[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 18]
[Senate]
[Pages 25048-25055]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




   NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2008--Continued

  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, I have been listening to my colleagues on 
the other side of the aisle, and sometimes I think we are talking past 
each other and about different legislation.
  The proposal in the Levin-Reed-Kerry and other Senators legislation 
says nothing about precipitous. I don't know how one interprets 
``precipitous'' when we leave the President the discretion to decide 
how many troops he is going to have there for training, for prosecuting 
the war on terror against al-Qaida, and for the job of protecting 
American facilities and forces.
  The fact is that for many people in the country, this is inadequate. 
It is not precipitous. To have a debate about buzz words that excite 
the base does not serve our troops well, and it certainly does not 
serve our national security interests very well.
  We keep hearing these words ``surrender'' and ``choose to lose,'' and 
so forth. It is insulting to a lot of people who have spent a lifetime, 
some who served in the Armed Forces, being told this by people who have 
not, that they are somehow choosing to put a strategy in place 
purposefully that is to surrender on behalf of America or to lose on 
behalf of America. Come on. It happens that a lot of people in the 
Senate and the country believe there is a better way to defend American 
interests.
  I will tell you, if you take a real measurement by facts of where we 
are with respect to American security interests--let me give them to 
you: Iran is stronger than Iran has ever been in recent years. Iran 
loves the fact that we are bogged down in Iraq. Iran is strengthened by 
the fact that we are bogged down in Iraq. Our own national intelligence 
agency has told us we are now experiencing more terrorism, not less, 
because of our policy in Iraq. That is our intelligence community 
telling us that, that there are more terrorists, not less. Osama bin 
Laden is free and doing what he does out of Pakistan, talking on the 
Internet to the world, attracting terrorists, and plotting to attack 
America. Hamas is stronger than it has ever been. They took over the 
Gaza and are creating havoc in the West Bank. Hezbollah is stronger 
than it has been. Al-Qaida is reconstituted.
  Those are all facts. Do you know what they add up to? They add up to 
a weak foreign policy, to a weak defense policy and, in fact, those who 
claim and talk about surrender and about choosing to lose are losing 
today when measured against the real interests of our country. They are 
not making America safer. Interestingly, one of the most important 
things General Petraeus said in that hearing, in answer to a question 
from the Republican former chairman of the Armed Services Committee, 
somebody respected and revered by people on both sides of the aisle, 
Senator Warner, are we safer?--General Petraeus couldn't say. He said: 
I don't know.
  So I have had enough of this gobbledygook talk about ``precipitous'' 
and ``surrender'' and ``walking away from responsibility.'' The 
responsibility here is to get this policy right for America and for our 
troops.
  Where is the accountability? We were told by the President of the 
United States last January, when he stood up and he talked to the 
Nation, one of those big televised ``We are going to talk to the 
Nation,'' he said to America: The Iraqis are going to do the following. 
Here is what they are going to do: A, B, C, and D. Then he said: And we 
are going to hold them accountable.
  Then after the Iraq Study Group reported, everybody said: OK, we are 
going to wait and give General Petraeus an opportunity to report; we 
are going to wait for September, and we will see whether we are going 
to change the strategy.
  What did General Petraeus talk about when he finally gets here at 
this long-awaited moment that everybody is waiting for to measure the 
strategy with respect to Iraq? He talked about tactics, about military 
tactics that do not amount to a strategy for how you resolve the 
fundamental problems of Iraq.
  The Senator from Alabama, Mr. Sessions, a moment ago pointed out this 
complete contradiction where they are claiming: Well, the streets are 
safer and they have been safer for, what, 7 months, 8 months now 
because General Petraeus's own chart shows the vast preponderance of 
the violence went down before our troops even got on the line.
  One of the reasons it went down is because there has been a massive 
amount of ethnic cleansing because the militias have done their dirty 
deed across the country, and Baghdad, which used to be 65 percent 
Sunni, is now 75 percent Shia. That tells you the story.
  There is a total mythology here about al-Qaida, not mythology in the 
sense that they are dangerous and they are real. We all understand 
that. Al-Qaida is a threat. Al-Qaida is a serious challenge to all of 
us in both parties, to the country, to every citizen. But al-Qaida is 
not the principal problem in Iraq.
  It was again interesting that General Petraeus, in answer to a 
question in the Armed Services Committee, was asked about Osama bin 
Laden and al-Qaida in Iraq, whether they were there at the beginning, 
and he said no. There 


[[Page 25049]]


is no connection between al-Qaida in Iraq and 9/
11, none whatsoever, despite countless, countless references by the 
President, the Vice President, and a bunch of folks on the other side 
to try to link them together and confuse Americans, grab their 
emotions, get them in the gut, and somehow that is going to excuse a 
policy that cannot find another excuse.
  It is a disgrace, and it doesn't serve our national security 
interests. I repeat, we are not safer in the grander sense of strategic 
interests of our country. When you measure what they have done with 
respect to Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, al-Qaida, Osama bin Laden, they have 
a failed national security policy for this country--a failed national 
security policy for this country. The measurement is given to us by our 
own intelligence agency, which tells us al-Qaida is reconstituted and 
capable of attacking from anywhere.
  It is obvious for everybody to see how we have lost leverage and lost 
credibility and lost influence in the world. That does not make our 
Nation safer, not in the least.
  While we have waited for General Petraeus to report, a lot of young 
Americans have died. Meanwhile, today in the Senate, we were distracted 
by this much discussed, much condemned ad in a newspaper 2 weeks ago. 
Some saw a chance to score cheap political points on the floor of the 
Senate. Instead of joining with everybody to condemn all those kinds of 
ads and involvements in American politics that people do not like, the 
other side could not bring themselves to do that. But they have to have 
their singular targeted, one-entity specific, not even affiliated party 
entity, and go on and attack it. Frankly, it is as insulting as it is 
illuminating that in a week-long debate about Iraq, in which both sides 
have just five amendments to try to affect the policy, the Republicans 
took one of those amendments to try to, instead, play pure politics.
  Mr. President, all of us opposed any kind of personal attack on the 
distinguished general, and we said so at the time. I think I was one of 
the first people to speak out and say so. But I am not going to join in 
some kind of hijacking of the Senate for political purposes to score 
points and create 30-second advertisements as a consequence of votes. 
It is a disgrace, and it does a disservice to what we are trying to do.
  We have had a lot of colleagues who have referenced the fact that the 
escalation of sending more troops into Iraq was to give Iraqi 
politicians the chance to be able to make up their own minds about 
their political future. And we have heard a lot of people talk again 
and again and again about how there is no military solution. I know 
what happens in the sort of ``speech-ifying'' that goes on here, and 
the repetition, I guess, of some of these facts. They kind of get 
glossy. They just sort of slide by people and people don't really focus 
on the real meaning or the impact of what is being said as a result. 
But the fact is, the President very clearly told America the rationale 
for sending more troops was not to go out and secure a whole bunch of 
communities for the sake of having a general come here and say we know 
how to secure a community.
  A lot of us, in discussing the so-called surge, said at the time that 
this is not going to be the thing that changes the fundamental dynamics 
that are now ruling Iraq absent an increase in significant political 
diplomacy and political strategic thinking. And in that, we have been 
proven 100 percent correct. The Iraqis have not made fundamental 
decisions.
  Let me ask you, Mr. President, what is the relationship between more 
security and making a decision about how you distribute oil revenues? 
Are you telling me they can't get into a room and figure out the Kurds 
have this much, the south has this much, the Sunni triangle doesn't 
have any? The Sunni are 20 percent of the population, so we have to 
have some revenue going to them from a national basis. Do you need 
security to make that decision? There is a complete disconnect in what 
is being talked about here.
  Do you need security to decide whether you are going to allow people 
who were formerly members of the Baath Party, but who were there 
because they were coerced or because it was the only way to stay alive 
but who never took part in the excesses of Saddam Hussein, do you need 
security to make the decision--and I am not saying you can get them all 
to go into the mainstream of the life of Iraq--but to make the decision 
as to whether you are going to let them go in? You need security to do 
that? No. You need a political will.
  I will tell you why they are not making the decision. It is not 
because of the absence of security. It is because of the fundamental 
reality of their constituencies. The Shia have spent 1,300 years being 
basically subjugated by Sunni, and they have now been given at the 
ballot box what they could never achieve in any other way. They have 
been given the right to run the country. And guess what. After what 
happened in 1990, when President Bush, 41, excited the notion they 
could take on Saddam Hussein and encouraged them to revolt, and they 
did, and then we pulled the rug out from under them, tens of thousands 
of them were brutally murdered, and they remember that. That is the 
freshest massacre in their memory. That memory says to them, we are not 
going to let go of this power very easily, especially when we now have 
an opportunity to have a Shia Islamic state, which is what they want. 
That is what the constituency wants.
  The Sunni constituency, which has been running the place for most of 
those years--not every single one of them but most of them--has now 
been emboldened in the notion that they have to reject this notion of a 
Shia Islamic state, and Iran and Iran's influence, and they have the 
sense that they can return to power. In that struggle is written the 
history of the IEDs and most of the ethnic cleansing and most of the 
violence we have seen. Now, not all of it. Yes, al-Qaida has been 
involved in brutal incidents; and, yes, al-Qaida is trying to stir 
things up; and, yes, al-Qaida was involved in the Samarra mosque and 
other things. We all understand that. But my colleagues are dead wrong 
when they come to the floor of the Senate and they tell us, or tell 
America, that al-Qaida is the principal problem that keeps us doing 
what we are doing in Iraq. It is not true.
  Al-Qaida will not survive in Iraq, in any kind of Iraq, if we are not 
there. The Sunni have made a decision. And, incidentally, the Sunni 
didn't make a decision that was based on security. The Sunni made a 
political decision to work with the United States, and then the 
security came as a consequence of the political decision. The political 
decision came first, and the Sunni made up their minds, and now they 
are, indeed, being armed, being trained, and fighting back against al-
Qaida because they got tired of al-Qaida's cruelty.
  The Shia will never get along with al-Qaida because al-Qaida and al-
Qaida's beliefs and its attempts to establish a caliphate in the region 
and out of Iraq does not include Shiism. You are better off as a 
Christian or a Jew in the eyes of al-Qaida than Shia are in the context 
of Muslim and the faith of Islam. So the Shia, and particularly Iran--
and I heard my colleague from Alabama turn to Iran as the reason to 
somehow talk about what is happening with Iraq and al-Qaida. Iran is 
not going to tolerate al-Qaida, not for an instance.
  The Kurds are not going to tolerate al-Qaida. Al-Qaida is not in 
Kurdistan, and al-Qaida doesn't do so well down there where the Shia 
are, and it is not doing so well right now where the Sunni are. The 
jihadists, as opposed to the former generals of Saddam Hussein--al-
Qaida in Iraq is made up of a number of different entities, and the 
worst, obviously, are the jihadists. Those are the foreign fighters who 
come in across the Syrian border or across the Iranian border, but they 
are the first who are going to find a massive unwelcome in Iraq because 
they are foreign and because there is no way that either Sunni or Shia 
or Kurd is going to allow the jihadists to get a foothold of any kind 
of consequence.
  The Baathists are using al-Qaida in a way because it serves their 
interests to foment some of the problems because they are targeting us 
as well as the 


[[Page 25050]]


Shia, and they want to create this disruption. The only 
way to resolve that is through this political issue, and that raises 
the question of, how you do solve it? There are some very smart people 
who know more about Iraq and its history than I do who suggest it may 
not be possible, for the time being, because of what has been 
unleashed--the opening of Pandora's box, or the genie out of the 
bottle, or whatever you want to say. It has changed the possibilities 
now so that you may not be able, for the time being, to achieve any 
kind of legitimate central government or pluralistic society. You may 
have to have this federalism that has been talked about for some period 
of time because they may have to live apart before they can live 
together again in order to prove you can get over these hurdles and 
create some governments.
  Even today, we had a meeting with the French Foreign Minister here, 
and he mentioned how there is a growing sense among some Iraqis that 
this may be the way in which you have to try to build a resolution. 
Those are the kinds of things we should be talking about in the Senate. 
These are the kinds of things we ought to be pursuing in diplomacy. And 
where is the diplomacy? Where is the significant standing summit? I 
think 3 years ago, when I was running for President, I talked about the 
need to have a standing summit and a standing conference. Senator Lugar 
has talked about it repeatedly, to the point of exhaustion, that you 
have to have people who are talking to each other every day. You have 
to have envoys of consequence.
  Why couldn't we have former President Bush and President Clinton 
serve as special envoys to convene and meet with these folks and work 
through these differences on a daily basis, with the notion that you 
are going to try to create a resolution, or find the resolution, like 
we did in Bosnia and Kosovo, as we have in so many other conflicts in 
the world?
  As a young person, when I came into politics, I remember one of the 
things I admired on both sides of the aisle was those titans of 
American diplomatic history. During the period that I grew up, there 
were people with names such as Acheson and Ball and Bundy and a host of 
others, and some did better than others. Kissinger and then Jim Baker, 
who I remember made 15 trips to Damascus just to get President Asaad to 
agree finally to Desert Storm. And he went the last time, on the 15th 
trip, without even knowing what the outcome would be, but he knew that 
he had to repeatedly be there and be in their face and cajoling and 
working and moving the process.
  There has been such a total absence of that kind of effort over the 
course of these last years, it just frustrates me to think about young 
men and women on the front lines suffering these grievous injuries and 
believing in our country and in the idea of trying to help Iraq and not 
having the kind of support and policy that does justice to the risks 
they are taking. It is stunning, Mr. President.
  I believe, as Tom Friedman said the other day, negotiating in the 
Middle East--without leverage is playing baseball without a bat. And 
that is basically what we have been doing because we will not get up 
from the table. There has never been a baseball owner in history who 
went into negotiation with another player and said: I can't get up from 
the table. That is a negotiation that is not going to end well. That is 
the negotiation we are basically in today.
  The President of the United States has said to the Iraqi Government, 
we are going to have 130,000 troops there next summer. It is already 
there. What did they have to do? What do you have to do if you are an 
Iraqi sitting there playing your game, knowing you are going to be 
there, not us, forever, if you stay alive; knowing that you are able to 
use the 130,000-troop promise of next year and you can just float along 
and avoid any kind of responsibility or decisionmaking and play your 
own political power game for the future? If you are already aligned 
with Iran, as many of those politicians are who are Shia, in the 
majority, they have no motivation whatsoever to compromise.
  You have to change the dynamics. You have to change the play on the 
ground. You have to get them worried and get them thinking about 
legitimate implications of what happens if we do something. Right now, 
when the United States starts talking militarily about Iran, they are 
not particularly scared because they know the situation with our 
troops. They read the newspapers. They hear the debate in the Senate. 
They know how overstretched we are. I mean this is not complicated. We 
don't have the leverage that we ought to have to get them to do what 
they ought to be doing--if they are willing to do it at all--and put it 
to the test to find out if they are willing to do it at all because we 
are going to have 130,000 troops there no matter what they do next 
summer. We have already told them that. The same number of troops we 
had last year when America said staying the course was not good enough; 
we want a better strategy, our strategy is to go back to where we were 
when the country almost disintegrated a year ago with 130,000 troops.
  The other thing we know is that we are not going to put enough troops 
in there to secure every single community. So when you push in Baghdad 
or you push in Anbar, and then somebody goes over to Baqouba, or 
somebody goes over to Diyala Province or one of the other provinces, 
they have infinitely more capacity to move around.
  I learned that lesson a long time ago, back in the war of the 1960s, 
in Vietnam. We learned what it was like to go into these villages where 
you don't share the culture, the language, you don't look like the 
people, the religion--any of it. You are carrying guns, and they think 
you are occupying their land. It is tough. It is tough on our folks.
  What are they doing? They are going out and finding IEDs the hard 
way. I hear folks talking about these battles and the enemy. The enemy? 
The enemy are IEDs. Obviously the people who plant them, but they don't 
see them very much. Most of the wounded are from IEDs. Most of the 
killed are from IEDs. This is not a set piece battle such as we have 
seen in a lot of other wars we have fought. It is not even the same 
kind of insurgency battle we have seen in a lot of other wars we have 
fought. It is very different.
  I don't think we have been as smart or as thoughtful and creative in 
the kinds of strategies we need to change it--particularly when you 
hear the Iraq Study Group and our own national intelligence entities 
all come together saying the American footprint is part of the problem. 
The large presence of American forces is attracting jihadists, 
attracting terrorists, creating the impression of occupation. That is 
what General Casey said and General Abizaid. That is what the Iraq 
Study Group has said. Everybody has said that.
  What have we done about it? We have increased the presence. We have 
increased the footprint. We have lent even more credibility to the 
concept, as General Jones said, that we are there for the long run 
because we have this massive footprint with great big bases and 
unbelievable amounts of equipment. A whole bunch of people think we are 
not just there to help Iraq, we are there for the long run, we are 
there because we want to be there for much larger purposes.
  I think we have to do this differently. The open-ended, seemingly 
endless commitment has clearly done nothing to directly confront the 
problem. What we need to do, the responsibility that each of our 
colleagues has, is to look at these kinds of dynamics and examine them. 
If the Shia really believe what they believe and the Sunni really 
believe what they believe--and you can talk to them and read history 
and make judgments about it--then the troops are not going to change 
what is necessary for them to try to make some decisions.
  GEN Tony Zinni--for whom I have great respect, who is former CENTCOM 
commander, he travels frequently over there and meets with an awful lot 
of people--some time ago talked to me about an idea that has appealed 
to me very much over the last years, which is the need to negotiate a 
new security arrangement for the region itself; if we were to become 
involved in trying to 



[[Page 25051]]


engage these other countries in that arrangement, 
which can be leveraged by the notion that we are going to pull back, 
that we are going to shift responsibility to the neighbors to begin to 
bear some of the strategic long-term requirements--with respect to 
Iran, for instance; with respect to the protection of the Gulf States--
Saudi interests, Jordanian interests, et cetera--remembering always 
that those countries are Sunni. An awful lot of the money that is 
reaching the 20-percent Sunni population who are resisting today is 
coming from those places. So our friends and our allies are even part 
of the problem right now because we are going it alone.
  Our strategy, in my judgment, is that while Americans fight and die 
to give Iraqis breathing room, Iraqi politicians refuse to resolve the 
political issues that matter the most. There is no progress on the 
lynchpin issue of sharing oil revenues, no progress on the 
debaathification law--despite the fact they tell us, on the oil law, 
they are sharing some revenue. That doesn't satisfy Sunnis, if there is 
no law. Gee, you mean we are getting a few revenues today at the grace 
of the folks who want to give us the spoils or something? What happens 
when things start to get rough? Is it still going to be there? Is there 
a law? Is there a requirement? Does anybody have to live up to 
anything? Will it be enforced? Who will enforce it?
  All of those issues are outstanding until they resolve that kind of 
difference, so it doesn't satisfy me, and certainly doesn't satisfy 
them, for someone to come and say they are sharing some of the revenue 
or they are putting some money into these other areas. By any measure, 
until you deal with the provincial elections, the constitutional issue, 
the federalism, the oil, and debaathification, you cannot begin, if you 
can at all, in the current atmosphere, to reconcile these differences.
  General Petraeus can come back next March and he can say, oh, we are 
making progress, but if there is no political progress, then what are 
our colleagues going to say and do next March? Ask for another 6 
months? Say we have secured this area a little more and that area a 
little more, give us another little 6 months?
  I think as long as you give the Iraqi politicians as long as they 
want, they will take as long as they want. As long as we say we are 
there for as long as it takes, they will take as long as they want. 
That is exactly what they are doing today.
  That is our policy. The policy of General Petraeus is basically a 
policy for staying, it is not a policy for winning, absent the 
political reconciliation. No one has shown how you get that political 
reconciliation. If it was doable, why couldn't it have been done in the 
last 7 months? Why couldn't it have been done in the last 4 years, when 
there was less violence 3 years ago, and 4 years ago, than there is 
today? Why couldn't it have been done? Because the political will is 
not there to do it.
  We have changed tactics, not strategy. Yes, we have some gains. I am 
not going to stand here and say there are not some tactical gains or 
that our military hasn't done a good job. They have done a tremendous 
job under the toughest of circumstances and they have made some gains 
in those communities. But it is not producing what you need to change 
the overall dynamic in Iraq, if it is changeable in the current 
context.
  What I regret is all this talk will see us back here in March. They 
will not bring peace or long-term stability to Iraq absent diplomacy. 
If we come back here in March and we have resolved the political 
differences, it will be because they decided to resolve the political 
differences--which they could do at any other time or could have done 
anywhere in the last few days.
  So rather than ``no surrender,'' I think the policy we have today is 
``no real way out.'' There is no real way to resolve the differences. 
It is a wing and a prayer. It is a hope. Even Ambassador Crocker, for 
whom I have great respect; I presided over his hearing for his 
nomination to be there; I admire his career--he is a Middle East 
specialist, an Arabist, he has been there, speaks the language, 
understands it. But in the conversations I have had with him privately 
as well as what he said publicly, it is clear to me he cannot say, with 
any certainty at all, what is around the corner, and he specifically 
said none of us can predict what is going to happen in the current 
context. That is what we put ourselves into, absent the kind of 
diplomacy necessary to try to change those dynamics.
  I think what we are seeing are the moves of the President, who has 
decided to wait out his time in office and shift responsibility for 
this disaster to the next President. He has as much as said that, that 
we are going to have troops there for a long time, and the next 
President is going to have to resolve these differences.
  I believe we have a bigger responsibility than that in the Senate. I 
believe that very deeply. When I was a young serviceman and in a war, I 
remember looking to Washington and wanting those folks who were in 
positions of responsibility to make the judgments that affected my life 
on a day-to-day basis.
  I remember being bitterly disappointed in the debates that went on as 
people kept finding these same kinds of excuses, the same arguments 
were made. I remember President Nixon actually stood up and said: I am 
not going to be the first President to lose a war.
  Our military has not lost this. Our military has won everything they 
engaged in on a personal basis. Nobody doubts the power or strength of 
the American military. No one would doubt the power or strength of the 
American military if they announced that, because the Iraqis are not 
making their decisions, we are not going to stay here and keep dying 
for you, folks. I don't think that is losing. I think that is actually 
a note of reality. It is the Iraqis who are losing. It is the Iraqi 
politicians, led by Mr. Maliki, if they are led at all, who are 
unwilling to make the decisions. They are the ones losing this 
opportunity for democracy. They are the ones losing the opportunity for 
peace. They are the ones turning their backs on the opportunity for 
reconciliation--not us. It is not for us to reconcile. No brave troop 
in Iraq has the ability to create that reconciliation. You are not 
going to create that reconciliation at the end of a gun barrel. It 
doesn't happen. It never has.
  I think it was the Roman historian Tacitus who, with respect to 
Carthage, said: ``They made a desert and called it peace.''
  That is what you can do with guns and with military might. But those 
who have always thought the power of ideas and the pen is more powerful 
than the sword right now believe we have a better ability here to be 
able to find a way through this.
  I think we ought to be refocusing on what we are doing. It is not 
precipitous. It is not a withdrawal sufficient to please a certain 
number of people. It is the beginning of the change of the footprint. 
It is a clear statement that we are drawing down and you have to assume 
a certain responsibility.
  There is a complete contradiction, incidentally, in the arguments 
made by the other side. I remember visiting General Petraeus when he 
was training people. Two years ago, he said we will have 125,000, 
200,000-something next year. How long does it take to train people? We 
have been training people for 4\1/2\ years. We certainly have been 
training them for at least 2 years in a highly focused manner--2\1/2\ 
or 3 years. How long does it take to take our recruits down to Parris 
Island or out to the Great Lakes, from total civilian status to 
graduation? Three or four months. Then they go to a specialty school 
and then, within a few months, they are ready to go and serve on the 
frontlines. They always do it with great distinction.
  These folks have been training and training and training. The problem 
is, it is not a lack of training, it is a lack of motivation. It is a 
lack of commitment and will. It manifests itself in the following way. 
If you are a Shia, can you safely go into a Sunni neighborhood and 
police? Can a Shia go tell a Sunni what to do? Will the Sunni listen 
and feel safe? Ask anybody in the country about that equation. That is 
part of 


[[Page 25052]]


the problem, a lack of historical understanding, a lack of 
cultural understanding, a remarkable kind of arrogance that came out of 
corners in the Pentagon, led by Secretary Rumsfeld and Richard Perle 
and Doug Feith and these other folks, all of whom talked about parades 
and flowers and the easy welcome of our troops and welcomed as 
liberators and every decision was wrong, not to mention the arrogance 
of turning their backs on the plans that the State Department and 
Secretary Powell drew up for how you deal with postwar Iraq.
  We are paying for that now. I think those who argue somehow these 
buzzwords of retreat and surrender--it is almost pathetic, to be honest 
with you. Because it is so divorced from the reality of what is being 
talked about, about how you strengthen America and strengthen our 
position and support the troops. The troops deserve a policy that is 
equal to the sacrifice they are being asked to make.
  Let me go through a couple of principal arguments and then I will 
yield the floor. First of all, those who want more of the same failed 
policy, this surrender talk, it seems to me--I think I mostly covered 
that. I think I pretty much discussed the idea, but I want to emphasize 
something. Leaving the President the discretion to fight al-Qaida, to 
finish the training and standing up of Iraqis, to protect American 
facilities and forces and to do so over the course of a year--to set a 
target date for the achievement of that goal a year from now is 
anything but precipitous.
  They cannot achieve these fundamental benchmarks of what they needed 
to do to show they are reconciling in that year; they are not going to 
do it while we are there.
  Secondly, it seems to me you have to remember what General Jones 
himself said. I want to quote from his report. He said:

       If our security gains are to be anything more than short-
     lived, the single most important event that could immediately 
     and favorably affect Iraq's direction and security is 
     political reconciliation.

  So General Jones is saying: If you want to have an impact on 
security, you have to have political reconciliation. He is not saying 
that the security is going to be given to you by the military; he is 
saying it is the political reconciliation--nothing will have more 
significance with the security.

       Sustained progress within the Iraq security forces depends 
     on such a political agreement.

  That is precisely what we are trying to achieve.
  Supporters of the escalation asked for more time to translate 
military success into political progress. But if General Petraeus is 
correct, that sectarian violence began decreasing in January. I do not 
have that chart here, but I absolutely know this because we asked him 
direct questions about that. And he spoke to the fact. He acknowledged 
that the better part of the violence reduction did, in fact, take place 
prior to the American forces becoming part of it. It is partly because 
of the dislocation that had taken place as a consequence of the militia 
and also the political decisions that were made individually in Anbar 
and elsewhere which preceded the vast majority of those forces 
arriving.
  Now, Prime Minister Maliki has been in office since May of 2006. But 
the fact is, the Iraqi Government, as we have discussed, has simply 
been absent from any kind of adequate responsibility to meet what they 
themselves said they would do.
  Now, why a deadline? I guess it is kind of like anybody doing their 
homework--we operate under deadlines here. Does anybody here believe we 
get the budget done without a deadline that we usually have? We usually 
have drop-dead times. In fact, we even move the clocks. We have a 
continuing resolution that is short-lived, and then we come back and we 
live under a certain sense of, you know, a responsibility factor there 
and all kinds of deadlines.
  The fact is, deadlines have worked in Iraq already. There was a 
deadline to have the transfer from the Provisional Authority from Paul 
Bremer. In fact, Iraqis and a lot of other people said: Do not do this 
to us; we are not ready. But the Government, our Government, to its 
credit, we insisted and said: No, this is what is going to happen. And 
it happened. Now, the decisions they made afterward were awful. But the 
transfer took place; likewise, the elections; likewise, the 
Constitution. Each of them was accomplished with a deadline.
  In fact, the President himself has already set a deadline, in some 
ways, because he is saying: We are going to have X number of forces out 
by such and such a time--30,000. That is a deadline. He has told us 
when--by next spring. General Petraeus has set a deadline that he is 
going to come back by next March and he is going to say something to 
us. So this idea that deadlines don't work or it is a losing equation, 
I just do not agree with that. I think, like any human reaction, when a 
big country like the United States of America gets serious in putting 
some deadlines there, people can begin to respond and you change the 
dynamics that people are dealing with.
  What is more, some people may not like to hear this, but clearly and 
obviously an administration would have the ability to come back in 4 
months and say: Look at all of the progress we have just made because 
we set the deadline, and we are making so much progress, but we can't 
get over the hump by the end of this period. Will you not give us a 
little longer? There is no one here, if that is a true measure of what 
is happening, who is not going to respond responsibly.
  So, again, this is a phony debate about the impact of a deadline, 
what it means.
  We can get together in a room, sensible people, and come up with a 
way to do this. But it has been made into a challenge to the 
President's authority, it has been made into a big political football 
where Republicans feel they have to go out and defend the President, 
and somehow everyone else thinks everybody else is after him, when what 
we are really after is a sensible policy in Iraq in the face of 4\1/2\ 
years of having not been given it time after time, even under the 
withering criticisms of some Senators from the other side, such as 
Senator Hagel, Senator McCain, and others, who have called the shots as 
they saw them over a number of years.
  Third. Supporters of the escalation point to the consequences of 
failure in Iraq. Well, I can remember how people used the sort of 
cataclysmic, dire end result as a legitimization of carrying on 
something that was going into oblivion. It was called Vietnam. We had 
the Domino Theory, we had the Bloodbath, we had all kinds of arguments 
thrown out there about what it would be like if the United States 
ultimately withdrew.
  Ultimately, we withdrew. Ultimately, Henry Kissinger and Richard 
Nixon negotiated a withdrawal, and they negotiated a withdrawal with 
something that was then called the ``decent interval''; 1973 we left, 
and in 1975 the place fell because the Government itself was so corrupt 
and so inept and so incapable they were not able to withstand what came 
at them. They did not have legitimacy, but they were given the 
opportunity to have it. What ultimately happened is precisely what 
could have been avoided 4 or 5 years later. Half the names that are on 
that Vietnam wall down the street were put on that wall from a time 
period after which our top leaders in the Defense Department and 
elsewhere knew the policy wasn't going to work, and they have since 
even written exactly that. That is craven, that so many lives were 
lost, 25,000 or so, more than half, in that period of time to pursue a 
policy that people knew was ultimately what could have been achieved 
even earlier.
  So when people talk about the dire consequences, we all understand 
Iran is a threat. Well, let's go back to what I said earlier: Iran is 
more of a threat today because we are less capable of confronting them 
and because we have not engaged in that kind of robust diplomacy that 
the French, the Germans, and the British engaged in for almost 3 
successive years without us at all, because we had a policy of not 
talking to anybody; just do as I say. The result is, 


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you know, they throw out these consequences, so we wind up staying 
there because we have been there.
  I have heard people say: Well, you know, we obviously need to honor 
the lives of those we have lost. Yes, we do. I believe that is what we 
are trying to do. I think you honor the lives of those who have been 
lost there and those who have given their lives by making certain that 
we are not wasteful going forward, that we are reasonable, that we are 
not stupid going forward, that we do what is correct. But you do not 
lose lives to honor the lives you have lost. That does not honor them. 
And losing more lives and the fact that we have lost lives is not an 
excuse for continuing the same policy.
  Now they argue it is not the same policy; we have a new general, we 
have a new strategy. But it is not a strategy; it is a tactic that has 
no relationship to the real strategy that has to be political and 
diplomatic and much more creative and much more global in this case.
  So we have lost sight of what is at stake here. I believe we are 
paralyzed in a sense because of it. You cannot leave because of this. 
Oh, gosh, Iran is going to do this. In fact, the Senator from Alabama 
talked a little while ago about how Iran will become involved in Iraq. 
Iran is involved in Iraq. Iran has thousands of agents in Iraq. It has 
people training people in Iraq. The Shiia in the south are aligned, 
particularly in the Basra area. But the British, nevertheless, have 
redeployed to the airport, and they have left those factions to kind of 
duke it out against each other without any serious enough consequence 
that we are rushing in to fill the breach. If it is okay for them, why 
is it not for us? If it is not okay for them, why did we let them do 
it, and why are we not responding?
  These contradictions just sort of leap out at you. And the fact is 
that Iran and al-Qaida are thrilled that we are bogged down in Iraq. 
Every day that we are bogged down in Iraq, we are presenting al-Qaida 
with targets. We are presenting al-Qaida with the image of American 
forces occupying a country, and they can run around and enlist more 
jihadists. They have been doing it. You can just talk to anybody in the 
intelligence community about it.
  This is a policy which makes America weaker. This is a policy which 
puts America at greatest risk. This is not a policy which advances 
America's larger strategic interests in the region or elsewhere in the 
world. That is a bad foreign policy when that is what is happening. A 
policy that makes you weaker, not stronger, is not a policy I would 
want to take out to the country. That is exactly what they are 
presenting us with. Americans are dying at greater levels now than in 
2003, 2004, 2005, and 2006, for a policy they have already told us is 
going to end next summer. And the Iraqi politicians know it is going to 
end next summer. That is a deadline. So, evidently, it is okay for them 
to plot and plan for the end of the surge, but they are not going to be 
changed in their planning for the end of American involvement. I do not 
get that. That is a complete contradiction.
  Fourth. The President's allies warn that Iraq could become a failed 
state. Well, guess what. According to Foreign Policy Magazine, Iraq is 
becoming a failed state under the current strategy. In fact, it ranks 
second in the entire world on the Failed State Index behind only the 
Sudan as the state most at risk for failure. That will only change when 
the Iraqi Government steps up, not our troops. Our troops cannot run 
the Government, and most of the Iraqis have said they do not want us 
there. Incidentally, the new polls coming out of Iraq show that 50-
plus--58 percent of the Sunnis think it is okay to go kill and hurt 
Americans. Seventy percent of the Iraqis think America should be gone.
  Our friends warn of a humanitarian catastrophe. But as the New York 
Times reported earlier this month, many mixed neighborhoods in Baghdad 
and surrounding provinces in Iraq have already been ethnically 
cleansed. Two million people are internally displaced, 2 million people 
have left the country as refugees. Baghdad, as I said earlier, which 
had a population when we went there of 65 percent Sunni, now is a 75-
percent Shiia majority city.
  What we are supposedly staying in Iraq trying to prevent is happening 
right under our very noses, and General Petraeus and Ambassador Crocker 
told us that in their testimony. Ambassador Crocker specifically 
referenced the movement of personnel and the ethnic cleansing and did 
not say that our troops or the surge is capable of stopping it. So we 
are witnessing right now a very high level of sectarian violence. Over 
1,000 civilians are dying a month.
  Across Iraq, the level of violence is higher than it was in 2004 and 
2005. The Washington Post reported on Monday that about 2 million 
Iraqis are displaced in Iraq and 2.2 million to the neighboring 
countries. Apparently, 60,000 Iraqis are evacuating their homes every 
month. And what I have been told in the visits when I have been there, 
people have described to me the exodus of the middle class. You do not 
have the middle class there now to try to help do some of the 
reconciliation and building that is necessary.
  I have also heard many people point to the legacy of Vietnam. But I 
hear the wrong conclusions being drawn about that legacy--somehow a 
presumption that given the great power conflict that we were caught in, 
people seem to forget that one of the reasons we did not invade the 
north was not that we did not have the military ability or other 
things; it was because China and Russia and the Cold War was raging at 
the time, and those countries were aligned with Vietnam, North Vietnam 
then, and many people saw a bigger, wider, more complicated, and 
dangerous conflict as a consequence. So it was not our withdrawal from 
Vietnam. People need to remember this.
  You know, we did a period of Vietnamization, we did a period of 
transition, we negotiated the process, we left in 1973. It was not our 
withdrawal that caused the instability in the region; it was the 
underlying cause of the violence that had gone on for 10 years 
preceding it. It was the American bombing in Cambodia that many people 
remember that created the instability of that country and China which 
created problems with the Khmer Rouge and the ethnic Chinese that 
created many of the original boat people, the original exodus. It was a 
civil war, a civil war that our military could not end. Many of the 
conditions that came about were the result of being there and what 
happened in that dislocation.
  Our troops cannot end the Iraqi civil war. Only, again, a political 
accommodation can achieve it, and that can only come through adequate 
diplomacy and effort. We ought to be working over time on that.
  The final thing I will point out is, supporters of the Bush 
escalation say we cannot abandon the central fight in the global war on 
terror. I have pointed out again and again, as we all do, it is OK to 
have a good debate about issues. But somehow the world's greatest 
deliberative body ought to find a way to accept what is fact and accept 
what is fiction and kind of put the fiction aside and deal with the 
facts, instead of coming back speech after speech repeating the same 
fiction, which is what happens. The fact is, we have never suggested 
pulling any punch or reducing the effort to go after al-Qaida. We give 
the President complete and total discretion in this legislation to do 
what the President needs to do in order to prosecute the war on terror 
against al-Qaida. So to keep reasserting al-Qaida in a way that 
suggests that Democrats somehow are forgetting about that is not 
accurate.
  In fact, we have been the ones who consistently point out that al-
Qaida is reconstituted globally, that al-Qaida's principal leaders are 
in Pakistan and Afghanistan, that it is from Pakistan and Afghanistan 
they have plotted and conducted the attacks they have conducted in 
recent months and plotted the attack against our airlines most 
recently, and that they communicate to the world network, not Iraq.
  The reality is, we all intend to defeat al-Qaida. Al-Qaida will be 
defeated. I am absolutely confident of that. I don't think a 
nihilistic, cynical, completely ideologically, and morally barren 
effort such as al-Qaida's has a chance in 


[[Page 25054]]


the long haul. What it can do 
is confuse people and attract converts in the absence of a legitimate 
counter moral force, and that moral force can come from moderate Islam, 
and needs to, and it can come from the rest of the world.
  I have heard this all through every visit I have made in every part 
of the region. I serve now as chairman of the Near East-South Asia 
Subcommittee. I make a point of trying to understand what is going on. 
The fact is, Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo and the current torture 
practices that we know are being engaged in, and the world knows, and 
the new 4,500 Web sites of various jihadist groups exploit those 
things. That is the war on ideas the President appropriately talked 
about, that supposedly Karen Hughes was appointed to lead a great 
effort on. Nobody has seen her or knows what is happening with respect 
to that most significant effort.
  I don't think this escalation or this current policy is protecting 
our homeland. I believe where there was previously no threat from al-
Qaida in a place called Iraq, there is now a threat, though not the 
level of threat or the kind of threat that is often described. The real 
threat remains centered in Afghanistan and Pakistan and many other 
places, including Europe. It is growing in Europe. Unless we deal with 
these larger implications, that challenge is going to become more 
significant as a consequence of this policy.
  This is an opportunity for us to try to do what I know is very 
difficult, because I understand the pressures that are put on 
colleagues, many of whom have come to the floor and spoken eloquently 
in opposition to the war and in opposition to the strategy. But they 
somehow won't translate those words into a vote. They won't go that 
extra step of actually confronting the President and changing the 
policy. What General Petraeus has obviously succeeded in doing--and we 
understand it--is giving people a reason to say: Give us 6 more months. 
He is obviously going to get that 6 more months, because the President 
has the power to veto and the power to move his policy in these next 
days. But I hope my colleagues will think about how history is going to 
measure what we do here and how their own responsibilities measure up 
to what this moment is about. I think the facts speak loudly and 
clearly for the imperative to have a policy that moves in a better 
direction to protect our Nation. That is the bottom line. That is what 
is at stake, our national security and our ability to protect future 
generations and stand up and lead the world in a more effective way in 
order to eliminate al-Qaida and, in fact, open up a whole set of new 
possibilities with Islam and a host of countries that are currently 
sitting on the sidelines and standing apart from us because they 
disagree with our policy and the way we are implementing it.
  I hope our colleagues will take advantage of this opportunity, and I 
hope we will cease to have a debate on buzz words and slogans but 
instead a debate on facts and do justice to the troops who, as I said, 
deserve a policy that is equal to what they are doing on our behalf 
every single day. We salute them.
  Mr. KERRY. Mr. President, today we saw the floor of the Senate 
hijacked for purely partisan political purposes at a time when we need 
the U.S. Senate to instead come together for the purpose of protecting 
our national security and changing a policy in Iraq that is not 
working.
  What happened in the Senate today is partisan, political and 
demeaning of this institution. The Republican minority is desperate to 
distract the Senate and our country from the real issue at hand, which 
is a failed escalation and an administration policy in Iraq that is 
every day costing American blood and treasure. The same Senators who 
have gone along with the President's Iraq policy every step of the way, 
who have expressed not a shred of outrage about nonexistent weapons of 
mass destruction, predictions of a ``cakewalk,'' ``mission 
accomplished,'' or ``an insurgency, its last throes'' will now say and 
do anything to avoid talking about what is really happening in Iraq. 
They would rather express outrage about a newspaper ad run by an 
independent entity, than express outrage about a policy pursued by 
their party and their administration. And certainly they don't want to 
address the outrage of more Americans dying for a policy we know is not 
working.
  The Senate did not need to spend hours today on this debate. Nine 
days ago, the first time I was asked about the ad which the Senator 
from Texas loves to talk about, I said it was ``over the top'' and 
``inappropriate, period.'' I said that, as a veteran, I thought it was 
wrong to characterize any member of the military in the way General 
Petraeus was characterized in that advertisement. I have nothing but 
respect for General Petraeus. I wasn't alone in that feeling. Senator 
Reid spoke out. Senator Biden spoke out. There was no question about 
where Democrats stood. And we ratified that opinion in a broad 
condemnation of that behavior--including the Petraeus ad--in the Boxer 
amendment.
  But I also asked that we all recognize that the emotion behind that 
ad is an emotion shared by the American people: frustration--
frustration as we head into the 5th year of being told one thing about 
Iraq and finding out another. That is why we should be having a real 
debate and a real discussion about the policy in Iraq rather than 
trying to score partisan points over the politics of Iraq. It is as 
insulting as it is illuminating that in a week-long debate in which 
each side can offer just five amendments, the Republicans would waste 
one of their chances to change a broken policy by choosing instead to 
embrace a political stunt.
  We are where we are. I vehemently oppose the kind of political abuse 
of the Senate embodied in the Cornyn amendment, and I am saddened if 
not surprised to see that so many of the Republicans who believe that 
what happened to General Petraeus was wrong, could not bring themselves 
to vote for the Boxer amendment which made clear that the assault on 
Senator Cleland's patriotism in 2002 was wrong, and that the lies 
broadcast about my own military record in 2004 were also wrong. The 
votes against the Boxer amendment--an amendment which makes clear our 
disagreement with the ad which ran September 10--speak volumes about 
the partisan motivations behind the Cornyn amendment, and the fact 
that, apparently, many of our colleagues believe that attacking the 
integrity of veterans and members of the military is fair game as long 
as they are Democrats. I would remind them that when you sign up for 
military duty, no one asks whether you are a Democrat or Republican, 
liberal, or conservative.
  Over the last years, I have defended veterans who have been under 
assault from any quarters, left or right. I spoke out in 2000 when John 
McCain's integrity and military record was questioned by the Bush 
campaign in South Carolina. I spoke out when Max Cleland's patriotism 
was savaged by people who had never worn the uniform. I defended Jack 
Murtha when vicious partisans on the right called that decorated marine 
a ``coward.'' I spoke out when the Bush administration questioned the 
patriotism of career military men and Generals throughout the war in 
Iraq, whether it was General Shinseki, or many in uniform who spoke out 
against Secretary Rumsfeld. I don't reserve my defense of patriotism 
for Democrats, I defend all who have worn the uniform, whether they 
agree with me or not. I wish I could say the same for those who brought 
forward the Cornyn amendment and voted against the Boxer amendment.
  This was not a proud day in the Senate, or a high mark in our 
politics; rather, it was hours lost and time wasted when the Senate 
should have delivered what all the men and women of the armed forces 
truly deserve: a policy equal to their sacrifice.
  Mr. FEINGOLD. Mr. President, I opposed the amendments offered by 
Senators Cornyn and Boxer because they were a diversion from the real 
issue before us; namely, the future of our military involvement in 
Iraq. I disagreed with the language used in all of the ads addressed in 
these amendments, but we should not let those ads sidetrack the real 
work of the Senate. I hope the 


[[Page 25055]]


Senate will not get in the habit of 
condemning political speech, even speech that is offensive.

                          ____________________