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Some of Ron Paul's foreign policy ideas dangerous to U.S.
In my opinion | Conservatively Speaking
by Nik Antovich | Columnist
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I conditionally want to vote for Representative Paul. I entirely agree with him regarding the repeal of income taxes, strong border security, privacy rights, property rights, and healthcare reform. We do need to distance ourselves from the U.N. and other international bureaucracies as Dr. Paul asserts. I like how he is consistent in his ideology, and how his voting record proves it. There is something appealing about a candidate who says what he believes and backs it up with policy.
Like I said, I truly want to vote for Ron Paul, but I can't. When speaking with Paul supporters it is clear they are excited. They're excited because Ron Paul offers a choice of freedom. Specifically, his message emphasizes individual freedom, just as our Founding Fathers desired. However, some of Paul's less publicized positions trouble me.
I understand that part of the allure of Ron Paul is his opposition to the war. On the political spectrum he is often placed where the extreme right and extreme left meet. His events are known for drawing hippies as well as Goldwaterites. However, his less talked about, yet strong conviction that U.S. troops should not be stationed anywhere around the world, specifically the Middle East, is ignorant. Paul argues that our presence in Saudi Arabia is what has caused extremists to target us. I can't say that I disagree, but I wonder if Paul understands the alternative.
Saudi Arabia has allowed our presence in order to protect their oil reserves from exterior threats. We have been sensitive to their requests for a minimal military footprint and have in fact been removing troops since Saddam Hussein was eliminated, as he posed the greatest danger. This not only ensures a constant flow of oil from the leading producer in the world, but also provides relief to investors driving our market, as they have reassurance knowing that a disturbance in the flow of oil from Saudi Arabia is unlikely. We cannot be responsible if a contingent of extremists believes our intentions to be negative. A disruption of oil from the country could cause economies to enter depressions.
If one were to ask Ron Paul to describe his foreign policy he would describe himself as a non-interventionist, and would be quick to point out that this is not isolationism. Instead, Paul describes non-intervention as, "Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations - entangling alliances with none." Paul would explain that this is in line with our Founding Fathers' beliefs, and he is right, in fact the above quote is a line from Thomas Jefferson's inaugural address.
I wish that I was born into a world in which the United States had a non-interventionist foreign policy, but I wasn't. The U.S. was forced to adopt an interventionist policy at the start of World War I. From that day on it was necessary for our country to be involved in others' actions. For the past 90 years our country has intertwined itself in foreign affairs, and contrary to Paul's position, we cannot just stop with the flick of a pen.
Ron Paul scares me because he is actually going to do what he says. If elected he would eliminate our intelligence agencies, and get us out of Iraq as well as Afghanistan, regardless of the unintended consequences. But then what? What happens if Iraq is overtaken by extremists? What happens if the flow of oil is disrupted in Saudi Arabia? What do we do if Israel is bombed by Hamas and Hezbollah, or Iran? What if Iran, with their mind set on the destruction of Israel, gets a nuclear weapon? If any Ron Paul supporters reading this know the answers to these questions please tell me. Because, frankly, I want a non-interventionist policy, but I don't see how it could work.
Ron Paul is a man who loves only one thing more than his country, and that is the Constitution. He will apply his interpretation of the Constitution to all executive decisions. I just wish he would recognize that we cannot reverse a century of foreign policy in one presidential term. I can acknowledge that our interventionist policies have hurt us at times, but President Bush did not invent alliances or trade agreements. Those have been around for a long time.
nantovich@dailyemerald.com
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 106
Dan
posted 11/27/07 @ 12:37 AM PST
Paul has said he would eliminate the CIA but not intelligence gathering. He has said what he wants to eliminate is the secretive CIA missions of assassinating people, and so on. (Continued…)
Scott from Oregon
posted 11/27/07 @ 12:55 AM PST
Dude. You've never spent time out in the world, have you?
Having been to American bases in Japan, Korea, Germany, Jerusalem (way back), and having traveled all over the mid-east and Asia. (Continued…)
Brian Middleton
posted 11/27/07 @ 12:58 AM PST
I am REALLY sorry to hear you agree with most of what Paul has to say and that you would vote for him, but you can't because of his foreign policy.
I also think it is unfair for you to expect his supporters to have the answer on his behalf. (Continued…)
Ralph Zavala
posted 11/27/07 @ 12:58 AM PST
Mr. Antonvich's deduction of Ron Paul's supporters as enthusiastic is true. Many of his supporters know we are in a Marathon. Government cannot be changed until we as people understand what governments place is in our lives. (Continued…)
bt
posted 11/27/07 @ 1:01 AM PST
First he flicks his pen, then five other people flick theirs, then 1000 others... Someone has to start the changes, otherwise things do not change. Of course it would not be immediate, it would actually take much longer to leave Iraq properly than it did to invade. (Continued…)
Tom
posted 11/27/07 @ 1:02 AM PST
Nik,
Are you serious?
We're in Saudi Arabia to "protect the oil"?
If the richest kingdom on earth needs protection, it can buy it from Blackwater. (Continued…)
Brian Middleton
posted 11/27/07 @ 1:12 AM PST
On the issue of the CIA. They were developed just after WW II and partly as a result of the US Government bringing in Nazi scientists and military officers under operation paperclip. (Continued…)
Greg Albert
posted 11/27/07 @ 1:13 AM PST
Hey Nik,
I appreciate your position on Paul's foreign policy, but since you called Paul's ideas 'ignorant', I'm going to have to stick it to you.
You want to support Israel and continue our considerable human and financial investment in the Middle East. (Continued…)
Billy Budd
posted 11/27/07 @ 1:13 AM PST
I'm not much of a wordsmith nor am I a geopolitical expert, just my thoughts.....
What happens if the flow of oil is disrupted in Saudi Arabia?
About three-quarters of the oil used in the United States comes from outside the Persian Gulf. (Continued…)
Paul Klavins
posted 11/27/07 @ 1:18 AM PST
I guess it really comes down to: "Do you think intervention in the Middle East will do more harm than good?" There are many unintended side effects of an interventionist foreign policy. (Continued…)
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