Before the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Report on
Iraq to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, April 9, 2008
Opening Statement
Mr. Chairman, I would like to thank you for calling this
hearing on the current state of affairs in Iraq with General
David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker. Reviewing the
presentations by our panel, I have noted with some concern
that they seem more focused on justifying a future attack
on Iran than reporting on progress in Iraq. Much of the assertions
about Iran in Iraq seem illogical, others seem intended to
inflame the situation with little justification.
Particularly, I am concerned about claims that a new enemy
in Iraq has emerged with ties to Iran. First we were told
that the enemy was Saddam Hussein and his Baathist Party.
Then we were told the enemy was the "dead-enders"
from Saddam’s former government. Then the prime enemy
became "al-Qaeda in Iraq," a prime focus of the
presentation by Ambassador Crocker and General Petraeus last
September. Now we are told that the new enemies are mysterious
"Special Groups" that are said to have spun off
from al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army.
If this phenomenon of constantly emerging enemies bent on
destabilizing Iraq is accurate and our presence in Iraq keeps
generating new enemies, perhaps the problem is the occupation
itself. If this is the case, doesn’t it make sense that
our departure from Iraq may actually have a stabilizing effect?
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I suspect these allegations that Iranian-supported "Special
Groups" are now the prime enemy are in reality designed
to provide an excuse for a planned US attack on Iran or are
meant as justification for a permanent US military presence
in Iraq.
It makes little sense to assert that Iran is funding militias
to undermine the Iraqi government. The current Iraqi government
may have been approved by the United States, but essentially
it was made in Iran. The leading political parties of Iraq,
the DAWA and the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council have close
ties to Iran. Leaders of these parties were in exile in Iran
until the US invasion of Iraq. Iranian president Ahmadinejad
is warmly welcomed in Baghdad by Iraqi Prime Minister Maliki.
Why would Iran set up militias in the south to destabilize
a government with such strong Iranian ties? I find the allegation
that Iran just cannot tolerate an elected government next
door to be unsatisfying, particularly considering that Iran
itself regularly holds elections where a wide variety of political
parties compete for power.
It is alleged that the rockets fired into the Green Zone
during the recent clashes in Baghdad and Basra were made in
2007 in Iran. Is it not true, however, that if the Iranian
government were to actually arm the Iraqi militias, these
groups would have more modern weapons to counter U.S. helicopter
gunships and heavy tanks? Is there any hard proof that the
Iranian government is arming groups in Iraq? There are reports
that thousands of US weapons have gone missing in Iraq. If
some of these turn up in the hands of insurgents, would it
make sense to suggest that the US government is intentionally
arming them?
In fact, there is plenty of evidence that Iran is trying
to prevent the further destabilization of Iraq, which makes
sense considering that Iran is next door and would keenly
feel the effects of an Iraq fallen into civil war. The Associated
Press reported yesterday that the Iranian government has condemned
attacks on the "Green Zone" in Iraq. According to
other press reports, the government of Iran brokered a ceasefire
after recent Iraqi government moves against elements of al-Sadr’s
Mahdi Army in Basra.
Mr. Chairman, I would like to conclude by again stating my
concern that the real purpose of today’s testimony is
to further set the stage for an attack on Iran. Congress should
make it very clear that there is no authority under current
law for an attack on Iran. It is in our best interest to talk
with Iran and to work with Iran to help stabilize the situation
in Iraq. It is also in our immediate interest to remove US
forces from Iraq as quickly as it is safe to do so.
Questions at Hearing
Questions for the Witnesses, General David H. Petraeus, USA
and The Honorable Ryan C. Crocker
Mr. Chairman, I would like to submit several questions to
the panel. I know there will not be enough time to answer
these, but I want to get them into the record.
Why should the American people continue to support a war
that was justified by false information, since Saddam Hussein
never aggressed against the United States, Iraq had nothing
to do with 9/11, and Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction?
It is said that we must continue the war because we have
already sacrificed so much. But what is moral about demanding
even more needless sacrifice of human lives merely to save
face for the mistakes of invading and occupying Iraq?
Doesn’t it seem awfully strange that the Iraqi government
we support is an ally of the Iranians who are our declared
enemies? Are we not now supporting the Iranians by propping
up their allies in Iraq? If (Iraqi Prime Minister) Maliki
is our ally and he has "diplomatic relations" with
(Iranian President) Ahmadinejad why can’t we? Why must
we continue to provoke Iran, just looking for an excuse to
bomb that country? Does our policy in Iraq not guarantee chaos
for years to come?
It is estimated that up to 2,000 Iraqi soldiers refused to
fight against al-Sadr’s militia. Why should we not expect
many of the 80,000 Sunnis we have recently armed to someday
turn their weapons against us, since they as well as the Mahdi
Army detest any and all foreign occupation?
Is it not true that our ally Malaki broke the ceasefire declared
by al-Sadr by initiating the recent violence? Is it not true
that the current ceasefire was brokered by the Iranians, who
also condemned the attacks on the "Green Zone"?
How can we blame all the violence on the Iranians?
Is it not true that with the recent surge in violence in
March, attacks are now back at the same levels as they were
in 2005?
Does Iran not have a greater justification to be involved
in neighboring Iraq than we do, since it is 6,000 miles from
our shores? If China and Russia were occupying Mexico how
would we react?
Since no one can define "winning the war," just
who do we expect to surrender? Does this not mean that this
war will be endless since the political leaders will not end
it – until we go broke, and maybe that’s not so
far off?