REGARDLESS OF YOUR POLITICAL
PERSUASION, YOU SHOULD TAKE -10 MIN. AND READ THIS SPEECH ....
(SNOPES CLEARED...) ... THEN
THINK ABOUT IT
.....and........
Gingrich Transcript
[Former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich delivered the following remarks to a Jewish National Fund meeting
Nov. 15 at the Selig Center
I just want to talk to you from
the heart for a few minutes and share with you where I think we
are.
I
think it is very stark. I don't think it is yet desperate, but it is
very stark. And if I had a title for today's talk, it would be sleepwalking
into
a nightmare. 'Cause that's what I think we're doing.
I gave a speech at the American
Enterprise Institute Sept. 10 at which I gave an alternative history of the
last six years, because the more I
thought about how much we're failing, the
more I concluded you couldn't just nitpick individual places and talk
about individual changes because it
didn't capture the scale of the disaster.
And I had been particularly
impressed by a new book that came out called
Troublesome Young Men, which is
a study of the younger Conservatives
who opposed appeasement in the 1930s and who took on Chamberlain. It's a very
revealing book and a very powerful
book because we tend to look backwards and
we tend to overstate Churchill's
role in that period. And we tend to
understate what a serious and conscientious and thoughtful effort appeasement
was and that it was the
direct and deliberate policy of very powerful and
very willful people. We
tend to think of it as a psychological weakness as
though Chamberlain was
somehow craven. He wasn't craven. Chamberlain had a
very clear vision of the
world, and he was very ruthless domestically. And
they believed so deeply in avoiding war with Germany that as late as
the spring of 1940, when they are six months or seven months into they war,
they are dropping leaflets instead
of bombs on the Rohr, and they are urging
the British news media not to publish anti-German stories because they
don't want to offend the German people. And you read this book, and it makes
you want to weep because,
interestingly, the younger Tories who were most
opposed to appeasement were the combat veterans of World War I, who had
lost all of their friends in the war but who understood that the failure of
appeasement would result in a
worse war and that the longer you lied about
reality, the greater the disaster.
And they were severely punished
and isolated by Chamberlain and the Conservative machine, and as I read that,
I realized that that's really
where we are today. Our current problem is
tragic. You have an administration whose policy is inadequate being opposed
by a political left
whose policy is worse, and you have nobody pre
pared to talk about the policy we need. Because we are told if you are for a
strong America, you
should back the Bush policy even if it's inadequate, and
so you end up making an argument in favor of something that can't work.
So your choice is
to defend something which isn't working or to oppose it by
being for an even weaker policy. So this is a catastrophe for this country
and a catastrophe for freedom around the world. Because we have refused
to be honest about the scale of the problem.
Let me work back. I'm going to get
to Iran since that's the topic, but I'm going to get to it
eventually.
Let me work back from Pakistan. The dictatorship in Pakistan has
never had control over Wiziristan. Not for a day. So we've now spent six
years since
9/11 with a sanctuary for Al-Qaida and a sanctuary for the
Taliban, and every time we pick up people in Great Britain who are
terrorists, they were
trained in Pakistan.
And our answer is to praise
Musharraf because at least he's not as bad as the others. But the truth is
Musharraf has not gotten control of terrorism
in Pakistan. Musharraf doesn't
have full control over his own government. The odds are even money
we're going to drift into a disastrous dictatorship at some point in
Pakistan. And while we worry about the Iranians acquiring a
nuclear weapon,
the Pakistanis already have 'em, So why would you feel
secure in a
world where you could presently have an Islamist dictatorship in Pakistan
with a hundred-plus nuclear weapons? What's our grand strategy
for
that?
Then you look at Afghanistan. Here's a country that's small,
poor, isolated, and in six years we have not been able to build roads, create
economic
opportunity, wean people off of growing drugs. A third of the GDP is
from drugs. We haven't been able to end the sanctuary for the Taliban
in
Pakistan. And I know of no case historically where you defeat a
guerrilla movement if it has a sanctuary. So the people who rely on the West
are
outbribed by the criminals, outgunned by the criminals, and faced
with a militant force across the border which practiced earlier defeating
the
Soviet empire and which has a time horizon of three or four
generations.
NATO has a time horizon of each quarter or at best a year,
facing an
opponent whose time horizon is literally three or four generations.
It's a total mismatch.
Then you come to the direct threat to the United States, which is
Al-Qaida.
Which, by the way, we just published polls. One of the sites I
commend to
you is AmericanSolutions.com. Last Wednesday we posted six
national surveys, $428,000 worth of data. We gave it away. I found
myself in the unique position of calling Howard Dean to tell him I was giving
him $400,000 worth of polling. We have given it away to both Democrats and
Republicans. It is fundamentally different from the national news
media. When asked the question "Do we have an obligation to defend the United
States and her allies?" the answer is 85 percent yes. When asked a further
question "Should we defeat our enemies?" - it's very strong language -
the answer is 75 percent yes, 75 to 16.
The complaint about Iraq is a
performance complaint, not a values complaint.
When asked whether or not Al-Qaida
is a threat, 89 percent of the country says yes. And they think you have to
defeat it, you can't negotiate with it.
So now let's look at Al-Qaida and the
rise of Islamist terrorism.
And let's be honest: What's the primary source of money for
Al-Qaida? It's you, recirculated through Saudi Arabia. Because we have no
national energy strategy, when clearly if you really cared about liberating
the United States from the Middle East and if you really cared about
the survival of
Israel, on e of your highest goals would be to move to a
hydrogen economy and to eliminate petroleum as a primary source of
energy.
Now that's what a serious national strategy would look like, but
that would require real change.
So then you look at Saudi Arabia.
The fact that we tolerate a country saying no Christian and no Jew can go to
Mecca, and we start with the presumption that that's true while they attack
Israel for being a religious state is a sign of our timidity, our
confusion, our cowardice that is stunning.
It's not complicated. We're
inviting Saudi Arabia to come to Annapolis to talk about rights for
Palestinians when nobody is saying, "Let's talk about
rights for Christians
and Jew s in Saudi Arabia. Let's talk about rights for women in Saudi
Arabia."
So
we accept this totally one-sided definition of the world in which our enemies
can cheerfully lie on television every day, and we don't even have
the nerve
to insist on the truth. We pretend their lies are reasonable. This is a
very fundamental problem. And if you look at who some of the largest
owners
of some of our largest banks are today, they're Saudis.
You keep pumping billions of
dollars a year into countries like Venezuela, Iran and Saudi Arabia, and
Russia, and you are presently going to ha ve
created people who oppose you
who have lots of money. And they're then going to come back to your own
country and finance, for example, Arab study institutes whose only
requirement is that they never tell the truth. So you
have all sorts of
Ph.D.s who now show up quite cheerfully prepared to say
whatever it is
that makes their funders happy - in the name, of course, of academic freedom.
So why wouldn't Columbia host a genocidal madman? It's just part of political
correctness. I mean, Ahmadinejad may say terrible things, he may lock
up students, he may kill journalists, he may say, "We
should wipe out
Israel," he may say, "We should defeat the United States,"but after all,
what has he done that's inappropriate? What has he done that wouldn't
be repeated at a Hollywood cocktail party or a nice gathering
in Europe?
And nobody says this is totally, utterly, absolutely
unacceptable. Why is it that the No. 1 threat in intelligence movies is the
CIA?
I
happened the other night to be watching an old movie, To Live and Die
in L.A., which is about counterfeiting. But the movie starts with a
Secret
Service agent who is defending Ronald Reagan in 1985, and the person
he is defending Ronald Reagan from is a suicide bomber who is actually,
overtly a Muslim fanatic. Now, six years after 9/11, you could not get that
scene made
in Hollywood today.
Just look at the movies. Why is it
that the bad person is either a right-wing crazed billionaire, or the CIA as
a government agency. Go look at
the Bourne Ultimatum. Or a movie like the one
that George Clooney made, which was an absolute lie, in which it
implied that if you were a reformist
Arab prince, that probably the CIA would
kill you. It's a total lie. We actually have SEALs protecting people all over
the world. We actually risk
American lives protecting reformers all
over the world, and yet Hollywood can't bring itself to tell the truth, (a)
because it's ideologically so
opposed to the American government and the
American military, and (b), because it's terrified that if it said
something really openly, honestly
true about Muslim terrorists, they might
show up in Hollywood. And you mighthave somebody killed as the Dutch
producer was killed.
And so we're living a life of cowardice, and in that life of
cowardice we're sleepwalking into a nightmare.
And then you come to Iran. There's
a terrific book. Mark Bowden is a remarkable writer who wrote Black Hawk
Down, has enormous personal courage. He's a Philadelphia newspaper writer,
actually got the money out of the Philadelphia newspaper to go to
Somalia to interview the Somalian side of Black Hawk Down. It's a remarkable
achievement. Tells a great story about getting to Somalia, paying lots of
cash, having the local warlord protect him, and after about two weeks
the warlord came to him and said, "You know,
we've decided that we're very
uncomfortable with you being here, and you
should leave."
And so he goes to the hotel, where
he is the only hard-currency guest, and says, "I've got to check out two
weeks early because the warlord has told me
that he no longer will protect
me." And the hotel owner, who wants to keep his only hard-currency
guest, says, "Well, why are you listening to him?
He's not the government.
There is no government." And Bowden says, "Well,
what will I do?" And he
says, "You hire a bigger warlord with more guns,"
which he did. But
then he could only stay one week because he ran out of
money.
But this is a guy with real
courage. I mean, imagine trying to go out and be a journalist in that kind of
world, OK? So Bowden came back and wrote Guest
of the Ayatollah, which is the
Iranian hostage of 1979, which he entitled, "The First Shots in Iran's
War Against America." So in the Bowden worldview,
the current Iranian
dictatorship has been at war with the United States
since 1979. Violated
international law. Every conceivable tenet of
international law was
violated when they seized the American Embassy and they seized the diplomats.
Killed Americans in Lebanon in the early '80s.
Killed Americans at Khobar
Towers in '95 and had the Clinton administration deliberately avoid
revealing the information, as Louis Freeh, the director of the FBI, has said
publicly, because they didn't want to have to confront the Iranian
complicity.
And so you have an Iranian regime which is cited annually as the
leading supporter of state terrorism in the world. Every year the State
Department
says that. It's an extraordinary act of lucidity on the part of
an institution which seeks to avoid it as often as
possible.
And you have Gen. Petraeus come to the U.S. Congress and say
publicly in an open session, "The Iranians are waging a proxy war against
Americans in
Iraq."
I
was so deeply offended by this, it's hard for me to express it
without sounding irrational. I'm an Army brat. My dad served 27 years in
the
infantry. The idea that an American general would come to the
American Congress, testify in public that our young men and women are
being killed by Iran, and we have done nothing, I find absolutely
abhorrent.
So
I'm preparing to come and talk today. I got up this morning, and a friend had
sent me yesterday's Jerusalem Post editorial, which if you haven't read,
I
recommend to you. It has, for example, the following quote: "On
Monday, chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat said, 'The problem of
the content of the document setting out joint principles for peace-making
post-Annapolis has not been resolved. One of the more pressing problems is
the Zionist regime's insistence on being recognized as a Jewish state.
We will not agree to recognize Israel as a Jewish state. There is no country
in the world where religious and national identities are intertwined.'
"
What truly bothers me is the shallowness and the sophistry of the
Western governments, starting with our own. When a person says to you, "I
don't
recognize that you exist," you don't start a negotiation. The person
says, "I literally do not recognize" and then lies to you. I mean the
first thing
you say to this guy is "Terrific. Let's go visit Mecca. Since
clearly there's no other state except Israel that is based on religion, the
fact
that I happen to be Christian won't bother anybody." And then
he'll say, "Well, that's different."
We tolerate this. We have created
our own nightmare because w e refuse to tell the truth. We refuse to tell the
truth to our politicians. Our State
Department refuses to tell the truth to
the country. If the president of the United States, and again, we're
now so bitterly partisan, we're so committed
to red-vs.-blue hostility, that
George W. Bush doesn't have the capacity to give an address from the Oval
Office that has any meaning for half the
country. And the anti-war left
is so strong in the Democratic primary that I think it's almost impossible
for any Democratic presidential candidate to
tell the truth about the
situation.
And so the Republicans are isolated and trying to defend
incompetence. The Democrats are isolated and trying to find a way to say,
"I'm really for
strength as long as I can have peace, but I'd really like to
have peace, except I don't want to recognize these people who aren't
very peaceful."
I
just want to share with you, as a grandfather, as a citizen, as a historian,
as somebody who was once speaker of the House, this is a serious
national
crisis. This is 1935 or 1936, and it's getting worse every year.
None of our enemies are confused.
Our enemies don't get up each morning and go, "Oh, gosh, I think I'll have an
existential crisis of identity in which
I will try to think through whether
or not we can be friends while you're killing me." Our enemies get up
every morning and say, "We hate the West. We hate freedom." They would not
allow a meeting with women in the room.
I was once interviewed by a BBC
reporter, a nice young lady who was only about as anti-American as she had to
be to keep her job. Since it was a live
interview, I turned to her halfway
through the interview and I said, "Do you like your job?" And it was
summertime, and she's wearing a short-sleeve
dress. And she said, "Well,
yes." She was confused because I had just
reversed roles. I said, "Well, then
you should hope we win." She said, "What do you mean?" And I said,
"Well, if the enemy wins, you won 't be allowed to
be on
television."
I
don't know how to explain it any simpler than that.
Now what do we need?
We need first of all to recognize
this is a real war. Our enemies are peaceful when they're weak, are ruthless
when they're strong, demand mercy
when they're losing, show no mercy when
they're winning. They understand exactly what this is, and anybody who
reads Sun Tzu will understand exactly what we're living through. This is a
total war. One side is going to win.
One side is going to lose. You'll be
able to tell who won and who lost by who's still standing. Most of
Islam is not in this war, but most of Islamisn't going to stop this war.
They're just going to sit to one side and tell
you how sorry they are that
this happened. We had better design grand strategies that are radically
bigger and radically tougher and radically
more honest than anything
currently going on, and that includes winning the argument in Europe , and it
includes winning the argument in the rest of the world. And it includes
being very clear, and I'll just give you one simple example because we're now
muscle-bound by our own inability to talk
honestly.
Iran produces 60 percent of its
own gasoline. It produces lots of crude oil but only has one refinery. It
imports 40 percent of its gasoline. The entire
60 percent is produced at one
huge refinery.
In
1981, Ronald Reagan decided to break the Soviet empire. He was asked what's
your vision of the Cold War. He said, "Four words: We win; they
lose." He was
clearly seen by The New York Times as an out-of-touch, reactionary,
right-wing cowboy from California who had no idea what was
going on in the
world. And 11 years later the Soviet Union disappeared, but obviously that
had nothing to do with Reagan because that would have meant he was
right. So it's just a random accident the Soviet Union disappeared.
Part of the war we waged on the
Soviet Union involved their natural gas supply because we wanted to cut off
their hard currency. The Soviets were
desperate to get better equipment for
their pipeline. We managed to sell them through third parties very,
very sophisticated American pipeline
equipment, which they were thrilled to
buy and thought they had pulled off a huge coup. Now we weren't playing fair.
We did not tell them that the
equipment was designed to blow up. One
day in 1982, there was an explosion in Siberia so large that the initial
reflection on the satellites looked
like there was a tactical nuclear weapon.
One part of the White House was genuinely worried, and the other part
of the White House had to calm them down. They said, "No, no, that's our
equipment blowing up."
In
the 28 years since the Iranians declared war on us, in the six years since
9/11, in the months since Gen. Petraeus publicly said they are killing
young
Americans, we have not been able to figure out how to take down
one refinery. Covertly, quietly, without overt war. And we have not
been able to figure out how to use the most powerful navy in the world to
simply stop the
tankers and say, "Look, you want to kill young Americans,
you're going to walk to the battlefield, but you're not going to ride
in the car because you're not going to have any gasoline."
We don't have to be stupid. The
choice is not cowardice or total war. Reagan unlocked Poland without firing a
shot in an alliance with the pope, with the
labor unions and with the
British. We have every possibility if we're prepared to be honest to
shape the world. It'll be a very big project. It's
much closer to World War
II than it is to anything we've tried recently. It will require real effort,
real intensity and real determination. We're
either going to do it now,
while we're still extraordinarily powerful, or we're going to do it later
under much more desperate circumstances after
we've lost several
cities.
We
had better take this seriously because we are not very many mistakes
away from a second Holocaust. Three nuclear weapons is a second Holocaust.
Our
enemies would like to get those weapons as soon as they can, and
they promise to use them as soon as they can.
I suggest we defeat our enemies
and create a different situation long before they have that power