety when they went to vote. That was the first free election in Iraq in over 50 years last January. Furthermore, and very significantly, turnout among Sunni Arabs increased dramatically. This is a testament that the policy of continued political outreach to influential Sunni leaders during the constitutional drafting process was a success. [[Page 25487]] For instance, in the heavily Sunni province of Salahaddeen in the city of Ishaqi, only 300 people voted last January in the interim election vote. This time around, on the Constitution, on October 15, 10,000 Iraqis voted. Three hundred in January, 10,000 in October, largely Sunnis. This is only one city, but the turnout was up dramatically. Many in the Sunni population obviously decided their interests are best served not by fighting an armed insurgency but by joining the political process. Not only did Iraqis turn out in record numbers, they also voted to ratify their new organizing document in overwhelming numbers. The final results show over 78 percent of Iraqi voters said yes to the Constitution. Of Iraq's 18 provinces, 12 voted yes with majorities exceeding 94 percent. Three more provinces voted yes with solid majorities, including the province of Baghdad. In the Baghdad province, 77 percent ratified the Constitution. The Iraqi Government decided that for the Constitution to fail, at least three provinces had to vote ``no'' with at least two-thirds of the vote. Only two provinces did that, the Anbar province and the province I mentioned earlier, Salahaddeen. The democratic process in Iraq will continue to move forward. Iraqis are now preparing for another nationwide election pursuant to the Constitution they ratified. That election on December 15 will be for the first permanent democratic government in Iraq's history. They will choose 275 members of a council of representatives to serve all the people of Iraq. It is odd to me that at such a moment of triumph in that country, there are still those who call for America to get out while we can in the midst of this triumph that is occurring there. They believe our troop withdrawal should be arbitrarily based on the calendar rather than on achieving results. In short, they want to cut and run. And until we do, they will endlessly criticize our troops' efforts but offer no alternatives of their own. It is important to remember to withdraw prematurely from Iraq, as the cut-and-run crowd suggests, would play right into the hands of the terrorists. The terrorists themselves have already told us that. They have told us what they have in mind. In a letter our intelligence forces intercepted, written by Ayman al-Zawahiri, the No. 2 terrorist in the al-Qaida hierarchy, and sent to lead Iraqi terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, we learn that the terrorists' foremost goal is to drive America out of Iraq. No great surprise. Here is how al-Zawahiri instructs his partner in villainy: [T]he Jihad in Iraq requires several incremental goals. The first stage: Expel the Americans from Iraq. No surprise. The second stage: Establish an Islamic authority . . . in order to fill the void stemming from the departure of the Americans, immediately upon their exit and before un-Islamic forces attempt to fill this void. The third stage: Extend the Jihad wave to the secular countries neighboring Iraq. So they clearly not only want Iraq, they want to spread this plague into the countries surrounding Iraq. Al-Zawahiri goes on to say: The mujahedeen must not have their mission end with the expulsion of the Americans from Iraq . . . their ongoing mission is to establish an Islamic state, and defend it, and for every generation to hand over the banner to the one after it until the Hour of Resurrection . . . Americans will exit soon, God willing. Those are chilling words from our enemies. Their plans are laid bare for all of us to see. They want us to cut and run. Worse still, they expect it. And then they will turn Iraq into a terrorist haven. Al-Zawahiri realizes that the terrorists can never hope to defeat America on the battlefield. The only way they can defeat us is by undermining our resolve with continued suicide bombings, gruesome beheadings performed for the camera, and guerilla sneak attacks, all brought to American living rooms through the media. The terrorists believe they can shape American policy--policy determined, in part, by this chamber--by killing Americans, because they have successfully done so before. In 1983, terrorists killed 241 Americans in Beirut, and American forces were withdrawn from Beirut as a result. And America did not take the threat of terrorism seriously after the first bombing of the World Trade Center in 1993, nor did we take it seriously after the destruction of our embassies in Tanzania and Kenya in 1998, nor did we take it seriously after the attack on the USS Cole in 2000. The terrorists believe that our determination to fight them now, after 9/11, is the exception rather than the rule. They believe that eventually we will tire, falter, and fail in this fight. We must make plain for them--in a language they can understand--that they are gravely mistaken. America is not going to cut and run before the job is done. For our own security, for the security of the Iraqi people, and for the security of the world, we must defeat the terrorists and leave behind a strong, stable, and secure democratic Iraq. The terrorists are rightfully scared because America is fighting and winning the war on terror. We have made incredible progress in Iraq in 2\1/2\ short years. I think we ought to take a look at the progress that has been made. Taking note of this chart, Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979 and was in power from 1979 to 2003. What were the hallmarks of those 24 years for the people of Iraq? Over 4,000 political prisoners were summarily executed--one of his great accomplishments; 50,000 Kurds killed, many of them with chemical weapons; 395,000 people were forced to leave Iraq during that 24-year period. They had to get out or be killed. Iraq had no free elections and no free newspapers, and Saddam Hussein stood above the law. What has happened in the 2\1/2\ years since Saddam Hussein's fall from power? Iraqis are now innocent until proven guilty. They have a legal system. Seventy-five Kurds have been elected to the legislature, as compared to 50,000 Kurds getting killed during Saddam's regime. Over 270,000 of those Iraqis who had to leave the country--of the 395,000 who were forced to flee Iraq--have come back home to build a new free Iraq, and 9.8 million people voted on the constitution on October 15. They weren't any free elections for 24 years under Saddam. They have over 100 free newspapers--100 free newspapers in Iraq now. They have more competition probably than we do, with freedom of speech breaking out all over Iraq. Hussein, who stood above the law, now is on trial, subject to the law in Iraq. That sums up the progress that has been made. The 24-year period of terror is over and a new democratic, free Iraq is emerging. Before I leave the floor, I want to offer my colleagues some words of bravery from ordinary Iraqis, as an antidote to the al-Zawahiri letter I read earlier. These are the people who defied al-Zawahiri and al-Zarqawi to vote for the free future of their country. What these courageous people have to say should convince anybody that the Iraqis understand and are willing to pay the price of freedom. Here is what one fellow had to say: `I have not forgotten the mass graves and the torture and the killings,' said Abdul Hussein Ahmed of Najaf. `Five members of my family were killed by Saddam and his people. But now, with this constitution, everyone is equal under the law.' Munthir Abbas Elaiwi of Baghdad agrees. `[The constitution] will bring all that is good for the people, such as stability, democracy and peace. With such a charter, we will show the world that we are a civilized nation, not a bunch of ignorant and bloodthirsty extremists.' That is from one of the Iraqis participating in the progress. And if any terrorists think the people of Iraq do not hold their new republic dear, let them heed the words of Munthir's older brother, Naseer Abbas, also of Baghdad. He states quite simply: ``We are ready to defend this constitution with our blood.'' [[Page 25488]] Iraqis are our partners in the war on terror, and they understand the magnitude of our shared cause. They realize the power a thriving democracy in the heart of the Middle East can have as a counter-example to tyrannical regimes like Iran, whose President recently called for Israel to be ``wiped off the face of the Earth.'' The Iraqis have embraced liberty, and rejected the homicidal urgings of terrorists. I hope my colleagues will join me in saluting them and their commitment to freedom. Tyrannical leaders who repress their people much as Saddam Hussein once did the Iraqis should make no mistake: The people in your country are looking at Iraq and wondering, ``Why not here? Why not now?'' The terrorists do not have the right answers to those questions. Americans, and Iraqis, do. I yield the floor. The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cornyn). The Senator from Pennsylvania. ____________________