Iraq Cannot Be Won
By Rep. John Murtha, AlterNet
Posted on November 19, 2005, Printed on November 19, 2005
http://www.alternet.org/story/28432/
Following is the transcript of a speech by conservative
Democratic Representative John Murtha of Pennsylvania on October
17. Murtha is the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriation
Committee's defense panel.
I just spoke to the Democratic Caucus and told them my feelings
about the war. And I started out by saying the war in Iraq is
not going as advertised. It's a flawed policy wrapped in
illusion. The American public is way ahead of the members of
Congress.
The United States and coalition troops have done all they can in
Iraq. But it's time for a change in direction. Our military is
suffering. The future of our country is at risk. We cannot
continue on the present course. It is evident that continued
military action in Iraq is not in the best interest of the
United States of America, the Iraqi people or the Persian Gulf
Region.
General Casey said, in a September 2005 hearing, the perception
of occupation in Iraq is a major driving force behind the
insurgency. General Abizaid said, on the same date, reducing the
size of visibility of the coalition forces in Iraq is a part of
our counterinsurgency strategy.
For two and a half years, I've been concerned about U.S. policy
and the plan in Iraq. I've addressed my concerns with the
administration and the Pentagon, and I've spoken out in public
about my concerns. The main reason for going to war has been
discredited.
A few days before the start of the war, I was in Kuwait.
The military drew a line -- a red line around Baghdad, and they
said when U.S. forces cross that line, they will be attacked by
the Iraqis with weapons of mass destruction. And I believed it,
and they believed it. But the U.S. forces -- the commander said,
they were prepared. They said they had well-trained forces with
the appropriate protective gear.
Now, let me tell you we've spent more money on intelligence than
any -- than all the countries in the world put together and more
on intelligence than most countries' GDP. And when they said
it's a world intelligence failure, it's a U.S. intelligence
failure. It's a U.S. failure, and it's a failure in the way the
intelligence was used.
I've been visiting our wounded troops at Bethesda and Walter
Reed, as some of you know, almost every week since the beginning
of the war. And what demoralizes them is not the criticism; what
demoralizes them is going to war with not enough troops and
equipment to make the transition to peace. The devastation
caused by IEDs is what they're concerned about, being deployed
to Iraq when their homes have been ravaged by hurricanes -- and
you've seen these stories about some of the people's whose homes
were destroyed, and they were deployed to Iraq after it -- being
on their second or third deployment, leaving their families
behind without a network of support.
The threat by terrorism is real, but we have other threats that
cannot be ignored. We must prepare to face all these threats.
The future of our military is at risk. Our military and their
families are stretched thin. Many say the Army's broken. Some of
our troops are on their third deployment. Recruitment is down
even as the military's lowered its standards. They expect to
take 20 percent Category 4, which is the lowest category, which
they said they'd never take, but they've been forced to do that,
to try to meet a reduced quota. Defense budgets are being cut.
Personnel costs are skyrocketing, particularly in health care.
Choices will have to be made, and we cannot allow promises we
have made to our military families in terms of service benefits,
in terms of their health care, to be negotiated away.
Procurement programs that ensure our military dominance cannot
be negotiated away.
We must be prepared. The war in Iraq has caused huge shortfalls
in our bases at home. I've been to three bases in the United
States, and each one of them were short of things they need to
train the people going to Iraq. Much of our ground equipment is
worn out. And I've told the COs you better get in the business
of rehabilitating equipment because we're not going to be able
to buy any new equipment because the money's not going to be
there.
George Washington said to be prepared for war is one of the most
effective means of preserving peace. We don't want somebody to
miscalculate down the road. It takes us 18 years to put a weapon
system in the arsenal. And I don't know what the threat is,
nobody knows what the threat is, but we better make sure we have
what's necessary to preserve our peace. We must rebuild our
Army.
Our deficit is growing out of control. The director of the
Congressional Budget Office recently admitted to being terrified
about the deficit in the coming decades. In other words, where's
the money going to come from for defense?
I voted against every tax cut -- every tax cut I voted against.
My wife says, "You shouldn't say that." I believe that when we
voted for these tax cuts, you can't have a war, you can't have a
tragedy like we had, the hurricanes, and then not have a huge
deficit, which is going to increase interest rates and could
cause real problems. This is the first prolonged war we've ever
fought with three years of tax cuts without full mobilization of
American industry and without a draft. On the college campuses
they always ask me about a draft: You're for a draft. I say
yeah, there's only two of us voted for it, so you don't have to
worry too much about it.
The burden of this war has not been shared equally. The military
and their families are shouldering the burden. Our military has
been fighting this war in Iraq for over two and a half years.
Our military has accomplished its mission and done its duty.
Our military captured Saddam Hussein, captured or killed his
closest associates. But the war continues to intensify. Deaths
and injuries are growing, and over 2,079 in confirmed American
deaths, over 15,500 have been seriously injured -- half of them
returned to duty, and it's estimated over 50,000 will suffer
from what I call battle fatigue. And there have been reports
that at least 30,000 Iraqi civilians have been killed.
I just recently visited Anbar province in Iraq in order to
assess the conditions on the ground. And last May we put in the
emergency supplemental spending bill -- [the] Moran amendment --
which was accepted in conference, which required the secretary
of Defense to submit a quarterly report about the -- and
accurately measure the stability and security in Iraq. Now --
we've now received two reports. So I've just come back from
Iraq, and I looked at the next report. I'm disturbed by the
findings in the key indicator areas.
Oil production and energy production are below prewar level. You
remember they said that was going to pay for the war, and it's
proved to (be) below prewar level. Our reconstruction efforts
have been crippled by security situations. Only $9 billion of
$18 billion appropriated for reconstruction has been spent. And
I said on the floor of the House, when they passed the $87
billion, the $18 billion was the most important part of it
because you got to get people back to work, you got to get
electricity, you got to get water! Unemployment is 60 percent.
Now, they tell you in the United States it's less than that, so
it may be 40 percent. But in Iraq, they told me it's 60 percent
when I was there. Clean water is scarce, and they only spent
$500 million of the $2.2 billion appropriated for water
projects.
And most importantly -- this is the most important point --
incidents have increased from 150 to a week to over 700 in the
last year. Instead of attacks going down over a time when
addition of more troops -- when we had addition of more troops,
attacks have grown dramatically. Since the revelation of Abu
Ghraib, American casualties have doubled. You look at the
timeline. You'll see one per day average before Abu Ghraib.
After Abu Ghraib, you'll see two a day -- two killed per day
because of the dramatic impact that Abu Ghraib had on what we
were doing in [Iraq. And] the State Department reported in 2004,
right before they quit putting the reports out, that -- they
indicated a sharp increase in global terrorism.
I said over a year ago now, the military and the administration
agrees now that Iraq cannot be won militarily.
I said two years ago, the key to progress in Iraq is Iraqitize,
internationalize and energize.
Now, we have a packet for you where I sent a letter to the
president in September, and I got an answer back from assistant
secretary of Defense five months later. I believe the same
today. They don't want input. They only want to criticize. They
-- Bush One was the opposite; Bush One might not like the
criticism and constructive suggestions, but he listened to what
we had to say.
I believe that and I have concluded the presence of U.S. troops
in Iraq is impeding this progress. Our troops have become the
primary target of the insurgency. They are united against U.S.
forces, and we have become a catalyst for violence. U.S. troops
are the common enemy of the Sunnis, the Saddamists and the
foreign jihadists. And let me tell you, they haven't captured
any in this latest activity, so this idea that they're coming in
from outside, we still think [they constitute] only seven
percent [of the insurgency].
I believe with the U.S. troop redeployment the Iraqi security
forces will be incentivized to take control. A poll recently
conducted -- this is a British poll reported in The Washington
Times -- over 80 percent of Iraqis are strongly opposed to the
presence of coalition forces, and about 45 percent of Iraqi
population believe attacks against American troops are
justified. I believe we need to turn Iraq over to the Iraqis. I
believe before the Iraqi elections, scheduled for mid-December,
the Iraqi people and the emerging government must be put on
notice. The United States will immediately redeploy --
immediately redeploy. No schedule which can be changed, nothing
that's controlled by the Iraqis, this is an immediate
redeployment of our American forces because they have become the
target.
All of Iraq must know that Iraq is free -- free from a United
States occupation, and I believe this will send a signal to the
Sunnis to join the political process. My experience in a
guerrilla war says that until you find out where they are, until
the public is willing to tell you where the insurgent is, you're
not going to win this war, and Vietnam was the same way. If you
have an operation -- a military operation and you tell the
Sunnis because the families are in jeopardy, they -- or you tell
the Iraqis, then they are going to tell the insurgents, because
they're worried about their families.
My plan calls for immediate redeployment of U.S. troops
consistent with the safety of U.S. forces, to create a quick
reaction force in the region, to create an over-the-horizon
presence of Marines, and to diplomatically pursue security and
stability in Iraq.
Now let me personalize this thing for you. I go out to the
hospitals every week. One of my first visits, two young women.
One was 22 or 23, had two children, lost her husband. One was
19. And they both went out to the hospitals to tell the people
out there how happy they were -- or how happy they should be to
be alive. In other words, they were reaching out because they
felt their husbands had done their duty, but they wanted to tell
them that they were so fortunate, even though they were wounded,
to be alive.
I have a young fellow in my district who was blinded and he lost
his foot. They did everything they could for him at Walter Reed,
then they sent him home. His father was in jail. He had nobody
at home. Imagine this. A young kid that age, 22, 23 years old,
goes home to nobody. VA did everything they could do to help
him. He was reaching out.
So they sent him -- to make sure that he was a blind, they sent
him to Johns Hopkins. Johns Hopkins started sending bills. Then
the collection agency started sending bills. Well, when I found
out about it, you could imagine they stopped the collection
agency and Walter Reed finally paid the bill. But imagine, a
young person being blinded, without a foot, and he's getting
bills from a collection agency.
I saw a young soldier who lost two legs and an arm, and his dad
was pushing him around.
I go to the mental ward; you know what they say to me? They got
battle fatigue. You know what they say? "We don't get nothing.
We get nothing. We're just as bruised, just as injured as
everybody else, but we don't even get a Purple Heart. We get
nothing. We get shunted aside. We get looked at as if there's
something wrong with us."
Saw a young woman from Notre Dame. Basketball player, right-
handed, lost her right hand. You know what she's worried about?
She's worried about her husband because he lost weight worrying
about her. These are great people. These soldiers and people who
are serving, they're marvelous people.
I saw a Seabee lying there with three children. His mother and
his wife were there. He was paralyzed from the neck down. There
were 18 of them killed in this one mortar attack. And they were
all crying because they knew what it would be like in the
future.
I saw a Marine rubbing his boy's hand. He was a Marine in
Vietnam, and his son had just come back from Iraq. And he said
he wanted his brother to come home. That's what the father said,
because the kid couldn't speak. He was in a coma.
He kept rubbing his hand.
He didn't want to come home. I told him the Marine Corps would
get him home.
I had one other kid, lost both his hands. Blinded. I was
praising him, saying how proud we were of him and how much we
appreciate his service to the country. "Anything I can do for
you?" His mother said get me a -- "Get him a Purple Heart." I
said, "What do you mean, get him a Purple Heart?"
He had been wounded in taking care of bomblets, these bomblets
that they drop that they have to dismantle. He had been wounded
and lost both his hands. The kid behind him was killed.
His mother said, "Because they're friendly bomblets, they
wouldn't give him a Purple Heart."
I met with the commandant. I said, "If you don't give him a
Purple Heart, I'll give him one of mine." And they gave him a
Purple Heart.
Let me tell you something. We're charged -- Congress is charged
with sending our sons and daughters into battle, and it's our
responsibility, our obligation to speak out for them. That's why
I'm speaking out.
Our military's done everything that has been asked of them. U.S.
cannot accomplish anything further in Iraq militarily; it's time
to bring the troops home.
© 2005 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at:
http://www.alternet.org/story/28432/
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Murtha, My Dear
Posted by: Tom Degan on Nov 19, 2005 3:33 AM [Report this
comment]
Murtha, my dear
Though we spend our days in
Pure frustration please
You're the fresh breeze
Finally...FINALLY the democrats - or at the very least one of
them - is starting to show some refreshing, long overdue courage
(What makes the muscrat guard his musk? Courage!) Finally
they're starting to wake up to the fact that for the second time
in a generation THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IS GOING TO LOSE A
WAR! Sure they'll pull out of there and "claim" victory, but the
facts on the ground will tell an entirely different story. For
the second time in a generation the USA has been pushed into
another unwinnable war by another half-witted Texan (what is it
about Texas?) Finally the American people are awakening from the
right-wing coma they've been sleeping under for the last
twenty-five years.
Prediction: 2008 will be 1932 all over again. Way back then a
"liberal" (BOO!) democrat, a man who lived just across the river
from where I'm writing from, a betrayer of his class named
Franklin D. Roosevelt was elected to the presidency and saved
this country from the worst elements of corporate greed and st