http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HufBS-ElYgQ
I just saw a statue of Ronald Reagan in front of the American Embassy and I was very inspired. I met Ronald Reagan when I was about 18 years old and most of you know I served with him in the White House for 7 years. It seems that his accomplishments are being acknowledged now and this is a great surprise for me. Most of us who worked for Reagan did not believe that his accomplishments would be recognised for 2 or 3 generations. We ended the Cold War without a major fight between the Soviet Union, and Soviet Communism, and the United States. What a great accomplishment!
I just saw a statue of Ronald Reagan in front of the American Embassy and I was very inspired. I met Ronald Reagan when I was about 18 years old and most of you know I served with him in the White House for 7 years. It seems that his accomplishments are being acknowledged now and this is a great surprise for me. Most of us who worked for Reagan did not believe that his accomplishments would be recognised for 2 or 3 generations. We ended the Cold War without a major fight between the Soviet Union, and Soviet Communism, and the United States. What a great accomplishment!
We live in a world now, because of what Reagan did,
and other leaders of the day did, to make this a better world. We live in a
world where we have the potential to solve all of the perplexing problems that
plague mankind since our beginnings, we have the chance now. We have developed
technology, and technology is currently in a development phase, that will carry
mankind, if given its opportunity, to higher areas and more benign living and
peace, than anyone could ever have dreamed about so many years ago.
A century ago, the average people of this world did
not dream of a better life for them or their family, did not dream of a time
when they could have their basic needs taken care of. They dreamed of how they
were going to get by the very next day and now we have, because of technology
and the leaps that we are about to make which are much greater than the
technology leaps we have done in the past. As member of the Foreign Affairs
Committee and Vice Chairman of the House of Representatives Science Committee,
my perceptions are based on the potential that we are developing in the area of
technology.
But yet, while we have all this technology, we
still have forces at play in the human beings throughout the world, that will
hold us back and the same forces that plague those who have aspirations for a
better life for people on this planet and the dynamic forces that I’m talking
about, that threaten us, are forces that were put into place during the Cold
War. For example, those things that we did in the Reagan White House I think
ended the Cold War by going away from some of the things that had been done
before Reagan, but we now have some of the things that were in place during the
Cold War that undermine peace, prosperity and freedom throughout the world and
some people are still living in the Cold War – in America and in Russia – there
are still people thinking in terms of the mentality of the Cold War and this
eliminates a lot of the opportunity for cooperation that would serve the interests
of all nations concerned.
For example, the government of India, only now is
making the transition, in many people’s eyes, from where they were aligned with
Russia, the Soviet Union, during the Cold War to now being a very democratic
country. It was then as well, but being aligned with the West. They should be a
good friend of the United States and that is widely recognised – fewer people
recognise perhaps that what was the Soviet Union and what is Russia should be a
good friend to the United States. But the Cold War is only one of the factors
that I am addressing in terms of the dynamic that is preventing us from having
this better world that I would envision.
The other is a dynamic that was put into place –
and it is very fitting that we are here in Great Britain in, you might say, the
epicentre of colonialism – because there are a lot of forces that are still at
play in our world preventing us from solving problems and seeking to uplift
mankind, that were put in place during the colonial times – and remember that I
am a Republican, not a monarch, and so I’m very proud that we were the first
guys who took on the strongest colonial power but Britain and the United
States, of course, since then have been and should be the very best of friends.
But the colonial powers, mainly European, intentionally created national
boundaries to divide and conquer the various peoples of the world – especially
in the undeveloped world.
That was a game plan that plagues us today. During
the Cold War, the United States had to operate and set its strategy based on
the threat that was right in front of us; that was Soviet Communism. We ended
up – sometimes my country violated and compromised its basic principles in
order to defeat the threat of Soviet Communism right there. Let me explain one
thing; I was a member of Ronald Reagan’s senior staff – I was a special
assistant to the President, I was one of Ronald Reagan’s senior speechwriters
for 7 years. Ronald Reagan changed the way we were fighting the Cold War and I
know a lot of people and liberal intellectuals can’t accept that, but he did.
The fact is, when Reagan came in the object was to be anti-Communist and find
anti-Communist alternatives. Ronald Reagan turned it into a war between
democracy and freedom on one side and Communism and dictatorship on the other.
That is when we started winning the Cold War and also there was a thing called
the Reagan Doctrine.
The Reagan Doctrine was instead of putting our army
out to fight the Soviet Union, we are going to help those people struggling for
freedom who are fighting our enemies. The enemy of our enemy is our friend.
That formula is what brought the Cold War to an end and we saw for example a
great expansion of democracy in Central and South America. That is not
recognised; that before Reagan most of those countries were all dictatorships
and after Reagan left there was a period, before things started going in the
opposite direction again after about a decade where almost every one of these
countries was democratic. That was the Reagan Doctrine and a commitment to
freedom, not just stopping Communism. That is what ended the Cold War and that
is what gave the world a chance to leave that behind us.
So, when Reagan left, I thought I was going to be
able to retire from politics and become a professional surfer and folk singer.
I am not a very good folk singer and I am not really a good surfer, so I hung
around. In short, I did not think I would have to stay in politics to make it a
better world but we have evolved now to where there are great threats to people
who want freedom and who want to build a better planet and the threats I have
in mind, and which I think are very clear to those of us in the West, are
radical Islam – which is at our throats today – and China which is positioning itself
to strangle us in the future. It behoves us to face this reality if we are to
be successful in making it a better and safer world, just as Ronald Reagan had
to find the right strategy.
First and foremost, I suggest, the most important
thing is facing facts and American policy makers have got to look at the world
as it is, face the facts, and make decisions based on this and not on some
dynamic that was created by British colonialism or even a dynamic created
during the Cold War and that perhaps the most important of those facing facts
is that Pakistan is not a friend of the United States and it is not a friend of
those who believe in peace and prosperity for the people of the world and
freedom for the people of the world. That is the most important fact we have
got to learn if we are going to bring peace to a whole region of the world that
is in turmoil.
Unfortunately, it has been American money and
American support for a vicious, murderous, gangster regime in Pakistan that has
kept this violence and horrendous reality as part of the lives of so many
millions of people who live in South Asia. So that is the first thing we have
got to do and that means we have got to realise that the ISI is a major command
force and force of direction and supply for radical Islam throughout the world.
So first and foremost, we have to quit giving any
military aid – and I would suggest we should quit giving any aid – to Pakistan
who then uses our aid to murder and suppress people like the Baloch people, who
are longing to have basic freedoms. We have to make sure that the evidence of
this is clear to everybody and that the monstrous violence that is being laid
upon the people of Balochistan is horrendous. We could have had a much more
peaceful place today and in the last 10 years in Afghanistan, had not the ISI
in Pakistan decided they wanted to dominate that country. At the same time, you
have the people of Balochistan – who are independent people – who again were
divided by British colonial interests.
Those things are behind us now, but the people of
Balochistan always deserved their freedom and we need to recognise that just
because somebody, maybe in this building, 150 years ago made some decision
about where the lines were going to be drawn down in South Asia; “Oh yeah, well
the Baloch don’t count, we can divide them”, etcetera. We do not have to honour
those boundaries; we must honour the principles that God gave rights to every
individual and every people have a right to gather together and have the right
to self-determination. I know there are a lot of people who say, “Well you’re
opening up a can of worms for conflict all over the world when you say that”.
Well I am not. Because if there are some people who are satisfied because their
government is democratic, and they are being treated well and they get along
with the other people who have been put together during the colonial times and
during the Cold War, they will not be revolting against their government
because they are satisfied with it. They will choose – they are choosing – by
not revolting against it, to accept those boundaries. But for people who do not
accept the colonial powers’ boundaries and will fight because they are being
oppressed by some other ethnic group that they have been forced into a
relationship with; no, we should be on the side of self-determination. Those
people have a right and hopefully a right that we can give them through the
ballot box and not through guns; they have a right to self-determination.
This is the heart of the matter now in Balochistan
and in that part of the world. I proudly stand up with the people, whether it
is Balochistan or elsewhere, who believe that they would rather have a separate
country than to be part of whatever country that is. The same way as my
founding fathers in my country demanded their right to self-determination.
People forget to read the Declaration of Independence sometimes. I hope you
have read the Declaration of Independence. It talks about why every people have
a right, given by God, to direct their own course through the ballot box and to
be free and independent, but then it describes why we as Americans were
fighting back in 1776; go on, read it. There was a list of atrocities being
committed by the British crown upon the American people. It is the very same
atrocities, only more, that are being committed by Pakistan against the people
of Balochistan today. So, if we are going to be true to our ideals, it means
first and foremost when we have people like the Baloch, to get behind them, and
the people of Afghanistan, and get behind them and say, “Look, we’re going to
try to find a peaceful solution to your problem but if they start killing and
dumping bodies all over your country, you can bet we’re going to be on your
side, and not on the side of the murderers and gangsters committing these
crimes.
I will end it with this, I get all sorts of people
on my case about this and they are assuming that, for example, when I first
started supporting the people of Balochistan, that I was just a “tool of
India”. They kept going, “Well why don’t you say anything about Kashmir”. Just
to remind everybody, I did propose a resolution in Congress supporting the
people of Kashmir’s right to a referendum to determine their self-determination
of whether they wanted to be part of India, or independent, or part of
Pakistan. Yes, that’s right; the people of Kashmir. All the people who would
tweet me and say “You’re an idiot and you’re supporting the Indian cause”, I
say “Wait a minute, who’s the idiot here? I support having a referendum for all
of these people, including those in India, if the Kashmiris don’t want to be
part of it”. So, I’ve had to tweet back and tell them, “What about you? Why
aren’t you supporting them? The same thing that you say I should support for
Kashmir – which I do – why aren’t you supporting the people of Balochistan?” So
we have got to try to find a peaceful method and the peaceful method is this;
let’s demand a referendum. Let’s demand a referendum! And if the Pakistanis,
who keep saying, “Oh, the Baloch people really want to be part of Pakistan,
they love us, that’s why we’re killing their children”.
The fact is, the best way to end this is not
through more killing, let us try to reason together. As you may know, I have a
resolution I submitted following hearings last year. This resolution basically
says that the people of Balochistan have a right to control their destinies
through the ballot box and we support a referendum for them to decide whether
they stay part of Pakistan or not. Again, people say, “You must love the
Balochi people” or “You must love these people”. Oh no, I love freedom, I love
democracy, I love the fact that ordinary people can live decent lives and I
love those principles and to the degree that the Baloch have that as their aspirations,
I am going to be on their side. I will not be on someone’s side because of
their ethnicity or anything like that. I think it behooves all of us to
recognise these fundamental principles and it’s basically the good guys on this
planet need to stick together and when the bad guys are brutalising some people
who want nothing more than to control their own lives and set their own
destinies through the ballot box.
Let us good guys side with those who are being
oppressed. We should always as a matter of principle, support those who are
oppressed and struggling for freedom, and oppose their oppressor rather than
trying to make short-term profit deals, as some people in our country like to
do, with these gangsters who are murdering other human beings. That is not the
American way and I can assure you that the American people, many of us, still
have that spark, that love of freedom, that is supposed to be the essence our
country. The other essence of our country, by the way, is that we come from
every ethnic background, there’s every race and every religion in our country
but what unites us, hopefully – the only thing that can unite us – is if we
stay true to those principles.
- See
more at: http://www.unpo.org/article/15484#sthash.KW5XXFOe.dpuf
Speech by
Congressman Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA)
I just saw a statue of Ronald Reagan in
front of the American Embassy and I was very inspired. I met Ronald
Reagan when I was about 18 years old and most of you know I served with
him in the White House for 7 years. It seems that his accomplishments
are being acknowledged now and this is a great surprise for me. Most of
us who worked for Reagan did not believe that his accomplishments would
be recognised for 2 or 3 generations. We ended the Cold War without a
major fight between the Soviet Union, and Soviet Communism, and the
United States. What a great accomplishment!
We live in a world now, because of what
Reagan did, and other leaders of the day did, to make this a better
world. We live in a world where we have the potential to solve all of
the perplexing problems that plague mankind since our beginnings, we
have the chance now. We have developed technology, and technology is
currently in a development phase, that will carry mankind, if given its
opportunity, to higher areas and more benign living and peace, than
anyone could ever have dreamed about so many years ago.
A century ago, the average people of
this world did not dream of a better life for them or their family, did
not dream of a time when they could have their basic needs taken care
of. They dreamed of how they were going to get by the very next day and
now we have, because of technology and the leaps that we are about to
make which are much greater than the technology leaps we have done in
the past. As member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and Vice Chairman
of the House of Representatives Science Committee, my perceptions are
based on the potential that we are developing in the area of technology.
But yet, while we have all this
technology, we still have forces at play in the human beings throughout
the world, that will hold us back and the same forces that plague those
who have aspirations for a better life for people on this planet and the
dynamic forces that I’m talking about, that threaten us, are forces
that were put into place during the Cold War. For example, those things
that we did in the Reagan White House I think ended the Cold War by
going away from some of the things that had been done before Reagan, but
we now have some of the things that were in place during the Cold War
that undermine peace, prosperity and freedom throughout the world and
some people are still living in the Cold War – in America and in Russia –
there are still people thinking in terms of the mentality of the Cold
War and this eliminates a lot of the opportunity for cooperation that
would serve the interests of all nations concerned.
For example, the government of India,
only now is making the transition, in many people’s eyes, from where
they were aligned with Russia, the Soviet Union, during the Cold War to
now being a very democratic country. It was then as well, but being
aligned with the West. They should be a good friend of the United States
and that is widely recognised – fewer people recognise perhaps that
what was the Soviet Union and what is Russia should be a good friend to
the United States. But the Cold War is only one of the factors that I am
addressing in terms of the dynamic that is preventing us from having
this better world that I would envision.
The other is a dynamic that was put into
place – and it is very fitting that we are here in Great Britain in,
you might say, the epicentre of colonialism – because there are a lot of
forces that are still at play in our world preventing us from solving
problems and seeking to uplift mankind, that were put in place during
the colonial times – and remember that I am a Republican, not a monarch,
and so I’m very proud that we were the first guys who took on the
strongest colonial power but Britain and the United States, of course,
since then have been and should be the very best of friends. But the
colonial powers, mainly European, intentionally created national
boundaries to divide and conquer the various peoples of the world –
especially in the undeveloped world.
That was a game plan that plagues us
today. During the Cold War, the United States had to operate and set its
strategy based on the threat that was right in front of us; that was
Soviet Communism. We ended up – sometimes my country violated and
compromised its basic principles in order to defeat the threat of Soviet
Communism right there. Let me explain one thing; I was a member of
Ronald Reagan’s senior staff – I was a special assistant to the
President, I was one of Ronald Reagan’s senior speechwriters for 7
years. Ronald Reagan changed the way we were fighting the Cold War and I
know a lot of people and liberal intellectuals can’t accept that, but
he did. The fact is, when Reagan came in the object was to be
anti-Communist and find anti-Communist alternatives. Ronald Reagan
turned it into a war between democracy and freedom on one side and
Communism and dictatorship on the other. That is when we started winning
the Cold War and also there was a thing called the Reagan Doctrine.
The Reagan Doctrine was instead of
putting our army out to fight the Soviet Union, we are going to help
those people struggling for freedom who are fighting our enemies. The
enemy of our enemy is our friend. That formula is what brought the Cold
War to an end and we saw for example a great expansion of democracy in
Central and South America. That is not recognised; that before Reagan
most of those countries were all dictatorships and after Reagan left
there was a period, before things started going in the opposite
direction again after about a decade where almost every one of these
countries was democratic. That was the Reagan Doctrine and a commitment
to freedom, not just stopping Communism. That is what ended the Cold War
and that is what gave the world a chance to leave that behind us.
So, when Reagan left, I thought I was
going to be able to retire from politics and become a professional
surfer and folk singer. I am not a very good folk singer and I am not
really a good surfer, so I hung around. In short, I did not think I
would have to stay in politics to make it a better world but we have
evolved now to where there are great threats to people who want freedom
and who want to build a better planet and the threats I have in mind,
and which I think are very clear to those of us in the West, are radical
Islam – which is at our throats today – and China which is positioning
itself to strangle us in the future. It behoves us to face this reality
if we are to be successful in making it a better and safer world, just
as Ronald Reagan had to find the right strategy.
First and foremost, I suggest, the most
important thing is facing facts and American policy makers have got to
look at the world as it is, face the facts, and make decisions based on
this and not on some dynamic that was created by British colonialism or
even a dynamic created during the Cold War and that perhaps the most
important of those facing facts is that Pakistan is not a friend of the
United States and it is not a friend of those who believe in peace and
prosperity for the people of the world and freedom for the people of the
world. That is the most important fact we have got to learn if we are
going to bring peace to a whole region of the world that is in turmoil.
Unfortunately, it has been American
money and American support for a vicious, murderous, gangster regime in
Pakistan that has kept this violence and horrendous reality as part of
the lives of so many millions of people who live in South Asia. So that
is the first thing we have got to do and that means we have got to
realise that the ISI is a major command force and force of direction and
supply for radical Islam throughout the world.
So first and foremost, we have to quit
giving any military aid – and I would suggest we should quit giving any
aid – to Pakistan who then uses our aid to murder and suppress people
like the Baloch people, who are longing to have basic freedoms. We have
to make sure that the evidence of this is clear to everybody and that
the monstrous violence that is being laid upon the people of Balochistan
is horrendous. We could have had a much more peaceful place today and
in the last 10 years in Afghanistan, had not the ISI in Pakistan decided
they wanted to dominate that country. At the same time, you have the
people of Balochistan – who are independent people – who again were
divided by British colonial interests.
Those things are behind us now, but the
people of Balochistan always deserved their freedom and we need to
recognise that just because somebody, maybe in this building, 150 years
ago made some decision about where the lines were going to be drawn down
in South Asia; “Oh yeah, well the Baloch don’t count, we can divide
them”, etcetera. We do not have to honour those boundaries; we must
honour the principles that God gave rights to every individual and every
people have a right to gather together and have the right to
self-determination. I know there are a lot of people who say, “Well
you’re opening up a can of worms for conflict all over the world when
you say that”. Well I am not. Because if there are some people who are
satisfied because their government is democratic, and they are being
treated well and they get along with the other people who have been put
together during the colonial times and during the Cold War, they will
not be revolting against their government because they are satisfied
with it. They will choose – they are choosing – by not revolting against
it, to accept those boundaries. But for people who do not accept the
colonial powers’ boundaries and will fight because they are being
oppressed by some other ethnic group that they have been forced into a
relationship with; no, we should be on the side of self-determination.
Those people have a right and hopefully a right that we can give them
through the ballot box and not through guns; they have a right to
self-determination.
This is the heart of the matter now in
Balochistan and in that part of the world. I proudly stand up with the
people, whether it is Balochistan or elsewhere, who believe that they
would rather have a separate country than to be part of whatever country
that is. The same way as my founding fathers in my country demanded
their right to self-determination. People forget to read the Declaration
of Independence sometimes. I hope you have read the Declaration of
Independence. It talks about why every people have a right, given by
God, to direct their own course through the ballot box and to be free
and independent, but then it describes why we as Americans were fighting
back in 1776; go on, read it. There was a list of atrocities being
committed by the British crown upon the American people. It is the very
same atrocities, only more, that are being committed by Pakistan against
the people of Balochistan today. So, if we are going to be true to our
ideals, it means first and foremost when we have people like the Baloch,
to get behind them, and the people of Afghanistan, and get behind them
and say, “Look, we’re going to try to find a peaceful solution to your
problem but if they start killing and dumping bodies all over your
country, you can bet we’re going to be on your side, and not on the side
of the murderers and gangsters committing these crimes.
I will end it with this, I get all sorts
of people on my case about this and they are assuming that, for
example, when I first started supporting the people of Balochistan, that
I was just a “tool of India”. They kept going, “Well why don’t you say
anything about Kashmir”. Just to remind everybody, I did propose a
resolution in Congress supporting the people of Kashmir’s right to a
referendum to determine their self-determination of whether they wanted
to be part of India, or independent, or part of Pakistan. Yes, that’s
right; the people of Kashmir. All the people who would tweet me and say
“You’re an idiot and you’re supporting the Indian cause”, I say “Wait a
minute, who’s the idiot here? I support having a referendum for all of
these people, including those in India, if the Kashmiris don’t want to
be part of it”. So, I’ve had to tweet back and tell them, “What about
you? Why aren’t you supporting them? The same thing that you say I
should support for Kashmir – which I do – why aren’t you supporting the
people of Balochistan?” So we have got to try to find a peaceful method
and the peaceful method is this; let’s demand a referendum. Let’s demand
a referendum! And if the Pakistanis, who keep saying, “Oh, the Baloch
people really want to be part of Pakistan, they love us, that’s why
we’re killing their children”.
The fact is, the best way to end this is
not through more killing, let us try to reason together. As you may
know, I have a resolution I submitted following hearings last year. This
resolution basically says that the people of Balochistan have a right
to control their destinies through the ballot box and we support a
referendum for them to decide whether they stay part of Pakistan or not.
Again, people say, “You must love the Balochi people” or “You must love
these people”. Oh no, I love freedom, I love democracy, I love the fact
that ordinary people can live decent lives and I love those principles
and to the degree that the Baloch have that as their aspirations, I am
going to be on their side. I will not be on someone’s side because of
their ethnicity or anything like that. I think it behooves all of us to
recognise these fundamental principles and it’s basically the good guys
on this planet need to stick together and when the bad guys are
brutalising some people who want nothing more than to control their own
lives and set their own destinies through the ballot box.
Let us good guys side with those who are
being oppressed. We should always as a matter of principle, support
those who are oppressed and struggling for freedom, and oppose their
oppressor rather than trying to make short-term profit deals, as some
people in our country like to do, with these gangsters who are murdering
other human beings. That is not the American way and I can assure you
that the American people, many of us, still have that spark, that love
of freedom, that is supposed to be the essence our country. The other
essence of our country, by the way, is that we come from every ethnic
background, there’s every race and every religion in our country but
what unites us, hopefully – the only thing that can unite us – is if we
stay true to those principles.
- See more at: http://www.unpo.org/article/15484#sthash.KW5XXFOe.dpuf
Speech by
Congressman Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA)
I just saw a statue of Ronald Reagan in
front of the American Embassy and I was very inspired. I met Ronald
Reagan when I was about 18 years old and most of you know I served with
him in the White House for 7 years. It seems that his accomplishments
are being acknowledged now and this is a great surprise for me. Most of
us who worked for Reagan did not believe that his accomplishments would
be recognised for 2 or 3 generations. We ended the Cold War without a
major fight between the Soviet Union, and Soviet Communism, and the
United States. What a great accomplishment!
We live in a world now, because of what
Reagan did, and other leaders of the day did, to make this a better
world. We live in a world where we have the potential to solve all of
the perplexing problems that plague mankind since our beginnings, we
have the chance now. We have developed technology, and technology is
currently in a development phase, that will carry mankind, if given its
opportunity, to higher areas and more benign living and peace, than
anyone could ever have dreamed about so many years ago.
A century ago, the average people of
this world did not dream of a better life for them or their family, did
not dream of a time when they could have their basic needs taken care
of. They dreamed of how they were going to get by the very next day and
now we have, because of technology and the leaps that we are about to
make which are much greater than the technology leaps we have done in
the past. As member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and Vice Chairman
of the House of Representatives Science Committee, my perceptions are
based on the potential that we are developing in the area of technology.
But yet, while we have all this
technology, we still have forces at play in the human beings throughout
the world, that will hold us back and the same forces that plague those
who have aspirations for a better life for people on this planet and the
dynamic forces that I’m talking about, that threaten us, are forces
that were put into place during the Cold War. For example, those things
that we did in the Reagan White House I think ended the Cold War by
going away from some of the things that had been done before Reagan, but
we now have some of the things that were in place during the Cold War
that undermine peace, prosperity and freedom throughout the world and
some people are still living in the Cold War – in America and in Russia –
there are still people thinking in terms of the mentality of the Cold
War and this eliminates a lot of the opportunity for cooperation that
would serve the interests of all nations concerned.
For example, the government of India,
only now is making the transition, in many people’s eyes, from where
they were aligned with Russia, the Soviet Union, during the Cold War to
now being a very democratic country. It was then as well, but being
aligned with the West. They should be a good friend of the United States
and that is widely recognised – fewer people recognise perhaps that
what was the Soviet Union and what is Russia should be a good friend to
the United States. But the Cold War is only one of the factors that I am
addressing in terms of the dynamic that is preventing us from having
this better world that I would envision.
The other is a dynamic that was put into
place – and it is very fitting that we are here in Great Britain in,
you might say, the epicentre of colonialism – because there are a lot of
forces that are still at play in our world preventing us from solving
problems and seeking to uplift mankind, that were put in place during
the colonial times – and remember that I am a Republican, not a monarch,
and so I’m very proud that we were the first guys who took on the
strongest colonial power but Britain and the United States, of course,
since then have been and should be the very best of friends. But the
colonial powers, mainly European, intentionally created national
boundaries to divide and conquer the various peoples of the world –
especially in the undeveloped world.
That was a game plan that plagues us
today. During the Cold War, the United States had to operate and set its
strategy based on the threat that was right in front of us; that was
Soviet Communism. We ended up – sometimes my country violated and
compromised its basic principles in order to defeat the threat of Soviet
Communism right there. Let me explain one thing; I was a member of
Ronald Reagan’s senior staff – I was a special assistant to the
President, I was one of Ronald Reagan’s senior speechwriters for 7
years. Ronald Reagan changed the way we were fighting the Cold War and I
know a lot of people and liberal intellectuals can’t accept that, but
he did. The fact is, when Reagan came in the object was to be
anti-Communist and find anti-Communist alternatives. Ronald Reagan
turned it into a war between democracy and freedom on one side and
Communism and dictatorship on the other. That is when we started winning
the Cold War and also there was a thing called the Reagan Doctrine.
The Reagan Doctrine was instead of
putting our army out to fight the Soviet Union, we are going to help
those people struggling for freedom who are fighting our enemies. The
enemy of our enemy is our friend. That formula is what brought the Cold
War to an end and we saw for example a great expansion of democracy in
Central and South America. That is not recognised; that before Reagan
most of those countries were all dictatorships and after Reagan left
there was a period, before things started going in the opposite
direction again after about a decade where almost every one of these
countries was democratic. That was the Reagan Doctrine and a commitment
to freedom, not just stopping Communism. That is what ended the Cold War
and that is what gave the world a chance to leave that behind us.
So, when Reagan left, I thought I was
going to be able to retire from politics and become a professional
surfer and folk singer. I am not a very good folk singer and I am not
really a good surfer, so I hung around. In short, I did not think I
would have to stay in politics to make it a better world but we have
evolved now to where there are great threats to people who want freedom
and who want to build a better planet and the threats I have in mind,
and which I think are very clear to those of us in the West, are radical
Islam – which is at our throats today – and China which is positioning
itself to strangle us in the future. It behoves us to face this reality
if we are to be successful in making it a better and safer world, just
as Ronald Reagan had to find the right strategy.
First and foremost, I suggest, the most
important thing is facing facts and American policy makers have got to
look at the world as it is, face the facts, and make decisions based on
this and not on some dynamic that was created by British colonialism or
even a dynamic created during the Cold War and that perhaps the most
important of those facing facts is that Pakistan is not a friend of the
United States and it is not a friend of those who believe in peace and
prosperity for the people of the world and freedom for the people of the
world. That is the most important fact we have got to learn if we are
going to bring peace to a whole region of the world that is in turmoil.
Unfortunately, it has been American
money and American support for a vicious, murderous, gangster regime in
Pakistan that has kept this violence and horrendous reality as part of
the lives of so many millions of people who live in South Asia. So that
is the first thing we have got to do and that means we have got to
realise that the ISI is a major command force and force of direction and
supply for radical Islam throughout the world.
So first and foremost, we have to quit
giving any military aid – and I would suggest we should quit giving any
aid – to Pakistan who then uses our aid to murder and suppress people
like the Baloch people, who are longing to have basic freedoms. We have
to make sure that the evidence of this is clear to everybody and that
the monstrous violence that is being laid upon the people of Balochistan
is horrendous. We could have had a much more peaceful place today and
in the last 10 years in Afghanistan, had not the ISI in Pakistan decided
they wanted to dominate that country. At the same time, you have the
people of Balochistan – who are independent people – who again were
divided by British colonial interests.
Those things are behind us now, but the
people of Balochistan always deserved their freedom and we need to
recognise that just because somebody, maybe in this building, 150 years
ago made some decision about where the lines were going to be drawn down
in South Asia; “Oh yeah, well the Baloch don’t count, we can divide
them”, etcetera. We do not have to honour those boundaries; we must
honour the principles that God gave rights to every individual and every
people have a right to gather together and have the right to
self-determination. I know there are a lot of people who say, “Well
you’re opening up a can of worms for conflict all over the world when
you say that”. Well I am not. Because if there are some people who are
satisfied because their government is democratic, and they are being
treated well and they get along with the other people who have been put
together during the colonial times and during the Cold War, they will
not be revolting against their government because they are satisfied
with it. They will choose – they are choosing – by not revolting against
it, to accept those boundaries. But for people who do not accept the
colonial powers’ boundaries and will fight because they are being
oppressed by some other ethnic group that they have been forced into a
relationship with; no, we should be on the side of self-determination.
Those people have a right and hopefully a right that we can give them
through the ballot box and not through guns; they have a right to
self-determination.
This is the heart of the matter now in
Balochistan and in that part of the world. I proudly stand up with the
people, whether it is Balochistan or elsewhere, who believe that they
would rather have a separate country than to be part of whatever country
that is. The same way as my founding fathers in my country demanded
their right to self-determination. People forget to read the Declaration
of Independence sometimes. I hope you have read the Declaration of
Independence. It talks about why every people have a right, given by
God, to direct their own course through the ballot box and to be free
and independent, but then it describes why we as Americans were fighting
back in 1776; go on, read it. There was a list of atrocities being
committed by the British crown upon the American people. It is the very
same atrocities, only more, that are being committed by Pakistan against
the people of Balochistan today. So, if we are going to be true to our
ideals, it means first and foremost when we have people like the Baloch,
to get behind them, and the people of Afghanistan, and get behind them
and say, “Look, we’re going to try to find a peaceful solution to your
problem but if they start killing and dumping bodies all over your
country, you can bet we’re going to be on your side, and not on the side
of the murderers and gangsters committing these crimes.
I will end it with this, I get all sorts
of people on my case about this and they are assuming that, for
example, when I first started supporting the people of Balochistan, that
I was just a “tool of India”. They kept going, “Well why don’t you say
anything about Kashmir”. Just to remind everybody, I did propose a
resolution in Congress supporting the people of Kashmir’s right to a
referendum to determine their self-determination of whether they wanted
to be part of India, or independent, or part of Pakistan. Yes, that’s
right; the people of Kashmir. All the people who would tweet me and say
“You’re an idiot and you’re supporting the Indian cause”, I say “Wait a
minute, who’s the idiot here? I support having a referendum for all of
these people, including those in India, if the Kashmiris don’t want to
be part of it”. So, I’ve had to tweet back and tell them, “What about
you? Why aren’t you supporting them? The same thing that you say I
should support for Kashmir – which I do – why aren’t you supporting the
people of Balochistan?” So we have got to try to find a peaceful method
and the peaceful method is this; let’s demand a referendum. Let’s demand
a referendum! And if the Pakistanis, who keep saying, “Oh, the Baloch
people really want to be part of Pakistan, they love us, that’s why
we’re killing their children”.
The fact is, the best way to end this is
not through more killing, let us try to reason together. As you may
know, I have a resolution I submitted following hearings last year. This
resolution basically says that the people of Balochistan have a right
to control their destinies through the ballot box and we support a
referendum for them to decide whether they stay part of Pakistan or not.
Again, people say, “You must love the Balochi people” or “You must love
these people”. Oh no, I love freedom, I love democracy, I love the fact
that ordinary people can live decent lives and I love those principles
and to the degree that the Baloch have that as their aspirations, I am
going to be on their side. I will not be on someone’s side because of
their ethnicity or anything like that. I think it behooves all of us to
recognise these fundamental principles and it’s basically the good guys
on this planet need to stick together and when the bad guys are
brutalising some people who want nothing more than to control their own
lives and set their own destinies through the ballot box.
Let us good guys side with those who are
being oppressed. We should always as a matter of principle, support
those who are oppressed and struggling for freedom, and oppose their
oppressor rather than trying to make short-term profit deals, as some
people in our country like to do, with these gangsters who are murdering
other human beings. That is not the American way and I can assure you
that the American people, many of us, still have that spark, that love
of freedom, that is supposed to be the essence our country. The other
essence of our country, by the way, is that we come from every ethnic
background, there’s every race and every religion in our country but
what unites us, hopefully – the only thing that can unite us – is if we
stay true to those principles.
- See more at: http://www.unpo.org/article/15484#sthash.KW5XXFOe.dpuf
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