-Caveat Lector-

Congress AWOL
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD


Before the US House of Representatives, February 4, 2004

There is plenty of blame to go around for the
mistakes made by going to war in Iraq, especially
now that it is common knowledge Saddam Hussein
told the truth about having no weapons of mass
destruction, and that Al Qaida and 9/11 were in no
way related to the Iraqi government.

Our intelligence agencies failed for whatever
reason this time, but their frequent failures should
raise the question of whether or not secretly
spending forty billion taxpayer dollars annually
gathering bad information is a good investment. The
administration certainly failed us by making the
decision to sacrifice so much in life and limb, by
plunging us into this Persian Gulf quagmire that
surely will last for years to come.

But before Congress gets too carried away with
condemning the administration or the intelligence
gathering agencies, it ought to look to itself. A
proper investigation and debate by this Congress
as we're now scrambling t o accomplish  clearly
was warranted prior to any decision to go to war.
An open and detailed debate on a proper
declaration of war certainly would have revealed
that U.S. national security was not threatened  and
the whole war could have been avoided. Because
Congress did not do that, it deserves the greatest
criticism for its dereliction of duty.

There was a precise reason why the most serious
decision made by a country  the decision to go to
war  was assigned in our Constitution to the body
closest to the people. If we followed this charge
I'm certain fewer wars would be fought, wide
support would be achieved for just defensive wars,
there would be less political finger-pointing if
events went badly, and blame could not be placed
on one individual or agency. This process would
more likely achieve victory, which has eluded us in
recent decades.

The president reluctantly has agreed to support an
independent commission to review our intelligence
gathering failures, and that is good. Cynics said
nothing much would be achieved by studying
pre-9/11 intelligence failures, but it looks like some
objective criticisms will emerge from that inquiry.
We can hope for the best from this newly appointed
commission.

But already we hear the inquiry will be deliberately
delayed, limited to investigating only the failures of
the intelligence agencies themselves, and may
divert its focus to studying intelligence gathering
related to North Korea and elsewhere. If the
commission avoids the central controversy
whether or not there was selective use of
information or undue pressure put on the CIA to
support a foregone conclusion to go to war by the
administration  the commission will appear a
sham.

Regardless of the results, the process of the inquiry
is missing the most important point  the failure of
Congress to meet its responsibility on the decision
to go, or not go, to war. The current mess was
predictable from the beginning. Unfortunately,
Congress voluntarily gave up its prerogative over
war and illegally transferred this power to the
president in October of 2002. The debate we are
having now should have occurred here in the halls
of Congress then. We should have debated a
declaration of war resolution. Instead, Congress
chose to transfer this decision-making power to the
president to avoid the responsibility of making the
hard choice of sending our young people into harms
way, against a weak, third world country. This the
president did on his own, with congressional
acquiescence. The blame game has emerged only
now that we are in the political season. Sadly, the
call for and the appointment of the commission is
all part of this political process.

It is truly disturbing to see many who abdicated
their congressional responsibility to declare or
reject war, who timidly voted to give the president
the power he wanted, now posturing as his harshest
critics.

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