UN in, US out
Kucinich's Plan to Bring Our Troops Home
The war in Iraq is over and the occupation of Iraq has turned
into a quagmire. The US troops have become the targets of
criminals and terrorists who are flowing into Iraq for the
chance to shoot Americans. The cost of the occupation keeps
rising: The President has already asked for more than $150
billion to pay for it. And there is no end in sight. The UN
is now in an impossible situation, where most of the members
view the war and occupation of Iraq to be a US folly. Under
these circumstances, the UN cant help. The US is stuck,
mostly alone, with a costly, unpopular and unending occupation
of Iraq. If we stay the course, it will do damage to American
security. Iraq was not and is not a threat to the US, yet
the demands of an occupation will overstretch our armed forces.
And the extended deployment of reserve forces make us vulnerable
at home because the reserve call ups include large numbers
of firemen, policemen and other first responders who are needed
for the homeland defense mission.
People are asking, is there a way out? I believe there is.
I am writing to share with you a plan that will get the UN
in Iraq and the US out. This plan could bring the troops home
by New Years day, it will cost much less than the Presidents,
and it will increase American security.
- The President must go to the UN and announce the US intention
to hand over all administrative and security responsibilities
to the UN. The UN would help Iraqis move quickly toward
self-determination.
- The UN, not the US, will administer Iraqs oil revenues.
It will be necessary to renounce clearly and unequivocally
any interest in controlling Iraqs oil resources.
- The UN will administer contracts to repair Iraq. War profiteering
will no longer be practiced by the White House. It will
be necessary to suspend all reconstruction contracts and
close the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority, because
of the suspicion caused by the sweetheart deals that the
Administration has given to large American corporations.
In its place, the UN would help Iraqis administer funds
to employ Iraqis to repair the damage from the invasion.
Bring US troops home as UN peacekeeping troops rotate into
Iraq: The goal is to bring all US troops home by the new year,
but in any case, to bring them home as quickly and as safely
as possible with a planned and orderly withdrawal.
As soon as practicable after this address, the UN Security
Council would ratify a new resolution on Iraq that would deploy
a multinational force under UN mandate to keep the peace in
Iraq while the interim Iraqi government receives UN support
and a new Iraqi government is elected. It is my hope that
within one month, the first UN troops and support personnel
will arrive in Iraq, and the first US troops will be sent
home. UN peacekeeper troops and Iraqis who are commissioned
as police and military will replace the US (at a rate of two
UN peacekeepers for every three US troops). In place of the
US-led Coalition Provisional Authority, the UN will open an
office to provide administrative support to the Iraqi Governing
Council, which will direct the repair to infrastructure damaged
by US invasion in the immediate term. In two months, the UN
will begin to conduct a census of the Iraqi population to
lay groundwork for national elections. At the same time, new
temporary rules for the election will be promulgated, guaranteeing
universal suffrage on a one-person one vote basis. During
the transition period, a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
between the American and UN force commanders for a turnover
period will settle the question of who commands the troops.
The MOU will specify who is to be in charge in case an incident
happens during that period. These might be local agreements
such as have been used before or they might be for the entire
area of operations. By the end of month three, all US troops
will have returned home.
In month four, a major milestone will be reached when Iraqi
sovereignty is established for the first time. A nationwide
election will take place to elect representatives to a Constitutional
Convention. The Constitutional Convention will have two duties:
1) elect a temporary Prime Minister who appoints a cabinet
to take over responsibility from the Iraqi Governing council,
and 2) draft a national constitution. Accountability of this
Prime Minister is achieved by virtue of the fact that he can
be recalled by a majority of the Convention.
In one year, there will be nationwide elections pursuant
to the new Constitution, which will install an elected government
in Iraq.
The US owes a moral debt to the people of Iraq for the damage
caused by the US invasion. The US will also owe a contribution
to the UN to help Iraq make the transition to self-government.
American taxpayers deserve that their contributions be handled
in an accountable, transparent manner. However, Americans
are not required to build a state-of-the-art infrastructure
as the Administration is planning. The Administration is ordering
for top shelf technology from US corporations for Iraq and
paid for by US taxpayers. Sweetheart deals have been awarded
with billions of dollars to top corporations and political
contributors. That is precisely what corrupts the Administrations
reconstruction efforts today. Instead, Iraqis should be employed
to repair Iraq, and US taxpayers should pay only for the damage
caused by the US invasion, including compensation for its
victims. US taxpayers should not be asked, however, to furnish
for Iraq what we do not have here.
The war and occupation in Iraq have been costly in other
ways too. One price the Administration has forced the US to
pay is Americas moral authority in the world. The Administration
launched an unprovoked attack on Iraq, and the premises of
the war are proving to be false. This has cost our credibility
and done serious harm to Americas standing in the world.
After the attacks of 9-11, the world felt sympathy for us.
But this war and the occupation have squandered that sympathy,
replacing it with dangerous anti-American sentiment in most
of the worlds countries. And, perhaps most costly of
all, the US occupying force serves as a recruiting cause for
terrorists and people who wish us ill.
All we can do now is to make a dramatic reversal of course:
we must acknowledge that the continued US military presence
in Iraq is counterproductive and destabilizing. We have a
choice in front of us: either we change course, withdraw our
troops and request that the UN move in, or we sink deeper
into this occupation, with more US casualties, ever higher
financial costs, and diminished security for Americans.
We need a real change. My plan will bring the troops home
by the new year, transfer authority to the UN with provisions
made toward a rapid transition to Iraqi sovereignty, and it
will save billions over the Administrations occupation.
It will enable the US to think creatively about how the US
will deal with threats that come not from established countries
with conventional armies (our armed forces are more than adequate
to that task), but rather threats that come from networks
of terrorist and criminals, who use unconventional means to
injure Americans. We must also apprehend the criminals who
masterminded the 9-11 attacks on this country, a goal that
is hindered by the occupation of Iraq. Lastly, it will also
enable the US to redirect scarce resources to rebuild America.
Sincerely,
Dennis J. Kucinich
Member of Congress
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| Bring
Home the Troops
It is time to bring home the troops. It is time to get the
UN in and the US out of Iraq. It is time to go to the UN Security
Council with a plan which calls for the UN to handle the collection
and distribution of all oil revenues for the Iraqi people,
with no privatization. Second, let the UN handle the awarding
of all contracts - no more Halliburton sweetheart deals. No
more war profiteering by Republican contributors and Bush
administration cronies. Third, let the UN work to create conditions
for Iraqi self governance. It is time for the United States
to rejoin the world community in the interests of international
security. Every day we pay to stay longer, we stand on the
rubble of the lies of the Bush Administration, lies about
9-11 and Iraq, lies about nuclear weapons capability and Iraq,
lies about weapons of mass destruction and Iraq. Let the American
people know the truth. The truth shall set us free, free from
the US occupation of Iraq and free from the Bush administration's
occupation of the White House.
Soon voices will cry out across this land and millions will
march in the streets demanding that our troops be brought
home. A majority of Americans want our troops home. Yet some
who are currently called the leading candidates in this race
are calling for us to "stay the course," "can't cut and run,"
and thereby exposing our troops to more danger, our nation
to more jeopardy, our budget to greater deficits, our international
standing to more condemnation. And this has consequences too
for our party. In 2002, for the first time in 40 years, the
party out of power (the Democrats) failed to gain seats in
an off-year election in Congress. This is directly due to
our leadership's failure to challenge the President on the
war. When the Democrats show up, the people show up. And they
will show up in 2004 and elect a Democratic President and
Congress when we show up and challenge the lies and the war.
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