[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 152 (2006), Part 13]
[House]
[Page 17821]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                  BUSH HAS NOT LEARNED LESSONS OF 9/11

  Mr. McGOVERN. Madam Speaker, yesterday we commemorated the fifth 
anniversary of that terrible morning of September 11, 2001. In 
communities across our Nation, people gathered to remember those whose 
lives were lost and, once again, our thoughts and our prayers were with 
the families, friends, neighbors and colleagues who lost someone on 
that tragic day.
  There is no doubt that September 11 changed America.
  There is no doubt that every American understands that there are 
individuals and networks of extremists who want to attack America and 
that terror is their weapon of choice.
  And there is also no doubt that no attack of any kind can harm the 
pride each of us has in being an American and the privilege of living 
in the United States of America.
  But I have to admit, Madam Speaker, that I am deeply disturbed by 
many of the statements and speeches that have been coming out of the 
White House over the past days and weeks leading up to this year's 
remembrance of September 11.
  Five years ago, the world stood in sympathy and solidarity with 
America. Today, America's standing in the world is at its lowest point 
in history. More disturbing, the level of hatred against the United 
States is at its highest, and is spreading. This does not make us 
safer, Madam Speaker. It makes us more isolated and more vulnerable in 
an increasingly dangerous world.
  Over the past few days and again last night, President Bush has 
finally admitted that he went into Iraq knowing there were no ties to 
al Qaeda, no ties to those who did us such grave harm on September 11.
  We know now that there was no threat from weapons of mass 
destruction. Intelligence was manipulated. The mission of the U.N. 
weapons inspectors inside Iraq was deliberately cut short by our 
invasion. And no weapons of mass destruction were ever found.
  We know now that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld threatened to 
fire any military officer, no matter what his degree of seniority, 
expertise and experience, if he dared put forward a plan for 
stabilizing and consolidating Iraq following the invasion.
  We know now that resources were diverted from Afghanistan, where the 
9/11 deadly plot was born, in order to invade and occupy Iraq. And we 
know now that the trail of Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of 9/11, has 
grown stone cold.
  We know now that the President's policies in Iraq have put an 
enormous strain on our military, with U.S. military readiness levels 
now at historic lows.
  We know now that the independent 9/11 Commission has just issued a 5-
year report card on President Bush and the Republican Congress filled 
about D's and F's on homeland security.
  We know now that the invasion and occupation of Iraq has increased 
the budget deficit to record proportions because this administration 
and this Republican Congress have done what no other President or 
Congress has ever done in the history of the United States. They have 
continued to fund this war completely outside the normal budget and to 
grant a series of tax cuts to the wealthiest of the wealthy during a 
time of war.
  And we now know that Iraq is rapidly descending into an ethnic and 
religious civil war, with a daily civilian death toll that tells every 
single Iraqi that nowhere is safe from violence, not their homes, not 
their jobs, not their schools, not even their hospitals.
  And still President Bush told us last night to stay the course. Told 
us that those who call for change or criticize his policy are giving 
comfort to the terrorists. Even worse, Vice President Cheney said on 
Sunday's Meet the Press that not only was the invasion and occupation 
of Iraq the right thing to do but, quote, if we had to do it over 
again, we'd do exactly the same thing.
  Exactly the same thing, Madam Speaker? Has this administration not 
learned a single lesson over the past 5 years? Did they intend to 
squander the good will of the international community? Did they intend 
for Iraq to fall into violent, sectarian civil war? Did they intend for 
our military to be stretched so thin it will take years and tens of 
billions of dollars to repair and rebuild? Did they intend for the 
Taliban to reassert control over parts of Afghanistan? Did they intend 
the historic, record-breaking deficits that will burden our children 
and our grandchildren?
  Is there not one single decision or policy they might consider 
changing?
  This is why we need new leadership and new direction, Madam Speaker. 
We need to change course and we need to do it now before our resources 
and the precious lives of our troops and our citizens are further 
sacrificed on the altar of these failed policies.

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