Escalation in the Middle
East
By Rep Ron Paul
01/15/07 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- While the president’s announcement
that an additional 20,000 troops would be sent to Iraq
dominated the headlines last week, the real story was
the president’s sharp rhetoric towards Iran and Syria.
And recent moves by the administration only serve to
confirm the likelihood of a wider conflict in the Middle
East.
The president stated last week that, “Succeeding in Iraq
also requires defending its territorial integrity- and
stabilizing the region in the face of the extremist
challenge. This begins with addressing Iran and Syria.”
He also announced the deployment of an additional
aircraft carrier battle group to the Persian Gulf, and
the deployment of Patriot air missile defense systems to
countries in the Middle East. Meanwhile, US troops
stormed the Iranian consulate in Iraq and detained
several Iranian diplomats. Taken together, the message
was clear: the administration intends to move the US
closer to a dangerous and ill-advised conflict with
Iran.
As I said last week on the House floor, speculation in
Washington focuses on when, not if, either Israel or the
U.S. will bomb Iran-- possibly with nuclear weapons. The
accusation sounds very familiar: namely, that Iran
possesses weapons of mass destruction. Iran has never
been found in violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty, and our own Central Intelligence Agency says
Iran is more than ten years away from producing any kind
of nuclear weapon. Yet we are told we must act
immediately while we still can!
This all sounds very familiar, but many of my colleagues
don’t seem to have learned much from the invasion of
Iraq. House Democrats strongly criticized the Iraq troop
surge after the president’s announcement, but then
praised the president’s confrontational words condemning
Iran. Many of those opposing a troop surge are not
calling for a withdrawal of our troops from the Middle
East, but rather for “redeployment.” Redeployment to
where? Iran?
We need to return to reality when it comes to our Middle
East policy. We need to reject the increasingly shrill
rhetoric coming from the same voices who urged the
president to invade Iraq.
The truth is that Iran, like Iraq, is a third-world
nation without a significant military. Nothing in
history hints that she is likely to invade a neighboring
country, let alone America or Israel. I am concerned,
however, that a contrived Gulf of Tonkin- type incident
may occur to gain popular support for an attack on Iran.
The best approach to Iran, and Syria for that matter, is
to heed the advice of the Iraq Study Group Report, which
states:
"… the United States should engage directly with Iran
and Syria in order to try to obtain their commitment to
constructive policies toward Iraq and other regional
issues. In engaging with Syria and Iran, the United
States should consider incentives, as well as
disincentives, in seeking constructive results."
In coming weeks I plan to introduce legislation that
urges the administration to heed the advice of the Iraq
Study Group. Dialogue and discussion should replace
inflammatory rhetoric and confrontation in our Middle
East policy, if we truly seek to defeat violent
extremism and terrorism.
Ron Paul is a Republican Congressman from Texas.
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