AP reported Wednesday afternoon that Cindy Sheehan had returned to Texas to resume her Crawford anti-war demonstration.[1] -- Also on Wednesday, former U.S. ambassador Joseph Wilson issued a statement defending Sheehan, saying: "The Bush White House and its right-wing allies are responding to Cindy Sheehan and the military families vigil in Central Texas in the same way that they always respond to bad news -- by unleashing personal attacks and smears against her." -- The president, meanwhile, delivered a speech to members of the Idaho National Guard and their families in Nampa, Idaho, in which he ruled out any reconsideration of his policy, another AP story reported. Bush said: "We'll complete our work in Afghanistan and Iraq. An immediate withdrawal of our troops in Iraq, or the broader Middle East, as some have called for, would only embolden the terrorists and create a staging ground to launch more attacks against America and free nations. So long as I'm the president we will stay, we will fight and we will win the war on terrorism."[2] -- William Branigin, covering the speech for the Washington Post, noted that "inside the Idaho Center -- the site of Bush's speech today in a state that gave him 68 percent of the vote in last year's presidential election -- the audience was strongly supportive, frequently interrupting him with applause and cheers [NOTE: 63 times, according to the White House web site]. Some of the loudest came when he struck a religious note in describing his aim of spreading democracy. -- 'Understand, freedom is not America's gift to the world,' Bush said. 'Freedom is an almighty God's gift to each man and woman in the world.' . . . He singled out one Idaho mother, Tammy Pruett. . . . Pruett, who was in the audience, has four sons currently serving in Iraq with the Idaho National Guard, and her husband and another son returned from duty there last year. . . . Bush said, 'America lives in freedom because of families like the Pruetts.'"[3] -- For an attempt to understand the social psychology of all this, see Richard Koenigsberg's speculative essay on Carolyn Marvin's views presented in her book, Blood Sacrifice and the Nation, where she argues that we "misunderstand the genuinely religious character of patriotism." -- Marvin speculates that the preservation of the nation-state is furthered by sacrificing members of one's own group. -- Koenigsberg summarizes her ideas: "The sacrifice of members of one’s own group, Marvin proposes, is the fundamental purpose of the institution of warfare. In our conventional way of thinking, nations go to war to defend the homeland, defeat the enemy, achieve 'victory,' etc. Marvin suggests that beneath these declared motives lies the real purpose of warfare, namely the desire or need to *sacrifice members of one’s own community*. 'Blood sacrifice,' Marvin declares, 'preserves the nation.' -- It is the task of the soldier to perform acts of self-sacrifice in the name of the nation. General Douglas MacArthur told graduating West Pointers in 1962 that they as soldiers 'above all other men' were required to practice 'the greatest act of religious training -- sacrifice.' Marvin calls soldiers the 'sacrificial class.' Soldiers are that group of people within a nation who are required to 'die for their country' when asked to do so. They are the designated sacrificial victims." -- On Wednesday George W. Bush used the word "sacrifice" eight times in speaking to the cheering crowd in Nampa, Idaho.[4] ...
1.
Breaking News
International
'PEACE MOM' RETURNS TO TEXAS WAR PROTEST By Angela K. Brown
Associated Press August 24, 2005
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-5231471,00.html
CRAWFORD, Texas -- A fallen soldier's mother who started an anti-war
demonstration near President Bush's ranch returned Wednesday after a weeklong
absence for a family emergency.
About a dozen protesters who have continued the peace vigil picked up Cindy
Sheehan at the Waco airport Wednesday afternoon, six days after she flew to Los
Angeles when her 74-year-old mother suffered a stroke.
"This is where I belong, until Aug. 31, like I told the president," Sheehan
said at the airport before driving about 20 miles to the Crawford site.
More than two weeks after Sheehan started camping off the main road leading
to Bush's ranch, vowing to stay through his monthlong vacation unless he met
with her, she continues drawing harsh criticism as well as support.
Conservative activists and military families were en route to Crawford from
California on a tour called "You don't speak for me, Cindy!" The caravan
coordinated by Move America Forward plans to hold a pro-Bush rally in town
Saturday.
Among those defending Sheehan are former U.S. ambassador Joseph Wilson, who
believes that his wife's identity as an undercover CIA operative was leaked in
retaliation for his criticism of the Bush administration in a 2002 New York
Times op-ed piece.
"The Bush White House and its right-wing allies are responding to Cindy
Sheehan and the military families vigil in Central Texas in the same way that
they always respond to bad news -- by unleashing personal attacks and smears
against her," Wilson said in a statement released Wednesday.
Later Wednesday, Bush was to return to Texas after a three-day trip to Idaho
where he met with some military families and gave speeches to rally support for
the war. He said Tuesday that he appreciates Sheehan's right to protest and
understands her anguish, although she does not represent the views of a lot of
families with whom he has met.
Sheehan and other grieving families met with Bush about two months after her
son died last year, before reports of faulty prewar intelligence surfaced and
caused her to become a vocal opponent of the war.
2.
BUSH REBUTS ANTIWAR ACTIVISTS, MEETS WITH FAMILIES OF IRAQ'S WAR DEAD
Associated Press August 24, 2005
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/world/050824/w082451.html
NAMPA, Idaho -- President George W. Bush, rebutting critics who want
the United States to leave Iraq, pledged Wednesday that as long as he is
president "we will stay, we will fight and we will win the war on terrorism."
In a speech to members of the Idaho National Guard and their families, the
second this week by the president in an effort to rebuild support for the war,
Bush emphasized the sacrifices military families make. He noted that Idaho has
the highest percentage of National Guard troops serving in Iraq. "We'll complete
our work in Afghanistan and Iraq," Bush said.
"An immediate withdrawal of our troops in Iraq, or the broader Middle East,
as some have called for, would only embolden the terrorists and create a staging
ground to launch more attacks against America and free nations."
"So long as I'm the president we will stay, we will fight and we will win the
war on terrorism," he declared. Bush said the country faced a clear choice after
the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 - either hunker down and retreat or
"bring the war to the terrorists, striking them before they could kill more of
our people."
"I made a decision. America will not wait to be attacked again," he said. "We
will confront emerging threats before they fully materialize."
After the speech, Bush was meeting privately with relatives of 19 military
families before returning to his Texas ranch in the evening.
Bush praised the unique role of guard members, who serve both their states
and their country. More than 243,000 National Guard members have been called up
for the war on terror, including more than 1,700 from Idaho.
In a rare reference to the war's death toll, Bush noted that 491 guard and
reserve members have lost their lives in the fight against terror. "And now
we'll honour their sacrifice by completing their mission," he said. In both
speeches this week, Bush made specific mention of war deaths, from Idaho and
from the country as a whole.
It was part of a strategy shift in which the president has started to do more
to acknowledge the mounting human costs of the conflicts in Iraq and
Afghanistan, which have claimed more than 2,000 U.S. military lives.
Bush also singled out Idaho resident Tammy Pruett, of Pocatello, as an
example of the sacrifices military families make. She has four sons in Iraq with
the Idaho Army National Guard. Her husband, Leon, and another son are back after
helping train Iraqi firefighters in Mosul. "America lives in freedom because of
families like the Pruetts," Bush said.
Outside the Idaho Center, the sports arena where Bush addressed thousands of
fatigue-clad service members and their families, about 150 protesters holding
signs and photos gathered in two areas designated by the local police.
Brenda Mansell, of Boise, held a photo of her son, Scott, a 20-year-old
marine, who she said left Tuesday for his second tour of duty in Iraq. "There
were quite a few people who asked me, 'Isn't your son ashamed of you?' " Mansell
said. "But a marine in full dress blues said my son was his brother, and he
respected me. I gave him a hug."
Among the family members scheduled to meet with Bush was Stevie Bitah, 18.
Her father, army National Guard Staff Sgt. Virgil Case, died June 1 from
non-combat related wounds in Iraq. Bitah said she does not share the antiwar
views of Cindy Sheehan, the California woman who lost a son in Iraq and has
given momentum to the peace movement by holding a vigil near Bush's Crawford,
Texas, ranch.
Still, Bitah said she hopes U.S. forces will return soon to spare other
families the loss she endured. "I don't think he intended to go over there and
have people lose family members. He's doing it for specific reasons; he's doing
it to protect our country," Bitah said of Bush. "My dad chose to go over there
and that's something he was proud of, and our family was proud of him."
Bush is trying to rebuild support for the Iraq mission in the face of a
growing opposition fuelled in part by Sheehan, who first met the president after
her son's death in Iraq last year and is now pressing for a follow-up meeting.
Bush met Sheehan last year during similar meetings with other families of the
war dead. But she says developments since then make another meeting necessary.
Sheehan flew to Los Angeles last week after her 74-year-old mother had a
stroke, but was expected to return to Texas to resume her vigil before Bush ends
his five-week vacation and returns to the White House at the beginning of
September.
3.
World
Middle East
BUSH SAYS U.S. IS ACHIEVING STRATEGIC OBJECTIVES IN IRAQ By William
Branigin
Washington Post August 24, 2005
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/24/AR2005082401454.html
President Bush said today that despite persistent insurgent violence in Iraq,
the United States is achieving its "strategic objectives" there, and he
suggested that terrorists are "less capable" of carrying out attacks on America
and other nations.
In a speech to members of the Idaho National Guard, Bush lauded the National
Guard and Reserves in general and Idaho's guardsmen in particular as he
delivered a tough defense of the U.S. war effort in Iraq, where he said
international terrorists have "converged."
His remarks appeared aimed at countering growing public skepticism about
Washington's ability to achieve its goals in Iraq and at signs of eroding public
support for the war. But Bush framed the argument only as a choice between
completing the mission and an immediate U.S. withdrawal.
"We will stay on the offense," Bush said in Nampa, Idaho. "We'll complete our
work in Afghanistan and Iraq. An immediate withdrawal of our troops in Iraq or
the broader Middle East, as some have called for, would only embolden the
terrorists and create a staging ground to launch more attacks against America
and free nations." He vowed, "So long as I'm the president, we will stay, we
will fight, and we will win the war on terror."
Bush's speech, delivered during a break from his nearly five-week vacation,
was his second this week about Iraq and the war on terrorism. On Monday, he
addressed the national convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Salt Lake
City, Utah, and his remarks today included some of the same language.
Antiwar protesters, led by the mother of a U.S. soldier killed in Iraq, have
gathered outside Bush's ranch near Crawford, Tex., to draw attention to the
mounting casualty toll.
But inside the Idaho Center -- the site of Bush's speech today in a state
that gave him 68 percent of the vote in last year's presidential election -- the
audience was strongly supportive, frequently interrupting him with applause and
cheers.
Some of the loudest came when he struck a religious note in describing his
aim of spreading democracy. "Understand, freedom is not America's gift to the
world," Bush said. "Freedom is an almighty God's gift to each man and woman in
the world."
Since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Bush noted, "more than 243,000
members of the National Guard have been mobilized for various missions in the
war on terror." He said more than 1,700 soldiers of the Idaho National Guard are
currently serving in Iraq, the highest percentage of mobilized Guard forces of
any state.
He singled out one Idaho mother, Tammy Pruett, who he said has experienced
the difficulty of seeing a loved one go off to war "six times over." Pruett, who
was in the audience, has four sons currently serving in Iraq with the Idaho
National Guard, and her husband and another son returned from duty there last
year. Bush quoted Tammy Pruett as having said, "I know that if something happens
to one of the boys, they would leave this world doing what they believe, what
they think is right for our country." Bush said, "America lives in freedom
because of families like the Pruetts."
After the event, Bush was scheduled to meet privately with families of
soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan before returning to his ranch this
evening. The Pruetts served as something of a counterweight to Cindy Sheehan,
the antiwar mother whose son was killed in Iraq last year and who has been
pushing for a second meeting with Bush to demand answers about the war. In his
speech, Bush portrayed the war in Iraq as necessary to thwart a particularly
brutal and dangerous terrorist movement.
"We will not allow the terrorists to establish new places of refuge in failed
states from which they can recruit and train and plan new attacks on our
citizens," he said.
He cautioned, "In a free society, it is impossible to protect against every
possible threat. And so the only way to defend our citizens where we live is to
go after the terrorists where they live." He suggested that, notwithstanding the
violence in Iraq, this policy was keeping America safer.
"When the terrorists spend their days and nights struggling to avoid death or
capture, they are less capable of arming and training and plotting new attacks
on America and the rest of the civilized world," Bush said, adding, "we will
stay on the hunt until the terrorists have nowhere to run and nowhere to hide."
Bush acknowledged that "terrorists have converged on Iraq" and said they have
done so "because they fear the march of freedom." He said, "The ranks of these
folks are filled with foreign fighters who've come from places like Saudi Arabia
and Syria and Iran and Egypt and Sudan and Yemen and Libya. They lack popular
support, so they're targeting innocent Iraqis with car bombs and suicide
attacks."
When they are defeated in Iraq, Bush said, "the Middle East will have a clear
example of freedom and prosperity and hope, and the terrorists will begin to
lose their sponsors and lose their recruits and lose the sanctuaries they need
to plan new attacks. And so they're fighting these efforts in Iraq with all the
brutality they can muster."
Despite the daily violence, Bush said, "we're achieving our strategic
objectives in Iraq. The Iraqi people are determined to build a free nation, and
we have a plan to help them succeed."
4.
News& Policies
PRESIDENT ADDRESSES MILITARY FAMILIES, DISCUSSES WAR ON TERROR
Idaho Center Nampa, Idaho
White House August 24, 2005
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/08/20050824.html
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all. (Applause.) Thank you all very much.
(Applause.) Thanks for the warm welcome. Glad I finally got here. (Applause.)
You got a beautiful state. (Applause.) Full of really decent people. And Laura
and I are thrilled to be here. I'm particularly thrilled to be with the
courageous men and women who wear our nation's uniform. (Applause.) I'm honored
to stand with the brave men and women of the Idaho National Guard. (Applause.) I
don't know if you know this or not, but 19 individuals have served both as
Guardsmen and as President of the United States. And I'm proud to have been one.
(Applause.)
In times of crisis, our nation depends on the courage and determination of
the Guard. You know that the call to active duty can come at any time. You stand
ready to put your lives on hold and answer that call. And you do so because you
love your state and your country. America appreciates your courageous decision
to serve. And we appreciate your families and employers who support you in your
vital work. Together with your comrades in the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine
Reserves, you're showing that patriotism and public service are alive and well
in Idaho and throughout the United States of America. (Applause.) I'm also proud
to be here with the Gunfighters of Mountain Home Air Force Base. (Applause.)
After our nation was attacked on September the 11th, 2001, air crews from the
366th Wing flew more than a thousand combat missions over the skies of
Afghanistan. In the war on terror, you're bringing justice to our enemies and
honor to the uniform, and our country is grateful to your service. (Applause.)
You can see coming in here I'm keeping pretty good company. (Laughter.) I'm
proud to be traveling today with a great wife, wonderful mother, Laura Bush.
(Applause.) She said, when you get in there keep your speech short. (Laughter.)
I said, I hadn't been to Idaho yet as President, how can I keep my speech short?
(Applause.) Anyway, I'm listening to her. (Laughter.) I'm proud to be here with
your Governor, Dirk Kempthorne, and his wife Patricia. He's a really fine man
and a great Governor for Idaho. (Applause.) Last night we spent the night in
Tamarack. I want to thank the good folks of Tamarack for their wonderful
hospitality and thanks for putting up with us, and the entourage. (Laughter.)
But we invited the congressional delegation from your great state to join us for
dinner, and so we were honored to have the likes of Senator Larry Craig and
Suzanne join us for dinner. (Applause.) Senator Mike Crapo -- (applause) --
Congressman Butch Otter -- (applause) and Congressman Mike Simpson and his wife
Kathy are with us today. (Applause.) I found it particularly interesting that
Larry Craig's mom, Dorothy, is with us, and Butch Otter's mom, Regina, is with
us. I guess it's "mothers bring their boys to work day." (Laughter and
applause.) I want to thank all the members of the Statehouse who are here. I
appreciate you being here. Thanks for serving your state. I want to thank Mayor
Tom Dale of Nampa. I appreciate you, Mr. Mayor. (Applause.) Mr. Mayor -- he
didn't ask for any advice, but I'll give you some anyway -- fill the potholes.
(Laughter.) I want to thank Mayor David Bieter of the city of Boise, for joining
us. Mr. Mayor, thank you. Thanks for your hospitality. (Applause.) Appreciate
you being here. I want to thank Generals Blum, Lafrenz, Sayler for their service
to our country. Thanks for greeting me when I came in today. I'm proud of your
service. (Applause.) Colonel Charlie Shugg, Commander of the 366th, is with us.
Colonel, thank you for being here. (Applause.) But most of all, thank you all
for coming. I appreciate you taking time out of your Wednesday morning to say
hello. (Applause.)
Our nation is engaged in a global war on terror that affects the safety and
security of every American. In Iraq, Afghanistan and across the world, we face
dangerous enemies who want to harm our people, folks who want to destroy our way
of life. Throughout our nation's history, whenever freedom has been threatened,
America has turned to the National Guard. From the War of Independence to
today's war on terror, the Guard has defended this country with courage and
determination. I'm proud to be the Commander-in-Chief, and I respect and honor
all those who serve in the United States Armed Forces Active Guard and Reserve.
(Applause.)
The role of the Guard in our military is unique. You're the only part of the
Armed Forces that serve both your state and your country. Here in Idaho there's
4,300 soldiers and airmen of the Guard who are meeting their state and federal
responsibilities with distinction and with courage. The Idaho Guard has been
called up to provide disaster relief eight times in the past decade. You've
helped your fellow citizens through fires and floods and snow emergencies. The
people of this state take comfort knowing you're on call. When tragedy strikes,
they know they can count on the men and women of the Guard. And as you protect
your neighbors from national disasters -- natural disasters, you're also helping
to protect all Americans from terrorist threats.
A special WMD response team in the Idaho Guard is based in Gowen Field. These
good folks are ready to mobilize within hours in the case of a terrorist attack.
You're not only protecting the American homeland, you're also taking the fight
to the enemy. Since September the 11th, 2001, more than 243,000 members of the
National Guard have been mobilized for various missions in the war on terror.
Idaho now has a higher percentage of its Guard forces mobilized than any other
state. (Applause.) At this moment, more than 1,700 soldiers of the Idaho Guard
are serving in Iraq. It's the largest Guard mobilization in the history of
Idaho. Laura and I are here to thank you for your service and your courage in
defending the United States of America. (Applause.)
A time of war is a time of sacrifice, and a heavy burden falls on our
military families. They miss you and they worry about you. By standing behind
you, you're standing up for America -- the families are standing for America.
And America appreciates the service and the sacrifice of the military families.
(Applause.) There are few things in life more difficult than seeing a loved one
go off to war. And here in Idaho, a mom named Tammy Pruett -- (applause) -- I
think she's here -- (laughter) -- knows that feeling six times over. (Applause.)
Tammy has four sons serving in Iraq right now with the Idaho National Guard --
Eric, Evan, Greg and Jeff. Last year, her husband Leon and another son, Eren,
returned from Iraq, where they helped train Iraqi firefighters in Mosul. Tammy
says this -- and I want you to hear this -- "I know that if something happens to
one of the boys, they would leave this world doing what they believe, what they
think is right for our country. And I guess you couldn't ask for a better way of
life than giving it for something that you believe in." America lives in freedom
because of families like the Pruetts. (Applause.)
Our nation depends on our Guard families, and we depend on the understanding
and support of the employers of our Guardsmen and women. Your service would not
be possible without the employers, without the help of the employers. In offices
and schools and factories across Idaho, your colleagues do without your talents
so that you can serve our nation. Businesses are putting patriotism ahead of
profit, because they know that our prosperity and way of life depend on the
freedom you defend. Guard employers are serving this nation, and they have the
gratitude of all Americans. (Applause.)
In this time of call-ups and alerts and mobilizations and deployments, your
employers are standing behind you, and so is your government. (Applause.) The
country owes you something in return for your sacrifice. We've taken a number of
steps to improve the call-up process so it's more respectful of you and your
families. In most cases, we're now giving you at least 30 days notification
before you mobilize so that you and your families have time to make
arrangements. We're working to give you as much certainty as possible about the
length of your mobilization, so you can know when you're able to resume civilian
life. We're working to minimize the number of extensions and repeat
mobilizations. We're working to ensure that you and your families are treated
with the dignity you deserve. (Applause.) We're also taking steps to improve the
quality of life. We've expanded health care benefits for Guard and Reserve
forces and their families, giving you access to the military's TRICARE system
for up to 90 days before you report, and 180 days after deactivation.
We're also expanding access to education for those who serve as citizen
soldiers. Last year I was proud to sign legislation providing our Guard and
Reserve forces between 40 to 80 percent of the education benefit available to
active duty forces, depending on the length of their mobilization in the war on
terror. We've also tripled the amount that can be paid for re-enlisting in the
Guard and Reserve. I've asked Congress to authorize a new retention bonus for
Guardsmen and Reservists with critical skills. What I'm tell you is this: We
understand that as the Guardsmen and Reservists stand up for America, this
administration and the government of the United States will stand with the Guard
and Reserves people. (Applause.) Your service is needed in these dangerous
times.
We remain a nation at war. The war reached our shores on September the 11th,
2001, when terrorists murdered nearly 3,000 of our citizens. And since then,
they've continued to kill -- in Madrid, in Istanbul, in Jakarta, Casablanca,
Riyadh, Bali, Baghdad, London, Sharm el-Sheikh and elsewhere. Our enemies murder
because they despise our freedom and our way of life. We believe in human
rights, and the human dignity of every man, woman and child on this Earth. The
terrorists believe that all human life is expendable. They share a hateful
ideology that rejects tolerance and crushes all dissent. They envision a world
where women are beaten, children are indoctrinated, and all who reject our
ideology of violence and extremism are murdered.
During the last few decades, the terrorists grew to believe that if they hit
America hard, as in Lebanon and Somalia, America would retreat and back down.
Before September the 11th, Osama bin Laden said that an attack could make
America run in less than 24 hours. So now they're trying to break our will with
acts of violence. They'll kill women and children, knowing that the images of
their brutality will horrify civilized people. Their goal is to force us to
retreat. See, they have a strategy. They want us to retreat so they can topple
governments in the Middle East and turn that region into a safe haven for
terrorism. We saw the terrible harm the terrorists did when they took effective
control of the failed state of Afghanistan. After all, it was there that they
trained and plotted and planned the attack that killed thousands of our
citizens. We will not allow the terrorists to establish new places of refuge in
failed states from which they can recruit and train and plan new attacks on our
citizens. (Applause.)
On September the 11th, 2001, we saw the future that the terrorists intend for
our country and the lengths they're willing to go to achieve their aims. We
faced a clear choice. We could hunker down, retreating behind a false sense of
security, or we could bring the war to the terrorists, striking them before they
could kill more of our people. (Applause.) I made a decision -- America will not
wait to be attacked again. Our doctrine is clear: We will confront emerging
threats before they full materialize. And if you harbor a terrorist, you're just
as guilty as the terrorist. (Applause.)
We will stay on the offense. We'll complete our work in Afghanistan and Iraq.
An immediate withdrawal of our troops in Iraq, or the broader Middle East, as
some have called for, would only embolden the terrorists and create a staging
ground to launch more attacks against America and free nations. So long as I'm
the President, we will stay, we will fight, and we will win the war on terror.
(Applause.) Since September the 11th, we've followed a clear strategy to defeat
the terrorists and protect our people. First, we are defending the homeland.
We've strengthened our intelligence capabilities; we've trained more than
800,000 first responders; we have taken critical steps to protect or cities and
borders and infrastructure. We have taken the fight to the enemy in our midst.
We've disrupted terrorist cells and financing networks in California and Oregon
and Illinois and New Jersey and Virginia, and other states. (Applause.)
This is a different kind of war. Today's enemies do not mass armies on
borders, or navies on high seas. They blend in with the civilian population.
They emerge to strike, and then they retreat back into the shadows. And that's
why there are thousands of our fellow citizens running down every single piece
of intelligence we can find, doing everything we can to disrupt folks that might
be here in America trying to hurt you. The second part of our strategy is this
-- and it's based upon this fact: In an open society like ours -- and we will
keep it open and we will keep it free -- it is impossible to protect against
every threat. That's a fact we have to deal with. In a free society it is
impossible to protect against every possible threat. And so the only way to
defend our citizens where we live is to go after the terrorists where they live.
(Applause.)
When the terrorists spend their days and nights struggling to avoid death or
capture, they are less capable of arming and training and plotting new attacks
on America and the rest of the civilized world. So we're after the enemy across
the globe. And we're determined, and we're relentless, and we will stay on the
hunt until the terrorists have nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. (Applause.)
And the third part of our strategy is this: We're spreading the hope of freedom
across the broader Middle East. In the long run, the only way to defeat the
terrorists is by offering an alternative to their ideology of hatred and fear.
So a key component of our strategy is to spread freedom. History has proven that
free nations are peaceful nations, that democracies do not fight their
neighbors. (Applause.) And so, by advancing the cause of liberty and freedom in
the Middle East, we're bringing hope to millions, and security to our own
citizens. By bringing freedom and hope to parts of the world that have lived in
despair, we're laying the foundation of peace for our children and
grandchildren. (Applause.)
We're using all elements of our national power to achieve our objectives --
military power, diplomatic power, financial, intelligence, and law enforcement.
We're fighting the enemy on many fronts -- from the streets of the Western
capitals to the mountains of Afghanistan, to the tribal regions of Pakistan, to
the islands of Southeast Asia and the Horn of Africa. You see, this new kind of
war, the first war of the 21st century, is a war on a global scale. And to
protect our people, we've got to prevail in every theater. And that's why it's
important for us to call upon allies and friends to join with us -- and they
are.
One of the most important battlefronts in this war on terror is Iraq.
Terrorists have converged on Iraq. See, they're coming into Iraq because they
fear the march of freedom. Their most prominent leader is a Jordanian named
Zarqawi, who has declared his allegiance with Osama bin Laden. The ranks of
these folks are filled with foreign fighters who come from places like Saudi
Arabia and Syria and Iran and Egypt and Sudan and Yemen and Libya. They lack
popular support so they're targeting innocent Iraqis with car bombs and suicide
attacks. They know the only way they can prevail is to break our will and the
will of the Iraqi people before democracy takes hold. They are going to fail.
(Applause.)
The stakes in Iraq could not be higher. The brutal violence in Iraq
today is a clear sign of the terrorists' determination to stop democracy from
taking root in the Middle East. They know that the success of a free Iraq, who
can be a key ally in the war on terror and a symbol of success for others, will
be a crushing blow to their strategy to dominate the region, and threaten
America and the free world. They know that when their hateful ideology is
defeated in Iraq, the Middle East will have a clear example of freedom and
prosperity and hope. And the terrorists will begin to lose their sponsors and
lose their recruits and lose the sanctuaries they need to plan new attacks. And
so they're fighting these efforts in Iraq with all the brutality they can
muster.
Yet, despite the violence we see every day, we're achieving our strategic
objectives in Iraq. The Iraqi people are determined to build a free nation, and
we have a plan to help them succeed. America and Iraqi forces are on the hunt,
side-by-side, to defeat the terrorists. And as we hunt down our common enemies,
we will continue to train more Iraqi security forces. Like free people
everywhere, Iraqis desire to defend their own country. That's what they want to
do. They want to be in a position to defend their own freedom and their own
democracy. And we're helping to achieve that goal. Our approach can be summed up
this way: As Iraqis stand up, we will stand down. And when the Iraqi forces can
defend their freedom by taking more and more of the fight to the enemy, our
troops will come home with the honor they have earned. (Applause.) At the same
time, we're helping the Iraqi people establish a secure democracy. The people of
Iraq have made a choice. In spite of the threats and assassinations, eight and a
half million Iraqis went to the polls in January. (Applause.)
By casting their ballots in defiance of the terrorists, they sent a clear and
unmistakable message to the world: It doesn't matter where you're born; it
doesn't matter what faith you follow, embedded in every soul is the deep desire
to live in freedom. (Applause.) I understand freedom is not America's gift to
the world; freedom is an Almighty God's gift to each man and woman in this
world. (Applause.) The Iraqi people want to live in freedom. Part of securing
America for our children and grandchildren is to help then secure their freedom.
Members of the Idaho Guard know the Iraqi people's desire for liberty because
they've seen it up close. Specialist Matt Salisbury is with us today.
(Applause.) He helped provide security for the election. He described seeing an
Iraqi family helping an elderly man to the polls vote that day. Is it all right
if I quote you? (Laughter.) "The pride radiating from his face was
unmistakable," Matt said. "With one act, he recovered his dignity which had been
stolen by a tyrant. How can I possibly describe the return of hope and dignity
that I saw in these people's eyes? It is worth the sacrifice of leaving
families, jobs and a safe life. I am proud to be a citizen soldier in the 116th
Brigade Combat Team serving in Iraq. And I'm proud to stand on my watch."
(Applause.)
You see, the Iraqi election that Matt witnessed was more than a momentary
victory for the Iraqi people. It was part of a series of defeats for the
terrorists. The terrorists have sworn havoc and destruction across -- sown havoc
and destruction across Iraq. Yet the violence has not stopped the Iraqi people
from building a free Iraq. The terrorists failed to stop the transfer of
sovereignty. They failed to stop Iraqis from running for office and going to the
polls. They have failed to stop a democratic government from taking power in
Iraq. The terrorists can kill the innocent, but they cannot stop the political
process which ultimately will lead to freedom. And right now, the Iraqi people
are achieving another important victory over the terrorists. Despite threats,
intimidation, and the assassination of some of its members, Iraq's
Constitutional Drafting Committee has submitted a constitution to Iraq's
Transitional National Assembly. Iraqi negotiators are now further debating and
revising the text.
The establishment of a democratic constitution will be a landmark event in
the history of Iraq and the history of the history of the Middle East. It will
bring us closer to a day when Iraq is a nation that can govern itself, sustain
itself, and defend itself. (Applause.) It will send a clear signal to the people
across the Middle East who are desperate for freedom that the future belongs to
freedom. See, producing a constitution is a difficult process. It involves a lot
of debate and compromise. We know that from our own history. Our Constitutional
Convention was the home to political rivalries and regional disagreements. And
the document that our founders produced in Philadelphia was not the final word.
After all, it has been amended many times over the century.
Iraqis are now at the beginning of a long process, and like our founders,
they're grappling with difficult issues, such as the role of the federal
government. Idaho people have a pretty good view of the role of the federal
government. (Laughter and applause.) Like, limit it. (Applause.) They're arguing
about the proper place of religion in the life of their nation. And like our
founders, they will come up with a system that respects the traditions of their
country and guarantees the rights of all their citizens. They understand that in
order to have a free democracy, you must have minority rights. The will of the
majority, coupled with minority rights and human dignity and rights for women is
important for a free society. They understand that. (Applause.)
But what's important is that the Iraqis are resolving these issues through
debate and discussion, not at the barrel of a gun. (Applause.) And we admire
their thoughtful deliberations, and we salute the determination of the Iraqi
leaders to lay the foundation of a lasting democracy amid the ruins of a brutal
dictatorship. (Applause.) The battle lines in Iraq are now clearly drawn for the
world to see, and there is no middle ground. Transforming a country that was
ruled by an oppressive dictator who sponsored terror into a free nation that is
an ally in the war on terror will take more time, more sacrifice, and continued
resolve. Terrorists will emerge from Iraq one of two ways: emboldened or
defeated. Every nation -- every free nation -- has a stake in the success of the
Iraqi people. If the terrorists were to win in Iraq, the free world would be
more vulnerable to attacks on innocent civilians. And that is why, for the sake
of our children and our grandchildren, the terrorists will be defeated.
(Applause.)
There will be more difficult moments on the path to victory, yet we can have
confidence in the future. We have seen freedom conquer evil and secure the peace
before. In World War II, free nations came together to fight the ideology of
fascism. Freedom prevailed. And today, the enemies of World War II are allies in
the cause of peace. (Applause.) In the Cold War, freedom defeated the ideology
of communism and led to a Europe that is whole, free and at peace. Now, once
again, freedom is confronting the followers of a murderous ideology, and like
the hate-filled ideologies that came before it, the darkness of terror will be
defeated, and the forces of freedom and moderation will prevail throughout the
Muslim world. (Applause.)
In the end, the terrorists will fail because they have nothing positive to
offer. The terrorist Zarqawi sums up their appeal this way: Anyone who stands in
the way of our struggle is our enemy and target of the swords. That's the sum of
his grim vision. They're brutal, but nothing more. They seek to exploit a great
religion, but in truth, they are animated by nothing but their own lust for
power and their desire for dominion over others. And while they may sow death
and destruction for a time, the history of the last half-century is clear -- the
will to power cannot withstand the will to live in freedom. (Applause.) We will
prevail in this struggle because freedom is the permanent hope of mankind, and
because we have on our side the greatest force for freedom in the history of the
world -- the brave men and women of the United States Armed Forces. (Applause.)
Since the founding of our republic, every generation has produced patriots
willing to sacrifice for our freedom. Since the morning of September the 11th,
we have known that the war on terror required great sacrifice, as well. In this
war, we have said farewell to some very good men and women, including 491 heroes
of the National Guard and Reserves. We mourn the loss of every life. We pray for
their loved ones. These brave men and women gave their lives for a cause that is
just and necessary for the security of our country, and now we will honor their
sacrifice by completing their mission. (Applause.)
The men and women of the Idaho Guard are serving freedom's cause with
courage and distinction, and your courage is changing the world. Specialist
Charles Glenn of Boise has been on the front lines in Iraq. He has seen the
progress firsthand, and he says, "I know Idaho has made a big difference here.
We have been a part of history." The citizen soldiers of Idaho are making
history. You're fighting to ensure that our freedom, like the state of Idaho,
may endure forever. Americans are grateful for your devotion to duty and your
courage under fire. We live in freedom and peace because of your determination
to prevail. I want to thank you for your service.
May God bless the people of this great state. May God bless our troops. And
may God continue to bless the United States of America. (Applause.)
END
11:43 A.M. MDT
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