The
Kucinich Plan For Iraq
By Dennis Kucinich
01/10/07 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- In
November of 2006, after an October upsurge in violence in
Iraq, the American people moved decisively to reject
Republican rule, principally because of the conduct of the
war. Democratic leaders well understand we regained control
of the Congress because of the situation in Iraq. However,
two months later, the Congress is still searching for a plan
around which it can unite to hasten the end of US
involvement in Iraq and the return home of 140,000 US
troops.
There is a compelling need for a
new direction in Iraq, one that recognizes the plight of the
people of Iraq, the false and illegal basis of the United
States war against Iraq, the realities on the ground which
make a military resolution of the conflict unrealistic and
the urgent responsibility of the United States, which caused
the chaos, to use the process of diplomacy and international
law to achieve stability in Iraq, a process which will
establish peace and stability in Iraq allow our troops to
return home with dignity.
The Administration is preparing
to escalate the conflict. They intend to increase troop
numbers to unprecedented levels, without establishing an
ending date for the so-called troop surge. By definition,
this escalation means a continuation of the occupation, more
troop and civilian casualties, more anger toward the US,
more support for the insurgency, more instability in Iraq
and in the region, and prolonged civil war at a time when
there is a general agreement in the world community that the
solution in Iraq must be political not military. Iraq is now
a training ground for insurgents who practice against our
troops.
What is needed is a
comprehensive political process. And the decision is not
President Bush's alone to make.
Congress, as a coequal branch of
government has a responsibility to assist in the initiation
of this process. Congress, under Article 1, Section 8 of the
US Constitution has the war-making power. Congress
appropriates funds for the war. Congress does not dispense
with its obligation to the American people simply by
opposing a troop surge in Iraq.
There are 140,000 troops
remaining in Iraq right now. What about them? When will they
come home? Why would we leave those troops in Iraq when we
have the money to bring them home? Soon the President will
ask for more money for the war. Why would Congress
appropriate more money to keep the troops in Iraq through
the end of President Bush's term, at a total cost of upwards
of two trillion dollars and thousands of more troop
casualties, when military experts say there is no military
solution? Our soldiers stand for us in the field, we must to
stand for them in our legislature by bringing them home.
It is simply not credible to
maintain that one opposes the war and yet continues to fund
it. This contradiction runs as a deep fault line through our
politics, undermining public trust in the political process
and in those elected to represent the people. If you oppose
the war, then do not vote to fund it.
If you have money which can be
used to bring the troops home or to prosecute the war, do
not say you want to bring the troops home while you
appropriate money in a supplemental to keep them in Iraq
fighting a war that cannot be won militarily. This is why
the Administration should be notified now that Congress will
not approve of the appropriations request of up to $160
billion in the spring for the purposes of continuing the
occupation and the war. Continuing to fund the war is not a
plan. It would represent the continuation of disaster.
The US sent our troops into Iraq
without a clear mission. We created a financial, military
and moral dilemma for our nation and now we are talking
about the Iraq war as our problem. The Iraqis are forgotten.
Their country has been destroyed: 650,000 casualties, [based
on the Lancet Report which surveyed casualties from March of
2003 to July of 2006] the shredding of the social fabric of
the nation, civil war, lack of access to food, shelter,
electricity, clean drinking water and health care because
this Administration, with the active participation of the
Congress, authorized a war without reason, without
conscience, without international law.
The US thinks in terms of
solving our own military, strategic, logistical, and
political problems. The US can determine how to solve our
problems, but the Iraqi people will have problems far into
the future. This requires an intensive focus on the
processes needed to stabilize Iraq. If you solve the Iraqi
problem you solve the US problem. Any comprehensive plan for
Iraq must take into account as a primary matter the
conditions and the needs of the Iraqi people, while
providing our nation with a means of righting grievous
wrongs and taking steps to regain US credibility and
felicity within the world community.
I am offering such a plan today.
This plan responds to the concerns of a majority of
Americans. On Tuesday, when Congress resumes its work, I
will present this plan to leadership and members as the only
viable alternative to the Bush Administration's policy of
continued occupation and escalation. Congress must know that
it cannot and must not stand by and watch our troops and
innocent Iraqi civilians die.
These are the elements
of the Kucinich Plan:
1. The US announces it
will end the occupation, close military bases and withdraw.
The insurgency has been fueled by the occupation and the
prospect of a long-term presence as indicated by the
building of permanent bases. A US declaration of an
intention to withdraw troops and close bases will help
dampen the insurgency which has been inspired to resist
colonization and fight invaders and those who have supported
US policy. Furthermore this will provide an opening where
parties within Iraq and in the region can set the stage for
negotiations towards peaceful settlement.
2. US announces that it
will use existing funds to bring the troops and necessary
equipment home. Congress appropriated $70 billion
in bridge funds on October 1st for the war. Money from this
and other DOD accounts can be used to fund the troops in the
field over the next few months, and to pay for the cost of
the return of the troops, (which has been estimated at
between $5 and $7 billion dollars) while a political
settlement is being negotiated and preparations are made for
a transition to an international security and peacekeeping
force.
3. Order a simultaneous
return of all US contractors to the United States and turn
over all contracting work to the Iraqi government.
The contracting process has been rife with world-class
corruption, with contractors stealing from the US Government
and cheating the Iraqi people, taking large contracts and
giving 5% or so to Iraqi subcontractors.
Reconstruction activities must
be reorganized and closely monitored in Iraq by the Iraqi
government, with the assistance of the international
community. The massive corruption as it relates to US
contractors, should be investigated by congressional
committees and federal grand juries. The lack of tangible
benefits, the lack of accountability for billions of
dollars, while millions of Iraqis do not have a means of
financial support, nor substantive employment, cries out for
justice.
It is noteworthy that after the
first Gulf War, Iraqis reestablished electricity within
three months, despite sanctions. Four years into the US
occupation there is no water, nor reliable electricity in
Baghdad, despite massive funding from the US and from the
Madrid conference. The greatest mystery involves the
activities of private security companies who function as
mercenaries. Reports of false flag operations must be
investigated by an international tribunal.
4. Convene a regional
conference for the purpose of developing a security and
stabilization force for Iraq. The focus should be
on a process which solves the problems of Iraq. The US has
told the international community, "This is our policy and we
want you to come and help us implement it." The
international community may have an interest in helping
Iraq, but has no interest in participating in the
implementation of failed US policy.
A shift in US policy away from
unilateralism and toward cooperation will provide new
opportunities for exploring common concerns about the plight
of Iraq. The UN is the appropriate place to convene, through
the office of the Secretary General, all countries that have
interests, concerns and influence, including the five
permanent members of the Security Council and the European
community, and all Arab nations.
The end of the US occupation and
the closing of military bases are necessary preconditions
for such a conference. When the US creates a shift of policy
and announces it will focus on the concerns of the people of
Iraq, it will provide a powerful incentive for nations to
participate.
It is well known that while some
nations may see the instability in Iraq as an opportunity,
there is also an even-present danger that the civil war in
Iraq threatens the stability of nations throughout the
region. The impending end of the occupation will provide a
breakthrough for the cooperation between the US and the UN
and the UN and countries of the region. The regional
conference must include Iran, Syria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and
Jordan.
5. Prepare an
international security and peacekeeping force to move in,
replacing US troops who then return home. The UN
has an indispensable role to play here, but cannot do it as
long as the US is committed to an occupation. The UN is the
only international organization with the ability to mobilize
and the legitimacy to authorize troops.
The UN is the place to develop
the process, to build the political consensus, to craft a
political agreement, to prepare the ground for the
peacekeeping mission, to implement the basis of an agreement
that will end the occupation and begin the transition to
international peacekeepers. This process will take at least
three months from the time the US announces the intention to
end the occupation.
The US will necessarily have to
fund a peacekeeping mission, which, by definition will not
require as many troops. Fifty percent of the peacekeeping
troops must come from nations with large Muslim populations.
The international security force, under UN direction, will
remain in place until the Iraqi government is capable of
handling its own security. The UN can field an international
security and peacekeeping mission, but such an initiative
will not take shape unless there is a peace to keep, and
that will be dependent upon a political process which
reaches agreement between all the Iraqi parties. Such an
agreement means fewer troops will be needed.
According to UN sources, the UN
the peacekeeping mission in the Congo, which is four times
larger in area than Iraq, required about twenty thousand
troops. Finally the UN does not mobilize quickly because
they depend upon governments to supply the troops, and
governments are slow. The ambition of the UN is to deploy in
less than ninety days. However, without an agreement of
parties the UN is not likely to approve a mission to Iraq,
because countries will not give them troops.
6. Develop and fund a
process of national reconciliation. The process of
reconciliation must begin with a national conference,
organized with the assistance of the UN and with the
participation of parties who can create, participate in and
affect the process of reconciliation, defined as an airing
of all grievances and the creation of pathways toward open,
transparent talks producing truth and resolution of
grievances. The Iraqi government has indicated a desire for
the process of reconciliation to take place around it, and
that those who were opposed to the government should give up
and join the government. Reconciliation must not be confused
with capitulation, nor with realignments for the purposes of
protecting power relationships.
For example, Kurds need to be
assured that their own autonomy will be regarded and
therefore obviate the need for the Kurds to align with
religious Shia for the purposes of self-protection. The
problem in Iraq is that every community is living in fear.
The Shia, who are the majority fear they will not be allowed
to government even though they are a majority. The Kurds are
afraid they will lose the autonomy they have gained. The
Sunnis think they will continue to be made to pay for the
sins of Saddam.
A reconciliation process which
brings people together is the only way to overcome their
fears and reconcile their differences. It is essential to
create a minimum of understanding and mutual confidence
between the Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds.
But how can a reconciliation
process be constructed in Iraq when there is such mistrust:
Ethnic cleansing is rampant. The police get their money from
the US and their ideas from Tehran. They function as
religious militia, fighting for supremacy, while the
Interior Ministry collaborates. Two or three million people
have been displaced. When someone loses a family member, a
loved one, a friend, the first response is likely to be that
there is no reconciliation.
It is also difficult to move
toward reconciliation when one or several parties engaged in
the conflict think they can win outright. The Shia, some of
whom are out for revenge, think they can win because they
have the defacto support of the US. The end of the US
occupation will enhance the opportunity for the Shia to come
to an accommodation with the Sunnis. They have the oil, the
weapons, and support from Iran. They have little interest in
reconciling with those who are seen as Baathists.
The Sunnis think they have
experience, as the former army of Saddam, boasting half a
million people insurgents. The Sunnis have so much more
experience and motivation that as soon as the Americans
leave they believe they can defeat the Shia government. Any
Sunni revenge impulses can be held in check by international
peacekeepers. The only sure path toward reconciliation is
through the political process. All factions and all
insurgents not with al Queda must be brought together in a
relentless process which involves Saudis, Turks and
Iranians.
7. Reconstruction and
Jobs. Restart the failed reconstruction program in
Iraq. Rebuild roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, and other
public facilities, houses, and factories with jobs and job
training going to local Iraqis.
8. Reparations.
The US and Great Britain have a high moral obligation to
enable a peace process by beginning a program of significant
reparations to the people of Iraq for the loss of lives,
physical and emotional injuries, and damage to property.
There should be special programs to rescue the tens of
thousands of Iraqi orphans from lives of destitution. This
is essential to enable reconciliation.
9. Political
Sovereignty. Put an end to suspicions that the US
invasion and occupation was influenced by a desire to gain
control of Iraq's oil assets by A) setting aside initiatives
to privatize Iraqi oil interests or other national assets,
and B) by abandoning efforts to change Iraqi national law to
facilitate privatization.
Any attempt to sell Iraqi oil
assets during the US occupation will be a significant
stumbling block to peaceful resolution. The current Iraqi
constitution gives oil proceeds to the regions and the
central government gets nothing. There must be fairness in
the distribution of oil resources in Iraq. An Iraqi National
Oil Trust should be established to guarantee the oil assets
will be used to create a fully functioning infrastructure
with financial mechanisms established protect the oil wealth
for the use of the people of Iraq.
10. Iraq Economy.
Set forth a plan to stabilize Iraq's cost for food and
energy, on par to what the prices were before the US
invasion and occupation. This would block efforts underway
to raise the price of food and energy at a time when most
Iraqis do not have the means to meet their own needs.
11. Economic
Sovereignty. Work with the world community to
restore Iraq's fiscal integrity without structural
readjustment measures of the IMF or the World Bank.
12. International Truth
and Reconciliation. Establish a policy of truth and
reconciliation between the people of the United States and
the people of Iraq. In 2002, I led the effort in the House
of Representatives challenging the Bush Administration's
plans to go to war in Iraq. I organized 125 Democrats to
vote against the Iraq war resolution. The analysis I offered
at that time stands out in bold relief for its foresight
when compared to the assessments of many who today aspire to
national leadership. Just as the caution I urged four years
ago was well-placed, so the plan I am presenting today is
workable, and it responds to the will of the American
people, expressed this past November. This is a moment for
clarity and foresight. This is a moment to take a new
direction in Iraq. One with honor and dignity. One which
protects our troops and rescues Iraqi civilians. One which
repairs our relationship with Iraqis and with the world.
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