From: http://www.9000phoneticwords.com/wisdom%20and%20courage/hagel.html
THE ANGRY ONE / From: GQ , January
2007 (comments from this website are in blue and preceded
by ***)
Republican senator Chuck Hagel (Nebraska) sounds
off on the sorry state of Congress, the
president’s lies, and the vote for war that he now regrets
Chuck Hagel came home from Vietnam in 1968 with shrapnel in his chest, scars
on his face, and an unyielding certainty that the freedom of men is theirs alone
to win. As an infantryman, he had not bombed from above or commanded from behind;
he had stood knee-deep in the muck, face-to-face with the enemy, firing on men
and watching them die. It’s a hard memory to leave behind. Even after four
decades and a lifetime of change—a fortune earned in the investment-banking
business; a decade as a senator from Nebraska; and a position as one of the GOP’s
conservative torchbearers with a shot at the White House—Hagel has put
everything on the line to oppose the war in Iraq, refusing to send a “surge” of
new troops into battle, or to forget the lessons he brought home from the killing
fields long ago.
Sitting in his office on a recent afternoon, Hagel leaned back in his armchair
to explain, in a voice reminiscent of sandpaper on rough oak, how he was deceived
by the president, and won’t let it happen again.
---------------------------------
Q. Why do you oppose the “surge”?
A. For almost four years, this administration has been saying, “Just give
us another six months. Give us more time. The Iraqis need more help. We need
more troops. We need more money.” I am not willing to sacrifice more young
men and women for a policy that isn’t working.
Q. What do you think the real effect of the “surge” would be?
A. More American lives lost. Billions of dollars going into this hole. It will
erode our standing in the Middle East and the world. It will destroy our force
structure.
It will divide this country in a bitter way not seen since Vietnam. And what
do we get in return? The administration likes to point to these benchmarks—the
Iraqis wrote a constitution, they had an election, they elected a unity government.
The administration takes great pride in saying, “It’s now a sovereign
nation. They’re in charge of their own affairs.” It’s completely
untrue, but they say it anyway.
Q. What would it take to secure Baghdad?
A. It’s not ours to secure. We have never understood that! We have framed
this in a way that never made sense: “Win or lose in Iraq.” Wait
a minute! There is no win or loss for us. The Iraqis will determine how this
turns out. We can help them with our blood and our treasure and our standing,
but in the end they have to deal with the sectarian problems. That is what’s
consuming that country. It’s not Al Qaeda. It’s not the terrorists.
That’s not the main problem over there. It’s a civil war!
Q. The administration doesn’t call it that (?).
A. They won’t call it civil war. Everybody calls it a civil war! Of course
it’s a civil war. The generals call it a civil war. And it’s even
worse than a civil war, because in addition to the sectarian violence, you’ve
got Shia killing Shia. We have ethnic cleansing of major proportions going
on in Baghdad. It’s reminiscent of Bosnia. A truck pulls up and Uncle
Joe is put inside; his body is found in a dump two or three days later, arms
bound, usually tortured—one of the favorite deals is to drill into their
head a little bit while they’re still conscious and then shoot them.
We can’t solve that!
Q. If we can’t win and the public wants out, isn’t it the responsibility
of Congress to check the power of the president?
A. Sure.
Q. But it seems Congress has been ineffective at that (?).
A. Well, we have. We’ve abdicated our responsibilities. That has to do
with the fact that the Republican Party controlled the White House, the House,
and
the Senate. When that happens, you get no probing, no questioning, no oversight.
If Bill Clinton had invaded Iraq and after two years he was having the same
problems, do you think the Republican Congress would have put up with that?
I don’t think so.
Q. Do you wish you’d voted differently in October of 2002, when Congress
had a chance to authorize or not authorize the invasion? Have you read that
resolution?
A. I have. It’s not quite the way it’s been framed by a lot of
people, as a resolution to go to war. That’s not quite what the resolution
said. It said, “to authorize the use of United States Armed Forces against
Iraq. In the event that all other options failed". So it’s
not as simple as “I
voted for the war.” That wasn’t the resolution. (***
Big mistake -- you would think that all of the lawyers in congress would recognize
the need
for clear language in a document that was authorizing an invasion. Hagel and
all the others should have insisted that the words " ... use of ... Armed Forces
against Iraq" be replaced by "we declare war" -- why pussyfoot around?)
Q. But there was a decision whether to grant the president that authority or
not (?).
A. Exactly right. And if you recall, the White House had announced that they
didn’t
need that authority from Congress.
Q. Which they seem to say about a lot of things (?).
A. That’s right. Mr. [Alberto] Gonzales was the president’s counsel
at that time, and he wrote a memo to the president saying, “You have
all the powers that you need.” So I called Andy Card, who was then the
chief of staff, and said, “Andy, I don’t think you have a shred
of ground to stand on, but more to the point, why would a president seriously
consider taking a nation to war without Congress being with him?” So
a few of us—Joe Biden, Dick Lugar, and I—were invited into discussions
with the White House.
Q. It’s incredible that you had to ask for that (?).
A. It is incredible. That’s what I said to Andy Card. Said it to Powell,
said it to Rice. Might have even said it to the president. And finally, begrudgingly,
they sent over a resolution for Congress to approve. Well, it was astounding.
It said they could go anywhere in the region.
Q. It wasn’t specific to Iraq?
A. Oh no. It said the whole region! They could go into Greece or anywhere.
I mean, is Central Asia in the region? I suppose! Sure as hell it was clear
they
meant
the whole Middle East. It was anything they wanted. It was literally anything
.No boundaries. No restrictions.
Q. They expected Congress to let them start a war anywhere they wanted in the
Middle East?
A. Yes. Yes. Wide open. We had to rewrite it. Joe Biden, Dick Lugar, and I
stripped the language that the White House had set up, and put our language
in it. (*** and that rewrittenlanguage was poorly written:
it did not attack all the errors?)
Q. But that should also have triggered alarm bells about what they really wanted
to do (?).
A. Well, it did. I’m not defending our votes; I’m just giving a
little history of how this happened. You have to remember the context of when
that
resolution was passed. This was about a year after September 11. The country
was still truly off balance. So the president comes out talking about “weapons
of mass destruction” that this “madman dictator” Saddam Hussein
has, and “our intelligence shows he’s got it,” and “he’s
capable of weaponizing,” and so on.
Q. And producing a National Intelligence Estimate that turned out to be doctored
(?).
A. Oh yeah. All this stuff was doctored. Absolutely. But that’s what
we were presented with. And I’m not dismissing our responsibility to
look into the thing, because there were senators who said, “I don’t
believe them.” But I was told by the president—we all were—that
he would exhaust every diplomatic effort. ( *** that
should have been in the document and guaranteed)
Q. You were told that personally?
A. I remember specifically bringing it up with the president. I said, “This
has to be like your father did it in 1991. We had every Middle East nation
except one with us in 1991. The United Nations was with us.”
Q. Did he give you that assurance, that he would do the same thing as his father?
A. Yep. He said, “That’s what we’re going to do.” But
the more I look back on this, the more I think that the administration knew
there was some real hard question whether he really had any WMD. In January
of 2003, if you recall, the inspectors at the IAEA, who knew more about what
Saddam had than anybody, said, “Give us two more months before you go
to war, because we don’t think there’s anything in there.” They
were the only ones in Iraq. We hadn’t been in there. We didn’t
know what the hell was in there. And the president wouldn’t do it! So
to answer your question—Do I regret that vote? Yes, I do regret that
vote.
Q. And you feel like you were misled?
A. I asked tough questions of Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld before the war: How are
you going to govern? Who’s going to govern? Where is the money coming
from? What are you going to do with their army? How will you secure their
borders?
And I was assured every time I asked, “Senator, don’t worry,
we’ve got task forces on that, they’ve been working, they’re
coordinated,” and so on.
Q. Do you think they knew that was false?
A. Oh, I eventually was sure they knew. Even before we actually invaded, I
had a pretty clear sense of it—that this administration was hell-bent
on going to war in Iraq.
Q. Even if it meant deceiving Congress?
A. That’s right.
Q. Congress has a lot less leverage to stop the war, now that it’s begun
(?).
A. Well, we still have power, starting with appropriations, oversight, the
power of the people, the polls. We represent the voters. (***
you have more rights than that -- see the top three items on << http://www.9000phoneticwords.com/wisdom%20and%20courage/firstpagewisdom.html >>
Q. It’s indirect, though (?). (*** it is not indirect
-- see the link directly above)
A. It is indirect, if you’re looking to stop the war. We’re already
in it, we’re hugely invested, half a trillion dollars, over 3,000 dead…
Q. And the decision to withhold funding is a tough one (?).
A. That’s right, because it can be seen as political. It is touchy. Nobody
ever wants to be accused of cutting a canteen from the troops, so you get into
that murky area: Are you hurting the troops by cutting off funding?
Q. Where are you on that?
A. I think we need to exercise oversight of the funding. The president is going
to come up with probably $100 billion in “emergency supplemental” funding
for the war. That bill needs to get oversight. The last four years, we haven’t
had any oversight over these “emergency” appropriations. Let’s
examine it. Let’s pull it apart: “What’s this 40 million
for?”
Q. That seems so slow and bureaucratic (?).
A. It’s frustrating. Especially when you’re losing young Americans
every day. We just keep throwing them into the fire. (***
then take the direct action you are authorized to use)
Q. Does it seem like the president is basically daring you to cut funding?
A. He is. He feels, as I think a number of Republicans do, that it would be
a disastrous thing politically. These are bright people. They understand politics
about as well as anyone. President Bush has been elected twice. Some might
argue that he wasn’t elected the first time. With the popular vote, he
actually wasn’t. But he’s very savvy politically. He’s never
going to stand for election again, and he believes this is right for the country.
The president is trying to do something very difficult: sustain a war without
the support of the American people.
Q. Are you especially sensitive about these wartime decisions because you’ve
been to war?
A. Certainly going through combat in Vietnam and seeing war up close, seeing
friends wounded and killed in front of you, you cannot help but be framed by
that experience.
When I got to Vietnam, I was a rifleman. I was a private, about as low as you
can get. So my frame of reference is very much geared toward the guy at the
bottom who’s doing the fighting and dying. Jim Webb and I are the only
ones in the Senate who had that experience. John McCain served his country
differently—he spent five years as a prisoner of war. John Kerry was
on a boat for about three months, maybe less. I don’t think my experience
makes me any better, but it does make me very sober about committing our nation
to war. We should never again get into a fiasco like we did in Vietnam. And
if we are going to use force, we better make damn sure it is in the national
interest.
Q. Which is essentially the “Powell Doctrine.” Do you and Colin
Powell still talk?
A. We’re very good friends.
Q. Do you think it’s hard for him to keep silent these days?
a. I think it is very hard for him. I think he is greatly tormented by all
of this.
Q. Does it surprise you that so many people in the administration who supported
this war, didn’t have any military experience?
A. I have never doubted the motives of those who wanted to go to war so badly.
I don’t question their moral standing.
Q. But you might wonder if they really understand what war is (?).
A. Look, it has not gone unnoticed that President Bush served a little time
in the National Guard. Secretary Rice never served. Wolfowitz never served.
Feith
never served. Cheney had five deferments. Rumsfeld might have done something
at one time. But the only guy that had any real experience was Colin Powell.
And they cut him off. That’s just a fact. That’s not subjective.
That’s the way it was.
Q. Does being a veteran also make you sensitive to the administration’s
approach to interrogation and the use of secret military prisons?
A. It does, because that’s not who America is. We have always, certainly
since World War II, had the moral high ground in the world. But these secret
prisons and the treatment at Guantánamo destroy all of that. We ought
to shut down Guantánamo. There shouldn’t be any secret prisons.
Why do we need those? What are we afraid of? Here we are, the greatest nation
the world has ever seen. Why can’t we let the Red Cross into our prisons?
Why do we deny they exist? Why do we keep them locked up? What are we afraid
of? Why aren’t we dealing with Iran and Syria?
*** The following questions are not directly related to the war -- so we are setting them aside
What about civil liberties? Does it concern you that the administration has
been searching bank records and personal mail, and listening to international
phone calls, without warrants?
Very much. We have always been able to protect national security without sacrificing
the liberties of the individual. Once you lose those rights, it’s very
hard to get them back. There have been arguments made that if we just give
up a few rights, it will be easier to preserve our national security. That
should never, ever happen. When you take office, you take an oath to protect
and defend the Constitution. That is your first responsibility.
Is it strange for you to be allied on these issues with the anti-war left,
which is not exactly your constituency?
I think these issues are starting to redefine the political landscape. You
are going to see alliances and relationships develop that are based on this
war. You are going to see a reorientation of political parties.
How conservative are you really? Tell me the truth: You don’t care whether
or not gay people get married, do you?
No. Personally, I think marriage is between a man and a woman, but that’s
because I see it as a religious union. As a legal contract, marriage should
be up to the states. If a state wants to change the rules, that’s up
to them.
What about the drug war? You don’t really think it’s going any
better than the Iraq war, do you?
The drug war is different. Drugs are against the law.
But what do you think of the law?
That’s part of having a society. You have to have standards, social mores
that are acceptable. You can’t go around exempting the law.
But Congress writes the laws.
Yes, and you can try to change the laws. If someone thinks marijuana ought
to be legalized, go through the process. I would be opposed to it, by the way.
Drugs are a devastating problem. Meth is creeping across the country. I know
there are some who say you wouldn’t have near the problem if you just
legalize drugs, but I disagree.
How about flag burning?
I voted for a constitutional amendment to ban it.
Isn’t it a form of expression, if some schmuck wants to make a statement?
I think you can defend your position both ways on that, but I am against it.
You don’t hear very many politicians say that both sides of an issue
are reasonable these days.
We are living through one of the most transformative periods in history. If
we are going to make it, we need a far greater appreciation and respect for
others, or we’re going to blow up mankind. Look at what zealotry can
do. Religious zealotry has been responsible for killing more people than any
other thing. Look at the Middle East today. It’s all about religion.
We need to move past those divisions and learn to be tolerant and respectful.
If we go out there full of intolerance and hatred, we’ll never make it.
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