[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 158 (2012), Part 2]
[House]
[Pages 1926-1927]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                          AFGHANISTAN AND IRAN

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Minnesota (Mr. Ellison) for 5 minutes.
  Mr. ELLISON. Mr. Speaker, President Obama's decision to end combat 
operations in Afghanistan next year is welcome news. I commend 
President Obama for making this decision. But we should bring our 
troops home even sooner than that.
  The American people are tired of this war in Afghanistan. Large 
majorities of them want a safe and orderly withdrawal from Afghanistan 
as soon as possible. A decade of war has ravaged military families, our 
Nation's treasury, and our standing in the world.
  I commend President Obama for ending the war in Iraq as well. I 
commend him for trying to end the war in Afghanistan. The courageous 
truth telling of Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Davis should give us pause. 
His report and the failure to establish peace in Afghanistan after 10 
years of war should remind us that we need a political solution, not a 
military one.
  We have ended the war in Iraq. This is a good thing. We are slowly 
ending the war in Afghanistan. This is also welcome news. But I suggest 
to you, Mr. Speaker, that it would be unwise for the United States to 
enter into a new war just as we're ending two others.
  But if you listen to the rhetoric around Washington and the Nation, 
Mr. Speaker, it is literally impossible to not hear the drumbeat of war 
with Iran. The rhetoric in Washington about the military strike against 
Iran leads me to think that we may be sliding into a new war yet.
  I would like to be perfectly clear, because whenever you speak 
against a war, your patriotism is challenged and your courage is 
challenged until they find out that you were right. So let me be clear:
  I strongly oppose nuclear proliferation, and that includes Iran. I 
have supported sanctions against Iran to help prevent the spread of 
nuclear weapons. Iran's repression of human rights and support for 
terrorist groups is appalling.
  But the heated rhetoric we hear around our city and the events on the 
world stage are deeply troubling, Mr. Speaker. News headlines read, 
``The Coming Attack on Iran.'' Pundits discuss the possibility with 
shocking casualness, and I am alarmed by this.
  America, we have seen this movie before, and, Mr. Speaker, it doesn't 
end well. Two months after leaving Iraq, we have already forgotten the 
consequences of war it appears. If you need a reminder, talk to a 
veteran or a veteran's widow.
  Our military leaders are cautioning against a strike on Iran. 
Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta said the United States ``could 
possibly be the target of retaliation from Iran, sinking our ships, 
striking our military bases.'' He said, ``That would not only involve 
many lives, but I think could consume

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the Middle East in a confrontation and a conflict that we would 
regret.'' Let me repeat, ``a conflict that we would regret.''
  Mr. Speaker, I wish the United States had never entered Iraq. And 
before we entered it, the world--not just Americans, but the world--
said, ``Don't do it.'' Some people led us to war anyway; and haven't we 
all regretted--after no weapons of mass destruction, no linkage between 
Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden--that none of these things that were 
recommended have come to pass, yet we've lost, literally, thousands of 
American lives and perhaps $1 trillion.
  Israeli intelligence officials have equally dire predictions about a 
military strike against Iran. Former Israeli Mossad Chief Meir Dagan 
said that attacking Iran ``would mean regional war, and in that case, 
you would have given Iran the best possible reason to continue the 
nuclear program.''
  There is serious concern that a military strike on Iran would hasten 
Iran's development of a nuclear weapon, not slow it down. A strike 
would only delay--not end--development. Speaking about what would 
happen after a military strike, retired General Anthony Zinni said, 
``If you follow this all the way down, eventually I'm putting boots on 
the ground somewhere.''
  America cannot afford another war. We've just gotten out of Iraq. 
We're getting out of Afghanistan. And diplomacy, diplomacy, diplomacy 
is what is called for to avoid a new war with Iran.

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