Sanders,
an independent who caucuses with Democrats, told the Texas crowd, “Brothers and
sisters, we cannot let history repeat itself. The United States faces enormous
problems here at home. We should be spending our money and our manpower
rebuilding America, not going into a war against Iran.”
The progressive Vermont senator, speaking at a town hall in
Fort Worth as part of his “Fighting Oligarchy” tour, highlighted how Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump used similar
language around the strikes on Iran to what Netanyahu and then-President George
Bush said surrounding the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.
Sanders quoted a Netanyahu congressional testimony from
2002, in which the Israeli leader said, “There is no question that Saddam
Hussein is seeking nuclear weapons.”
Sanders then emphasized how “George Bush said, ‘Saddam’s
regime is seeking a nuclear bomb,’ and he argued for a preemptive attack,”
referencing an analogy by the then-president that the United States could not
afford to wait for “the smoking gun which could come in the form of a mushroom
cloud.”
“No
weapons of mass destruction were ever found,” Sanders continued. “That war was
based on a lie. A lie that cost US 4,500 young Americans, 32,000 wounded and
trillions of dollars.”
Bush in 2003 announced the invasion of Iraq under the
pretext of disarming it from weapons of mass destruction, a claim that was
later debunked.
Netanyahu and Trump have both cited the threat posed by
Iran’s nuclear program, with the US president saying Saturday from the White
House, “Our objective was the destruction of Iran’s nuclear enrichment capacity
and a stop to the nuclear threat posed by the world’s No. 1 state sponsor of
terror.”
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