ACDN - Action of Citizens for Nuclear Disarmament
logo ACDN banniere ACDNVisiter ACDN
Accueil-Home ACDN Contact ACDN Consulter le plan du site - SiteMap Other Version
vous etes ici Homepage > News > External sources > Our Troops Must Leave Iraq
ACDN, What is it ?

News
Communiqués
External sources
Letters from ACDN
News Articles

Actions
2nd RID-NBC
3rd RID-NBC
Campaign "The Very Last Atom!"
Gathering for a Livable World

Petitions

Correspondance
International

Medias

Background papers

EUROPE

French Elections
News of the Presidential Campaign

Our Troops Must Leave Iraq
by Walter Cronkite and David Krieger


Published 5 December 2007

Published on Tuesday, December 4, 2007 by CommonDreams.org

The American people no longer support the war in Iraq. The war is being carried on by a stubborn president who, like Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon during the Vietnam War, does not want to lose. But from the beginning this has been an ill-considered and poorly prosecuted war that, like the Vietnam War, has diminished respect for America. We believe Mr. Bush would like to drag the war on long enough to hand it off to another president.

The war in Iraq reminds us of the tragedy of the Vietnam War. Both wars began with false assertions by the president to the American people and the Congress. Like Vietnam, the Iraq War has introduced a new vocabulary: “shock and awe,” “mission accomplished,” “the surge.” Like Vietnam, we have destroyed cities in order to save them. It is not a strategy for success.

The Bush administration has attempted to forestall ending the war by putting in more troops, but more troops will not solve the problem. We have lost the hearts and minds of most of the Iraqi people, and victory no longer seems to be even a remote possibility. It is time to end our occupation of Iraq, and bring our troops home.

This war has had only limited body counts. There are reports that more than one million Iraqis have died in the war. These reports cannot be corroborated because the US military does not make public the number of the Iraqi dead and injured. There are also reports that some four million Iraqis have been displaced and are refugees either abroad or within their own country. Iraqis with the resources to leave the country have left. They are frightened. They don’t trust the US, its allies or its mercenaries to protect them and their interests.

We know more about the body counts of American soldiers in Iraq. Some 4,000 American soldiers have been killed in this war, about a third more than the number of people who died in the terrorist attacks of 9/11. And some 28,000 American soldiers have suffered debilitating injuries. Many more have been affected by the trauma of war in ways that they will have to live with for the rest of their lives - ways that will have serious effects not only on their lives and the lives of their loved ones, but on society as a whole. Due to woefully inadequate resources being provided, our injured soldiers are not receiving the medical treatment and mental health care that they deserve.

The invasion of Iraq was illegal from the start. Not only was Congress lied to in order to secure its support for the invasion of Iraq, but the war lacked the support of the United Nations Security Council and thus was an aggressive war initiated on the false pretenses of weapons of mass destruction. There were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Nor has any assertion of a relationship between Iraq and al Qaeda proven to be true. In the end, democracy has not come to Iraq. Its government is still being forced to bend to the will of the US administration.

What the war has accomplished is the undermining of US credibility throughout the world, the weakening of our military forces, and the erosion of our Bill of Rights. Nobel Laureate economist Joseph Stiglitz calculates that the war is costing American tax payers more than $1 trillion. This amount could double if we continue the war. Each minute we are spending $500,000 in Iraq. Our losses are incalculable. It is time to remove our military forces from Iraq.

We must ask ourselves whether continuing to pursue this war is benefiting the American people or weakening us. We must ask whether continuing the war is benefiting the Iraqi people or inflicting greater suffering upon them. We believe the answer to these inquiries is that both the American and Iraqi people would benefit by ending the US military presence in Iraq.

Moving forward is not complicated, but it will require courage. Step one is to proceed with the rapid withdrawal of US troops from Iraq and hand over the responsibility for the security of Iraq to Iraqi forces. Step two is to remove our military bases from Iraq and to turn Iraqi oil over to Iraqis. Step three is to provide resources to the Iraqis to rebuild the infrastructure that has been destroyed in the war.

Congress must act. Although Congress never declared war, as required by the Constitution, they did give the president the authority to invade Iraq. Congress must now withdraw that authority and cease its funding of the war.

It is not likely, however, that Congress will act unless the American people make their voices heard with unmistakable clarity. That is the way the Vietnam War was brought to an end. It is the way that the Iraq War will also be brought to an end. The only question is whether it will be now, or whether the war will drag on, with all the suffering that implies, to an even more tragic, costly and degrading defeat. We will be a better, stronger and more decent country to bring the troops home now.


Walter Cronkite is the former long-time anchor for CBS Evening News. David Krieger is President of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation.


L'argent est le nerf de la paix ! ACDN vous remercie de lui faire un DON

Other versions
print Printable version
pdfPDF Version


Share through social networks

Also in this section

Nuclear Abolition Flame kicks-off World March
Viable Proposal for Disarming the Middle East of Weapons of Mass Destruction
Missile killer scores a first Target hit after leaving booster.
US Congress resolution versus UN fact-finding report (Oct 29, 2009)
5 ex-Soviet republics in Central Asia sign nuclear free zone treaty
US Air Strikes
“According to the best values of the IDF”
Turning point at Chernobyl
Gaza War Crimes: Israeli Government Contradicts its Own "Self-Defense" Argument
Britain’s boycott of the UN multilateral nuclear disarmament talks

navigation motscles

IRAQ
D.U. Effects on People in the South of Iraq
The Iraq lesson: the attack on “Forward Base Falcon”
Bush doesn’t want detente. He wants to attack Iran
UK radiation jump blamed on Iraq shells. Europe contaminated?
Generals opposing Iraq war break with military tradition
Fallujah babies born with birth defects as a result of DU Weapons
USA
US-India Nuclear Deal
Leading Americans Ask U.S. Military to Refuse Orders to Attack Iran
The "Peace President" Wants To Keep America’s Nukes
Solving the Korean Stalemate, One Step at a Time
Russian Military Sources Warn Attack on Iran 6 April
A Pakistani view of U.S. nuclear weapons
On Indo-US Nuke Deal
Ballistic Missile Defense: the new Cold War
Tehran triangle: Russia, U.S. and nuclear power
President Obama: "The United States will take concrete steps toward a world without nuclear weapons"
War
US Economy: Rudderless and Reeling From Direct Hits
Open Letter on NATO Missile Defense Plans and Increased Risk of Nuclear War
THE CRISIS IS NOT RESOLVING ITSELF
The solution exists, it just has to be seized!
Robert Gates: Nuclear Weapons and Deterrence in the 21st Century
IRAN : No proliferation! No war!
DECLARATION of the "Nuclear Phasing Out" French Network on the Current "Iranian Crisis"
No to War, No to NATO!
The death-cult
Voting against nuclear war with Iran

visites :  1235082

Home | Contact | Site Map | Admin |

Site powered by SPIP
design et fonction Easter-Eggs