Crossposted from West Virginia Blue where we don’t hesitate to criticize our beloved Democrats, but we also point out when they were damn well right.

Before the invasion of Iraq and throughout the administration of Mr. George W. Bush and President Dick Cheney, Senator Robert C. Byrd did much to atone for his past and was one of the greatest advocates for wisdom and reasoned debate at a time when it was much needed and terribly lacking.

Now that the Iraq war is costing the United States $10 billion per month (plus an additional $2 billion per month for Afghanistan) when the neocons were testifying on Capitol Hill before the invasion the entire war would cost $10 billion, it is worth returning to the words of wisdom from Senator Byrd.

From his Feb. 26, 2003 speech:

A swift and simple military victory certainly is one possibility, but in our democratic-Republic the Administration also has a responsibility to inform the American people that much less pleasant scenarios are also possible and even likely.  The Congress has a responsibility to explore all possible scenarios with an eye to the eventual costs of this war.  We must not just accept the rosy projections so far offered by the Administration.  Frankly, I have seen little effort by either the Administration or the Congress to inform the taxpayer about the likely costs of this war.

In both dollars and human lives, the Administration has been ominously quiet about its internal calculations and estimates.  What is even worse is that the Congress has barely bothered to ask about them.

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This is a dangerous and damaging game the Administration is playing with the American public.  Glossing over the cost of a war with Iraq may make it easier to win short-term support.  But without any serious attention to costs, the American people cannot be engaged in a fulsome public discussion about the eventual wisdom of undertaking this war.  Public support cannot be sustained to accomplish our post-war goals in Iraq if the nation has been misled about the duration and difficulty of such a conflict.  We cannot treat the citizens of this nation as if they are children who must be fed a fairy tale about fighting a glorious war of “liberation” which will be cheap, short and bloodless.  If the President is going to force this nation to engage in this unwise, potentially disastrous, and alarmingly expensive commitment, he must lay out all of the costs and risks to the nation.

What is particularly worrisome is how naively the idea of establishing a perfect democracy in Iraq is being tossed around by this Administration.  If the Administration engages in such a massive undertaking without the American people understanding the real costs and long-term commitment that will be required to achieve this bucolic vision, our efforts in Iraq could end with chaos in the region.  Chaos, poverty, hopelessness, hatred – – that’s exactly the kind of  environment that becomes a fertile breeding ground for terrorists.

The Administration is asking the American public and the international community to support this war.  The Administration must also put all of its cards on the table.  A list of real risks and downsides do the nation no good locked in Donald Rumsfeld’s desk drawer.  They must be brought into the sunshine for the people to assess.

The American people are willing to embrace a cause when they judge it to be noble and both its risks and its benefits are explained honestly to them.  But if information is withheld, long-term political support can never be sustained.  Once the order is given and the bombs start falling, the lives of American troops and innocent civilians on the ground hang in the balance.  Once “boots are on the ground,” concerns about the monetary cost of war necessarily take a back seat.  This nation will not shortchange the safety of our fighting men and women once they are in harms way.

But our people and this Congress should not have to wait until our troops are sent to fight to know what we are facing, including the painful costs of this war in dollars, political turmoil, and blood.

In a democratic-Republic, secrecy has no place.  Hiding information from the public to rally support behind a war, at the very time when the government should be striving for maximum trust will eventually undermine our nation’s strength.  This conflict will be paid for with the people’s treasure and the people’s blood.  This is no time to affront that sacrifice with beltway spin and secrecy.

If only more people had listened to Senator Byrd.

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