Fight against terror - defining challenge of our time
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US President George W Bush
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Excerpts from the address by US President George W Bush to the
Israeli Knesset on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the
establishment of the State of Israel.
This anniversary is a time to reflect on the past. It's also an
opportunity to look to the future. As we go forward, our alliance will
be guided by clear principles shared convictions rooted in moral clarity
and unswayed by popularity polls or the shifting opinions of
international elites.
We believe in the matchless value of every man, woman, and child. So
we insist that the people of Israel have the right to a decent, normal,
and peaceful life, just like the citizens of every other nation.
We believe that democracy is the only way to ensure human rights. We
believe that religious liberty is fundamental to a civilized society. So
we condemn anti-Semitism in all forms whether by those who openly
question Israel's right to exist, or by others who quietly excuse them.
We believe that free people should strive and sacrifice for peace.
So we applaud the courageous choices Israel's leaders have made. We
also believe that nations have a right to defend themselves and that no
nation should ever be forced to negotiate with killers pledged to its
destruction. We believe that targeting innocent lives to achieve
political objectives is always and everywhere wrong. So we stand
together against terror and extremism, and we will never let down our
guard or lose our resolve.
The fight against terror and extremism is the defining challenge of
our time. It is more than a clash of arms. It is a clash of visions, a
great ideological struggle. On the one side are those who defend the
ideals of justice and dignity with the power of reason and truth.
On the other side are those who pursue a narrow vision of cruelty and
control by committing murder, inciting fear, and spreading lies. This
struggle is waged with the technology of the 21st century, but at its
core it is an ancient battle between good and evil.
The killers claim the mantle of Islam, but they are not religious
men. No one who prays to the God of Abraham could strap a suicide vest
to an innocent child, or blow up guiltless guests at a Passover Seder,
or fly planes into office buildings filled with unsuspecting workers. In
truth, the men who carry out these savage acts serve no higher goal than
their own desire for power.
They accept no God before themselves. And they reserve a special
hatred for the most ardent defenders of liberty, including Americans and
Israelis.
There are good and decent people who cannot fathom the darkness in
these men and try to explain away their words. It's natural, but it is
deadly wrong. As witnesses to evil in the past, we carry a solemn
responsibility to take these words seriously. Jews and Americans have
seen the consequences of disregarding the words of leaders who espouse
hatred. And that is a mistake the world must not repeat in the 21st
century.
Some seem to believe that we should negotiate with the terrorists and
radicals, as if some ingenious argument will persuade them they have
been wrong all along. We have heard this foolish delusion before.
As Nazi tanks crossed into Poland in 1939, an American senator
declared: "Lord, if I could only have talked to Hitler, all this might
have been avoided." We have an obligation to call this what it is the
false comfort of appeasement, which has been repeatedly discredited by
history.
America stands with you in breaking up terrorist networks and denying
the extremists sanctuary.
Ultimately, to prevail in this struggle, we must offer an alternative
to the ideology of the extremists by extending our vision of justice and
tolerance and freedom and hope. These values are the self-evident right
of all people, of all religions, in all the world because they are a
gift from the Almighty God.
Securing these rights is also the surest way to secure peace. Leaders
who are accountable to their people will not pursue endless
confrontation and bloodshed. Young people with a place in their society
and a voice in their future are less likely to search for meaning in
radicalism. Societies where citizens can express their conscience and
worship their God will not export violence, they will be partners in
peace.
The fundamental insight, that freedom yields peace, is the great
lesson of the 20th century. Now our task is to apply it to the 21st.
Nowhere is this work more urgent than here in the Middle East. We must
stand with the reformers working to break the old patterns of tyranny
and despair.
We must give voice to millions of ordinary people who dream of a
better life in a free society. We must confront the moral relativism
that views all forms of government as equally acceptable and thereby
consigns whole societies to slavery. Above all, we must have faith in
our values and ourselves and confidently pursue the expansion of liberty
as the path to a peaceful future.
That future will be a dramatic departure from the Middle East of
today. So as we mark 60 years from Israel's founding, let us try to
envision the region 60 years from now. This vision is not going to
arrive easily or overnight; it will encounter violent resistance.
But if we and future Presidents and future Knessets maintain our
resolve and have faith in our ideals, here is the Middle East that we
can see: Israel will be celebrating the 120th anniversary as one of the
world's great democracies, a secure and flourishing homeland for the
Jewish people.
The Palestinian people will have the homeland they have long dreamed
of and deserved a democratic state that is governed by law, and respects
human rights, and rejects terror. From Cairo to Riyadh to Baghdad and
Beirut, people will live in free and independent societies, where a
desire for peace is reinforced by ties of diplomacy and tourism and
trade.
This is a bold vision, and some will say it can never be achieved.
But think about what we have witnessed in our own time. When Europe was
destroying itself through total war and genocide, it was difficult to
envision a continent that six decades later would be free and at peace.
When Japanese pilots were flying suicide missions into American
battleships, it seemed impossible that six decades later Japan would be
a democracy, a lynchpin of security in Asia, and one of America's
closest friends. And when waves of refugees arrived here in the desert
with nothing, surrounded by hostile armies, it was almost unimaginable
that Israel would grow into one of the freest and most successful
nations on the earth.
Yet each one of these transformations took place. And a future of
transformation is possible in the Middle East, so long as a new
generation of leaders has the courage to defeat the enemies of freedom,
to make the hard choices necessary for peace, and stand firm on the
solid rock of universal values. |