Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Ron Paul's Official Middle East Policy


Peace & Prosperity



The Palestinian Authority's recent announcement that it would seek UN recognition as an
independent state dominated the news and the political debate in the United States last week,
though in truth it should mean very little to us. Only a political class harboring the illusion it can
run the world obsesses over the aspirations of a tiny population on a tiny piece of land
thousands of miles away. Remember, the UN initiated this persistent conflict with its 1947
Partition Plan.
Unfortunately the debate is dominated by those who either support the Israeli side in the
conflict, or those who support the Palestinian desire for statehood. We rarely seem to hear the
view of those who support the US side and US interests. I am on that side. I believe that we
can no longer police the world. We can no longer bribe the Israelis and Palestinians to continue
an endless "peace process" that goes nowhere. It is not in our interest to hector the Palestinians
or the Israelis, or to "export" democracy to the region but reject it when people vote the "wrong"
way.
I have reservations about the Palestinian drive for UN recognition. Personally I wish the United
States would de-recognize the United Nations. As most readers already know, in every
Congress I introduce legislation to end our membership in that organization. The UN is a threat
to our sovereignty-- and as we are the main source of its income, it is a threat to our economic
well-being. Increasingly over the past several years, we see the United Nations providing
political and legal cover for the military aspirations of interventionists rather than serving as an
international forum to preserve peace. Neoconservatives in the US have grown to love the
United Nations as they co-opt the organization under the guise of endless "reform." Under the
sovereignty-destroying doctrine of "Responsibility to Protect," adopted at the 2005 World
Summit, the UN takes it upon itself to intervene in internal conflicts of its member states
whenever it believes that human rights are being violated. Thus under "Responsibility to
Protect," the UN provides the green light for a kind of global no-knock raid on any sovereign
country.
If asked, I would personally counsel the Palestinians to avoid the United Nations. UN
membership and participation is no guarantee that sovereignty will be respected. We see what
happens to UN members such as Iraq and Libya when those countries' leaders fall out of favor
with US administrations: under US and allied pressure a fig leaf resolution is adopted in the UN
to facilitate devastating military intervention. When the UN gave NATO the green light to bomb
Libya there was no genocide taking place. It was a purely preventative war. The result?
Thousands dead, a destroyed country, and extremely dubious new leaders.

A Palestinian State?

While I do not see UN membership as a particularly productive move for the Palestinian
leadership, I do not believe the US should use its position in the UN Security Council to block
their membership. I believe in self-determination of peoples and I recognize that peoples may
wish to pursue statehood by different means. As we saw after the Cold War, numerous new
states were born out of the ruins of the USSR as the various old Soviet Republics decided that
smaller states were preferable to an enormous and oppressive multi-national conglomerate.
The real, pro-US solution to the problems in the Middle East is for us to end all foreign aid, stop
arming foreign countries, encourage peaceful diplomatic resolutions to conflicts, and
disengage militarily. In others words, follow Jefferson's admonition: "Peace, commerce, and
honest friendship with all nations, entangling alliances with none."




Ron Paul Is An Honest Man

An honest man can feel no pleasure in the exercise of power over his fellow citizens.
        Thomas Jefferson, letter to John Melish, January 13, 1813

 Peace & Prosperity