Dear Friend,
Watch video of Barack and supporters delivering excerpts of his historic
speech opposing the Iraq war: |
Read today's speech outlining Barack's plan to end the war:
|
Five years ago today, October 2, 2002, Barack Obama gave a powerful
speech opposing the Iraq war before it began.
While others followed the conventional thinking in Washington, Barack
stood up against a popular war he knew was a mistake:
"What I am opposed to is a dumb war. What I am opposed
to is a rash war. What I am opposed to is the cynical attempt by Richard
Perle and Paul Wolfowitz and other armchair, weekend warriors in this administration
to shove their own ideological agendas down our throats, irrespective of
the costs in lives lost and in hardships borne.
What I am opposed to is the attempt by political hacks
like Karl Rove to distract us from a rise in the uninsured, a rise in the
poverty rate, a drop in the median income -- to distract us from corporate
scandals and a stock market that has just gone through the worst month since
the Great Depression. That's what I'm opposed to. A dumb war. A rash war.
A war based not on reason but on passion, not on principle but on politics."
-Barack Obama, October 2, 2002
Today, Barack delivered another speech about the war in
which he held those who authorized it accountable and outlined a plan to
bring it to an end:
"Some seek to rewrite history. They argue that they
weren't really voting for war, they were voting for inspectors, or for diplomacy.
But the Congress, the Administration, the media, and the American people
all understood what we were debating in the fall of 2002.
This was a vote about whether or not to go to war.
That's the truth as we all understood it then, and as we need to understand
it now. And we need to ask those who voted for the war: how can you give
the President a blank check and then act surprised when he cashes it?"
-Barack Obama, October 2, 2007
Barack's plan to challenge Washington's conventional thinking
and create a new beginning in U.S. foreign policy is clear:
- Ending the war in Iraq
- Ensuring there is no safe haven for Al Qaeda
- Securing loose nuclear material and renewing our efforts
towards eliminating nuclear weapons and stopping the threat of nuclear terrorism
- Talking directly to friend and foe
- Strengthening the State Department to make diplomacy
a priority
- Reversing Washington's reliance on secrecy by establishing
a National Declassification Center
- Getting politics out of intelligence by giving the
Director of National Intelligence a fixed term
- Uniting America behind a non-partisan foreign policy
Read the full text of Barack's speech below, and watch
a video of Barack and supporters from around the country delivering his
historic speech from October 2, 2002:
http://my.barackobama.com/judgment
In 2002, Barack demonstrated his judgment by opposing
the Iraq war publicly and passionately.
He demonstrated that same judgment today as he outlined
a plan that will end the war and restore America's position in the world.
America cannot afford another president without this kind
of judgment.
Thank you for your support,
David
David Plouffe
Campaign Manager
Obama for America
----------------------------------
A New Beginning
As prepared for delivery
DePaul University
Barack Obama
October 2, 2007
Thank you, Ted. Ted Sorenson has been counselor to a President
in some of our toughest moments, and he has helped define our national purpose
at pivotal turning points. Let me also welcome all of the elected officials
from Illinois who are with us. Let me give a special welcome to all of the
organizers and speakers who joined me to rally against going to war in Iraq
five years ago. And I want to thank DePaul University and DePaul's students
for hosting this event.
We come together at a time of renewal for DePaul. A new
academic year has begun. Professors are learning the names of new students,
and students are reminded that you actually do have to attend class. That
cold is beginning to creep into the Chicago air. The season is changing.
DePaul is now filled with students who have not spent
a single day on campus without the reality of a war in Iraq. Four classes
have matriculated and four classes have graduated since this war began. And
we are reminded that America's sons and daughters in uniform, and their families,
bear the heavy burden. The wife of one soldier from Illinois wrote to me
and said that her husband "feels like he's stationed in Iraq and deploys
home." That's a tragic statement. And it could be echoed by families across
our country who have seen loved ones deployed to tour after tour of duty.
You are students. And the great responsibility of students
is to question the world around you, to question things that don't add up.
With Iraq, we must ask the question: how did we go so wrong?
There are those who offer up easy answers. They will assert
that Iraq is George Bush's war, it's all his fault. Or that Iraq was botched
by the arrogance and incompetence of Donald Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Or
that we would have gotten Iraq right if we went in with more troops, or if
we had a different proconsul instead of Paul Bremer, or if only there were
a stronger Iraqi Prime Minister.
These are the easy answers. And like most easy answers,
they are partially true. But they don't tell the whole truth, because they
overlook a harder and more fundamental truth. The hard truth is that the
war in Iraq is not about a catalog of many mistakes -- it is about one big
mistake. The war in Iraq should never have been fought.
Five years ago today, I was asked to speak at a rally
against going to war in Iraq. The vote to authorize the war in Congress was
less than ten days away and I was a candidate for the United States Senate.
Some friends of mine advised me to keep quiet. Going to war in Iraq, they
pointed out, was popular. All the other major candidates were supporting
the war at the time. If the war goes well, they said, you'll have thrown
your political career away.
But I didn't see how Saddam Hussein posed an imminent
threat. I was convinced that a war would distract us from Afghanistan and
the real threat from al Qaeda. I worried that Iraq's history of sectarian
rivalry could leave us bogged down in a bloody conflict. And I believed the
war would fan the flames of extremism and lead to new terrorism. So I went
to the rally. And I argued against a "rash war" -- a "war based not on reason,
but on politics" -- "an occupation of undetermined length, with undetermined
costs, and undetermined consequences."
I was not alone. Though not a majority, millions of Americans
opposed giving the President the authority to wage war in Iraq. Twenty-three
Senators, including the leader of the Senate Intelligence Committee, shared
my concerns and resisted the march to war. For us, the war defied common
sense. After all, the people who hit us on 9/11 were in Afghanistan, not
Iraq.
But the conventional thinking in Washington has a way
of buying into stories that make political sense even if they don't make
practical sense. We were told that the only way to prevent Iraq from getting
nuclear weapons was with military force. Some leading Democrats echoed the
Administration's erroneous line that there was a connection between Saddam
Hussein and al Qaeda. We were counseled by some of the most experienced voices
in Washington that the only way for Democrats to look tough was to talk,
act and vote like a Republican.
As Ted Sorenson's old boss President Kennedy once said
-- "the pursuit of peace is not as dramatic as the pursuit of war -- and
frequently the words of the pursuer fall on deaf ears." In the fall of 2002,
those deaf ears were in Washington. They belonged to a President who didn't
tell the whole truth to the American people; who disdained diplomacy and
bullied allies; and who squandered our unity and the support of the world
after 9/11.
But it doesn't end there. Because the American people
weren't just failed by a President -- they were failed by much of Washington.
By a media that too often reported spin instead of facts. By a foreign policy
elite that largely boarded the bandwagon for war. And most of all by the
majority of a Congress -- a coequal branch of government -- that voted to
give the President the open-ended authority to wage war that he uses to this
day. Let's be clear: without that vote, there would be no war.
Some seek to rewrite history. They argue that they weren't
really voting for war, they were voting for inspectors, or for diplomacy.
But the Congress, the Administration, the media, and the American people
all understood what we were debating in the fall of 2002. This was a vote
about whether or not to go to war. That's the truth as we all understood
it then, and as we need to understand it now. And we need to ask those who
voted for the war: how can you give the President a blank check and then
act surprised when he cashes it?
With all that we know about what's gone wrong in Iraq,
even today's debate is divorced from reality. We've got a surge that is
somehow declared a success even though it has failed to enable the political
reconciliation that was its stated purpose. The fact that violence today
is only as horrific as in 2006 is held up as progress. Washington politicians
and pundits trip over each other to debate a newspaper advertisement while
our troops fight and die in Iraq.
And the conventional thinking today is just as entrenched
as it was in 2002. This is the conventional thinking that measures experience
only by the years you've been in Washington, not by your time spent serving
in the wider world. This is the conventional thinking that has turned against
the war, but not against the habits that got us into the war in the first
place -- the outdated assumptions and the refusal to talk openly to the
American people.
Well I'm not running for President to conform to Washington's
conventional thinking -- I'm running to challenge it. I'm not running to
join the kind of Washington groupthink that led us to war in Iraq -- I'm
running to change our politics and our policy so we can leave the world a
better place than our generation has found it.
So there is a choice that has emerged in this campaign,
one that the American people need to understand. They should ask themselves:
who got the single most important foreign policy decision since the end
of the Cold War right, and who got it wrong. This is not just a matter of
debating the past. It's about who has the best judgment to make the critical
decisions of the future. Because you might think that Washington would learn
from Iraq. But we've seen in this campaign just how bent out of shape Washington
gets when you challenge its assumptions.
When I said that as President I would lead direct diplomacy
with our adversaries, I was called naïve and irresponsible. But how
are we going to turn the page on the failed Bush-Cheney policy of not talking
to our adversaries if we don't have a President who will lead that diplomacy?
When I said that we should take out high-level terrorists
like Osama bin Laden if we have actionable intelligence about their whereabouts,
I was lectured by legions of Iraq War supporters. They said we can't take
out bin Laden if the country he's hiding in won't. A few weeks later, the
co-chairmen of the 9/11 Commission -- Tom Kean and Lee Hamilton -- agreed
with my position. But few in Washington seemed to notice.
Some people made a different argument on this issue. They
said we can take out bin Laden, we just can't say that we will. I reject
this. I am a candidate for President of the United States, and I believe
that the American people have a right to know where I stand.
And when I said that we can rule out the use of nuclear
weapons to take out a terrorist training camp, it was immediately branded
a "gaffe" because I did not recite the conventional Washington-speak. But
is there any military planner in the world who believes that we need to
drop a nuclear bomb on a terrorist training camp?
We need to question the world around us. When we have
a debate about experience, we can't just debate who has the most experience
scoring political points. When we have a debate about experience, we can't
just talk about who fought yesterday's battles -- we have to focus on who
can face the challenges and seize the opportunities of tomorrow. Because
no matter what we think about George Bush, he's going to be gone in January
2009. He's not on the ballot. This election is about ending the Iraq War,
but even more it's about moving beyond it. And we're not going be safe in
a world of unconventional threats with the same old conventional thinking
that got us into Iraq. We're not going to unify a divided America to confront
these threats with the same old conventional politics of just trying to beat
the other side.
In 2009, we will have a window of opportunity to renew
our global leadership and bring our nation together. If we don't seize that
moment, we may not get another. This election is a turning point. The American
people get to decide: are we going to turn back the clock, or turn the page?
I want to be straight with you. If you want conventional
Washington thinking, I'm not your man. If you want rigid ideology, I'm not
your man. If you think that fundamental change can wait, I'm definitely
not your man. But if you want to bring this country together, if you want
experience that's broader than just learning the ways of Washington, if
you think that the global challenges we face are too urgent to wait, and
if you think that America must offer the world a new and hopeful face, then
I offer a different choice in this race and a different vision for our future.
The first thing we have to do is end this war. And the
right person to end it is someone who had the judgment to oppose it from
the beginning. There is no military solution in Iraq, and there never was.
I will begin to remove our troops from Iraq immediately. I will remove one
or two brigades a month, and get all of our combat troops out of Iraq within
16 months. The only troops I will keep in Iraq will perform the limited
missions of protecting our diplomats and carrying out targeted strikes on
al Qaeda. And I will launch the diplomatic and humanitarian initiatives
that are so badly needed. Let there be no doubt: I will end this war.
But it's also time to learn the lessons of Iraq. We're
not going to defeat the threats of the 21st century on a conventional battlefield.
We cannot win a fight for hearts and minds when we outsource critical missions
to unaccountable contractors. We're not going to win a battle of ideas with
bullets alone.
Make no mistake: we must always be prepared to use force
to protect America. But the best way to keep America safe is not to threaten
terrorists with nuclear weapons -- it's to keep nuclear weapons and nuclear
materials away from terrorists. That's why I've worked with Republican Senator
Dick Lugar to pass a law accelerating our pursuit of loose nuclear materials.
And that's why I'll lead a global effort to secure all loose nuclear materials
during my first term in office.
But we need to do much more. We need to change our nuclear
policy and our posture, which is still focused on deterring the Soviet Union
-- a country that doesn't exist. Meanwhile, India and Pakistan and North
Korea have joined the club of nuclear-armed nations, and Iran is knocking
on the door. More nuclear weapons and more nuclear-armed nations mean more
danger to us all.
Here's what I'll say as President: America seeks a world
in which there are no nuclear weapons.
We will not pursue unilateral disarmament. As long as
nuclear weapons exist, we'll retain a strong nuclear deterrent. But we'll
keep our commitment under the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty on the long
road towards eliminating nuclear weapons. We'll work with Russia to take
U.S. and Russian ballistic missiles off hair-trigger alert, and to dramatically
reduce the stockpiles of our nuclear weapons and material. We'll start by
seeking a global ban on the production of fissile material for weapons. And
we'll set a goal to expand the U.S.-Russian ban on intermediate-range missiles
so that the agreement is global.
As we do this, we'll be in a better position to lead the
world in enforcing the rules of the road if we firmly abide by those rules.
It's time to stop giving countries like Iran and North Korea an excuse.
It's time for America to lead. When I'm President, we'll strengthen the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty so that nations that don't comply will
automatically face strong international sanctions.
This will require a new era of American diplomacy. To
signal the dawn of that era, we need a President who is willing to talk to
all nations, friend and foe. I'm not afraid that America will lose a propaganda
battle with a petty tyrant -- we need to go before the world and win those
battles. If we take the attitude that the President just parachutes in for
a photo-op after an agreement has already been reached, then we're only going
to reach agreements with our friends. That's not the way to protect the American
people. That's not the way to advance our interests.
Just look at our history. Kennedy had a direct line to
Khrushchev. Nixon met with Mao. Carter did the hard work of negotiating
the Camp David Accords. Reagan was negotiating arms agreements with Gorbachev
even as he called on him to "tear down this wall."
It's time to make diplomacy a top priority. Instead of
shuttering consulates, we need to open them in the tough and hopeless corners
of the world. Instead of having more Americans serving in military bands
than the diplomatic corps, we need to grow our foreign service. Instead of
retreating from the world, I will personally lead a new chapter of American
engagement.
It is time to offer the world a message of hope to counter
the prophets of hate. My experience has brought me to the hopeless places.
As a boy, I lived in Indonesia and played barefoot with children who could
not dream the same dreams that I did. As an adult, I've returned to be with
my family in their small village in Kenya, where the promise of America
is still an inspiration. As a community organizer, I worked in South Side
neighborhoods that had been left behind by global change. As a Senator,
I've been to refugee camps in Chad where proud and dignified people can't
hope for anything beyond the next handout.
In the 21st century, progress must mean more than a vote
at the ballot box -- it must mean freedom from fear and freedom from want.
We cannot stand for the freedom of anarchy. Nor can we support the globalization
of the empty stomach. We need new approaches to help people to help themselves.
The United Nations has embraced the Millennium Development Goals, which
aim to cut extreme poverty in half by 2015. When I'm President, they will
be America's goals. The Bush Administration tried to keep the UN from proclaiming
these goals; the Obama Administration will double foreign assistance to $50
billion to lead the world to achieve them.
In the 21st century, we cannot stand up before the world
and say that there's one set of rules for America and another for everyone
else. To lead the world, we must lead by example. We must be willing to
acknowledge our failings, not just trumpet our victories. And when I'm President,
we'll reject torture -- without exception or equivocation; we'll close Guantanamo;
we'll be the country that credibly tells the dissidents in the prison camps
around the world that America is your voice, America is your dream, America
is your light of justice.
We cannot -- we must not -- let the promotion of our values
be a casualty of the Iraq War. But we cannot secure America and show our
best face to the world unless we change how we do business in Washington.
We all know what Iraq has cost us abroad. But these last
few years we've seen an unacceptable abuse of power at home. We face real
threats. Any President needs the latitude to confront them swiftly and surely.
But we've paid a heavy price for having a President whose priority is expanding
his own power. The Constitution is treated like a nuisance. Matters of war
and peace are used as political tools to bludgeon the other side. We get
subjected to endless spin to keep our troops at war, but we don't get to
see the flag-draped coffins of our heroes coming home. We get secret task
forces, secret budgeting, slanted intelligence, and the shameful smearing
of people who speak out against the President's policies.
All of this has left us where we are today: more divided, more distrusted,
more in debt, and mired in an endless war. A war to disarm a dictator has
become an open-ended occupation of a foreign country. This is not America.
This is not who we are. It's time for us to stand up and tell George Bush
that the government in this country is not based on the whims of one person,
the government is of the people, by the people and for the people.
We thought we learned this lesson. After Vietnam, Congress
swore it would never again be duped into war, and even wrote a new law --
the War Powers Act -- to ensure it would not repeat its mistakes. But no
law can force a Congress to stand up to the President. No law can make Senators
read the intelligence that showed the President was overstating the case
for war. No law can give Congress a backbone if it refuses to stand up as
the co-equal branch the Constitution made it.
That is why it is not enough to change parties. It is
time to change our politics. We don't need another President who puts politics
and loyalty over candor. We don't need another President who thinks big
but doesn't feel the need to tell the American people what they think. We
don't need another President who shuts the door on the American people when
they make policy. The American people are not the problem in this country
-- they are the answer. And it's time we had a President who acted like
that.
I will always tell the American people the truth. I will
always tell you where I stand. It's what I'm doing in this campaign. It's
what I'll do as President. I'll lead a new era of openness. I'll give an
annual "State of the World" address to the American people in which I lay
out our national security policy. I'll draw on the legacy of one our greatest
Presidents -- Franklin Roosevelt -- and give regular "fireside webcasts,"
and I'll have members of my national security team do the same.
I'll turn the page on a growing empire of classified information,
and restore the balance we've lost between the necessarily secret and the
necessity of openness in a democratic society by creating a new National
Declassification Center. We'll protect sources and methods, but we won't
use sources and methods as pretexts to hide the truth. Our history doesn't
belong to Washington, it belongs to America.
I'll use the intelligence that I do receive to make good
policy -- I won't manipulate it to sell a bad policy. We don't need any
more officials who tell the President what they want to hear. I will make
the Director of National Intelligence an official with a fixed term, like
the Chairman of the Federal Reserve -- not someone who can be fired by the
President. We need consistency and integrity at the top of our intelligence
agencies. We don't need politics. My test won't be loyalty -- it will be
the truth.
And I'll turn the page on the imperial presidency that
treats national security as a partisan issue -- not an American issue. I
will call for a standing, bipartisan Consultative Group of congressional
leaders on national security. I will meet with this Consultative Group every
month, and consult with them before taking major military action. The buck
will stop with me. But these discussions have to take place on a bipartisan
basis, and support for these decisions will be stronger if they draw on bipartisan
counsel. We're not going to secure this country unless we turn the page
on the conventional thinking that says politics is just about beating the
other side.
It's time to unite America, because we are at an urgent
and pivotal moment.
There are those who suggest that there are easy answers
to the challenges we face. We can look, they say, to Washington experience
-- the same experience that got us into this war. Or we can turn the page
to something new, to unite this country and to seize this moment.
I am not a perfect man and I won't be a perfect President.
But my own American story tells me that this country moves forward when
we cast off our doubts and seek new beginnings.
It's what brought my father across an ocean in search
of a dream. It's what I saw in the eyes of men and women and children in
Indonesia who heard the word "America" and thought of the possibility beyond
the horizon. It's what I saw in the streets of the South Side, when people
who had every reason to give in decided to pick themselves up. It's what
I've seen in the United States Senate when Republicans and Democrats of good
will do come together to take on tough issues. And it's what I've seen in
this campaign, when over half a million Americans have come together to seek
the change this country needs.
Now I know that some will shake their heads. It's easy
to be cynical. When it comes to our foreign policy, you get it from all
sides. Some folks on the right will tell you that you don't love your country
if you don't support the war in Iraq. Some folks on the left will tell you
that America can do no right in the world. Some shrug their shoulders because
Washington says, "trust us, we'll take care of it." And we know happened
the last time they said that.
Yes, it's easy to be cynical. But right now, somewhere
in Iraq, there's someone about your age. He's maybe on his second or third
tour. It's hot. He would rather be at home. But he's in his uniform, got
his combat gear on. He's getting in a Humvee. He's going out on patrol. He's
lost a buddy in this war, maybe more. He risked his life yesterday, he's
risking his life today, and he's going to risk it tomorrow.
So why do we reject the cynicism? We reject it because
of men and women like him. We reject it because the legacy of their sacrifice
must be a better America. We reject it because they embody the spirit of
those who fought to free the slaves and free a continent from a madman; who
rebuilt Europe and sent Peace Corps volunteers around the globe; because
they are fighting for a better America and a better world.
And I reject it because I wouldn't be on this stage if,
throughout our history, America had not made the right choice over the easy
choice, the ambitious choice over the cautious choice. I wouldn't be here
if I didn't think we were ready to move past the fights of the 1960s and
the 1990s. I wouldn't be here if, time and again, the torch had not been
passed to a new generation -- to unite this country at home, to show a new
face of this country to the world. I'm running for the presidency of the
United States of America so that together we can do the hard work to seek
a new dawn of peace and prosperity for our children, and for the children
of the world.
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Download the full text of today's speech and watch a video
of Barack and supporters from around the country delivering his historic
speech from October 2, 2002:
http://my.barackobama.com/judgment