Statement
of Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), September 6, 2000
MINDING OUR OWN BUSINESS REGARDING
COLOMBIA IS IN THE BEST INTEREST OF AMERICA (House of Representatives
- September 06, 2000)
The SPEAKER pro tempore.
Under a previous order of the House, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Paul)
is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, those
of us who warned of the shortcomings of expanding our military presence
in Colombia were ignored when funds were appropriated for this purpose
earlier this year. We argued at that time that clearly no national security
interests were involved; that the Civil War was more than 30 years old,
complex with three factions fighting, and no assurance as to who the good
guys were; that the drug war was a subterfuge, only an excuse, not a reason,
to needlessly expand our involvement in Colombia ; and that special interests
were really driving our policy: Colombia Oil Reserves owned by American
interests, American weapons manufacturers, and American corporations anxious
to build infrastructure in Colombia .
Already our foolish expanded
pressure in Colombia has had a perverse effect. The stated purpose of
promoting peace and stability has been undermined. Violence has worsened
as factions are now fighting more fiercely than ever before for territory
as they anticipate the full force of U.S. weapons arriving.
The already weak peace process
has been essentially abandoned. Hatred toward Americans by many Colombians
has grown. The Presidents of 12 South American countries rejected outright
the American-backed military operation amendment aimed at the revolutionary
groups in Colombia .
This foolhardy effort to settle
the Colombian civil war has clearly turned out to be a diplomatic failure.
The best evidence of a seriously flawed policy is the departure of capital.
Watching money flows gives us a market assessment of policy; and by all
indication, our policy spells trouble.
There is evidence of a recent
large-scale exodus of wealthy Colombians to Miami. Tens of thousands of
Colombians are leaving for the U.S., Canada, Costa Rica, Spain, Australia.
These are the middle-class and upper-class citizens, taking their money
with them. Our enhanced presence in Colombia has accelerated this exodus.
Our policy, unless quickly
and thoroughly reversed, will surely force an escalation of the civil
war and a dangerous increase in our involvement with both dollars and
troops. All this will further heighten the need for drug sales to finance
all factions of the civil war. So much for stopping the drug war.
Our policy is doomed to fail.
There is no national security interest involved; therefore, no goals can
be set and no victory achievable. A foreign policy of non-intervention
designed only to protect our sovereignty with an eagerness to trade with
all nations willing to be friends is the traditional American foreign
policy and would give us the guaranteed hope of peace, the greatest hope
of peace and prosperity.
Let us think seriously about
our foreign policy, and hopefully someday we will pursue a policy in the
best interest of America by minding our own business.
As of September 23, 2000, this
document was also available online at http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?r106:H06SE0-354: