President
Delivers
"State
of the
Union"
The U.S.
Capitol
9:01
P.M. EST
THE
PRESIDENT:
Mr.
Speaker,
Vice
President
Cheney,
members
of
Congress,
distinguished
citizens
and
fellow
citizens:
Every
year, by
law and
by
custom,
we meet
here to
consider
the
state of
the
union.
This
year, we
gather
in this
chamber
deeply
aware of
decisive
days
that lie
ahead.
You
and I
serve
our
country
in a
time of
great
consequence.
During
this
session
of
Congress,
we have
the duty
to
reform
domestic
programs
vital to
our
country;
we have
the
opportunity
to save
millions
of lives
abroad
from a
terrible
disease.
We will
work for
a
prosperity
that is
broadly
shared,
and we
will
answer
every
danger
and
every
enemy
that
threatens
the
American
people.
(Applause.)
In
all
these
days of
promise
and days
of
reckoning,
we can
be
confident.
In a
whirlwind
of
change
and hope
and
peril,
our
faith is
sure,
our
resolve
is firm,
and our
union is
strong.
(Applause.)
This
country
has many
challenges.
We will
not
deny, we
will not
ignore,
we will
not pass
along
our
problems
to other
Congresses,
to other
presidents,
and
other
generations.
(Applause.)
We will
confront
them
with
focus
and
clarity
and
courage.
During
the last
two
years,
we have
seen
what can
be
accomplished
when we
work
together.
To lift
the
standards
of our
public
schools,
we
achieved
historic
education
reform
-- which
must now
be
carried
out in
every
school
and in
every
classroom,
so that
every
child in
America
can read
and
learn
and
succeed
in life.
(Applause.)
To
protect
our
country,
we
reorganized
our
government
and
created
the
Department
of
Homeland
Security,
which is
mobilizing
against
the
threats
of a new
era. To
bring
our
economy
out of
recession,
we
delivered
the
largest
tax
relief
in a
generation.
(Applause.)
To
insist
on
integrity
in
American
business
we
passed
tough
reforms,
and we
are
holding
corporate
criminals
to
account.
(Applause.)
Some
might
call
this a
good
record;
I call
it a
good
start.
Tonight
I ask
the
House
and
Senate
to join
me in
the next
bold
steps to
serve
our
fellow
citizens.
Our
first
goal is
clear:
We must
have an
economy
that
grows
fast
enough
to
employ
every
man and
woman
who
seeks a
job.
(Applause.)
After
recession,
terrorist
attacks,
corporate
scandals
and
stock
market
declines,
our
economy
is
recovering
-- yet
it's not
growing
fast
enough,
or
strongly
enough.
With
unemployment
rising,
our
nation
needs
more
small
businesses
to open,
more
companies
to
invest
and
expand,
more
employers
to put
up the
sign
that
says,
"Help
Wanted."
(Applause.)
Jobs
are
created
when the
economy
grows;
the
economy
grows
when
Americans
have
more
money to
spend
and
invest;
and the
best and
fairest
way to
make
sure
Americans
have
that
money is
not to
tax it
away in
the
first
place.
(Applause.)
I am
proposing
that all
the
income
tax
reductions
set for
2004 and
2006 be
made
permanent
and
effective
this
year.
(Applause.)
And
under my
plan, as
soon as
I sign
the
bill,
this
extra
money
will
start
showing
up in
workers'
paychecks.
Instead
of
gradually
reducing
the
marriage
penalty,
we
should
do it
now.
(Applause.)
Instead
of
slowly
raising
the
child
credit
to
$1,000,
we
should
send the
checks
to
American
families
now.
(Applause.)
The
tax
relief
is for
everyone
who pays
income
taxes --
and it
will
help our
economy
immediately:
92
million
Americans
will
keep,
this
year, an
average
of
almost
$1,000
more of
their
own
money. A
family
of four
with an
income
of
$40,000
would
see
their
federal
income
taxes
fall
from
$1,178
to $45
per
year.
(Applause.)
Our plan
will
improve
the
bottom
line for
more
than 23
million
small
businesses.
You,
the
Congress,
have
already
passed
all
these
reductions,
and
promised
them for
future
years.
If this
tax
relief
is good
for
Americans
three,
or five,
or seven
years
from
now, it
is even
better
for
Americans
today.
(Applause.)
We
should
also
strengthen
the
economy
by
treating
investors
equally
in our
tax
laws.
It's
fair to
tax a
company's
profits.
It is
not fair
to again
tax the
shareholder
on the
same
profits.
(Applause.)
To boost
investor
confidence,
and to
help the
nearly
10
million
senior
who
receive
dividend
income,
I ask
you to
end the
unfair
double
taxation
of
dividends.
(Applause.)
Lower
taxes
and
greater
investment
will
help
this
economy
expand.
More
jobs
mean
more
taxpayers,
and
higher
revenues
to our
government.
The best
way to
address
the
deficit
and move
toward a
balanced
budget
is to
encourage
economic
growth,
and to
show
some
spending
discipline
in
Washington,
D.C.
(Applause.)
We
must
work
together
to fund
only our
most
important
priorities.
I will
send you
a budget
that
increases
discretionary
spending
by 4
percent
next
year --
about as
much as
the
average
family's
income
is
expected
to grow.
And that
is a
good
benchmark
for us.
Federal
spending
should
not rise
any
faster
than the
paychecks
of
American
families.
(Applause.)
A
growing
economy
and a
focus on
essential
priorities
will
also be
crucial
to the
future
of
Social
Security.
As we
continue
to work
together
to keep
Social
Security
sound
and
reliable,
we must
offer
younger
workers
a chance
to
invest
in
retirement
accounts
that
they
will
control
and they
will
own.
(Applause.)
Our
second
goal is
high
quality,
affordable
health
care for
all
Americans.
(Applause.)
The
American
system
of
medicine
is a
model of
skill
and
innovation,
with a
pace of
discovery
that is
adding
good
years to
our
lives.
Yet for
many
people,
medical
care
costs
too much
-- and
many
have no
coverage
at all.
These
problems
will not
be
solved
with a
nationalized
health
care
system
that
dictates
coverage
and
rations
care.
(Applause.)
Instead,
we must
work
toward a
system
in which
all
Americans
have a
good
insurance
policy,
choose
their
own
doctors,
and
seniors
and
low-income
Americans
receive
the help
they
need.
(Applause.)
Instead
of
bureaucrats
and
trial
lawyers
and
HMOs, we
must put
doctors
and
nurses
and
patients
back in
charge
of
American
medicine.
(Applause.)
Health
care
reform
must
begin
with
Medicare;
Medicare
is the
binding
commitment
of a
caring
society.
(Applause.)
We must
renew
that
commitment
by
giving
seniors
access
to
preventive
medicine
and new
drugs
that are
transforming
health
care in
America.
Seniors
happy
with the
current
Medicare
system
should
be able
to keep
their
coverage
just the
way it
is.
(Applause.)
And just
like you
-- the
members
of
Congress,
and your
staffs,
and
other
federal
employees
-- all
seniors
should
have the
choice
of a
health
care
plan
that
provides
prescription
drugs.
(Applause.)
My
budget
will
commit
an
additional
$400
billion
over the
next
decade
to
reform
and
strengthen
Medicare.
Leaders
of both
political
parties
have
talked
for
years
about
strengthening
Medicare.
I urge
the
members
of this
new
Congress
to act
this
year.
(Applause.)
To
improve
our
health
care
system,
we must
address
one of
the
prime
causes
of
higher
cost,
the
constant
threat
that
physicians
and
hospitals
will be
unfairly
sued.
(Applause.)
Because
of
excessive
litigation,
everybody
pays
more for
health
care,
and many
parts of
America
are
losing
fine
doctors.
No one
has ever
been
healed
by a
frivolous
lawsuit.
I urge
the
Congress
to pass
medical
liability
reform.
(Applause.)
Our
third
goal is
to
promote
energy
independence
for our
country,
while
dramatically
improving
the
environment.
(Applause.)
I have
sent you
a
comprehensive
energy
plan to
promote
energy
efficiency
and
conservation,
to
develop
cleaner
technology,
and to
produce
more
energy
at home.
(Applause.)
I have
sent you
Clear
Skies
legislation
that
mandates
a
70-percent
cut in
air
pollution
from
power
plants
over the
next 15
years.
(Applause.)
I have
sent you
a
Healthy
Forests
Initiative,
to help
prevent
the
catastrophic
fires
that
devastate
communities,
kill
wildlife,
and burn
away
millions
of acres
of
treasured
forest.
(Applause.)
I urge
you to
pass
these
measures,
for the
good of
both our
environment
and our
economy.
(Applause.)
Even
more, I
ask you
to take
a
crucial
step and
protect
our
environment
in ways
that
generations
before
us could
not have
imagined.
In
this
century,
the
greatest
environmental
progress
will
come
about
not
through
endless
lawsuits
or
command-and-control
regulations,
but
through
technology
and
innovation.
Tonight
I'm
proposing
$1.2
billion
in
research
funding
so that
America
can lead
the
world in
developing
clean,
hydrogen-powered
automobiles.
(Applause.)
A
single
chemical
reaction
between
hydrogen
and
oxygen
generates
energy,
which
can be
used to
power a
car --
producing
only
water,
not
exhaust
fumes.
With a
new
national
commitment,
our
scientists
and
engineers
will
overcome
obstacles
to
taking
these
cars
from
laboratory
to
showroom,
so that
the
first
car
driven
by a
child
born
today
could be
powered
by
hydrogen,
and
pollution-free.
(Applause.)
Join
me in
this
important
innovation
to make
our air
significantly
cleaner,
and our
country
much
less
dependent
on
foreign
sources
of
energy.
(Applause.)
Our
fourth
goal is
to apply
the
compassion
of
America
to the
deepest
problems
of
America.
For so
many in
our
country
-- the
homeless
and the
fatherless,
the
addicted
-- the
need is
great.
Yet
there's
power,
wonder-working
power,
in the
goodness
and
idealism
and
faith of
the
American
people.
Americans
are
doing
the work
of
compassion
every
day --
visiting
prisoners,
providing
shelter
for
battered
women,
bringing
companionship
to
lonely
seniors.
These
good
works
deserve
our
praise;
they
deserve
our
personal
support;
and when
appropriate,
they
deserve
the
assistance
of the
federal
government.
(Applause.)
I
urge you
to pass
both my
faith-based
initiative
and the
Citizen
Service
Act, to
encourage
acts of
compassion
that can
transform
America,
one
heart
and one
soul at
a time.
(Applause.)
Last
year, I
called
on my
fellow
citizens
to
participate
in the
USA
Freedom
Corps,
which is
enlisting
tens of
thousands
of new
volunteers
across
America.
Tonight
I ask
Congress
and the
American
people
to focus
the
spirit
of
service
and the
resources
of
government
on the
needs of
some of
our most
vulnerable
citizens
-- boys
and
girls
trying
to grow
up
without
guidance
and
attention,
and
children
who have
to go
through
a prison
gate to
be
hugged
by their
mom or
dad.
I
propose
a
$450-million
initiative
to bring
mentors
to more
than a
million
disadvantaged
junior
high
students
and
children
of
prisoners.
Government
will
support
the
training
and
recruiting
of
mentors;
yet it
is the
men and
women of
America
who will
fill the
need.
One
mentor,
one
person
can
change a
life
forever.
And I
urge you
to be
that one
person.
(Applause.)
Another
cause of
hopelessness
is
addiction
to
drugs.
Addiction
crowds
out
friendship,
ambition,
moral
conviction,
and
reduces
all the
richness
of life
to a
single
destructive
desire.
As a
government,
we are
fighting
illegal
drugs by
cutting
off
supplies
and
reducing
demand
through
anti-drug
education
programs.
Yet for
those
already
addicted,
the
fight
against
drugs is
a fight
for
their
own
lives.
Too many
Americans
in
search
of
treatment
cannot
get it.
So
tonight
I
propose
a new
$600-million
program
to help
an
additional
300,000
Americans
receive
treatment
over the
next
three
years.
(Applause.)
Our
nation
is
blessed
with
recovery
programs
that do
amazing
work.
One of
them is
found at
the
Healing
Place
Church
in Baton
Rouge,
Louisiana.
A man in
the
program
said,
"God
does
miracles
in
people's
lives,
and you
never
think it
could be
you."
Tonight,
let us
bring to
all
Americans
who
struggle
with
drug
addiction
this
message
of hope:
The
miracle
of
recovery
is
possible,
and it
could be
you.
(Applause.)
By
caring
for
children
who need
mentors,
and for
addicted
men and
women
who need
treatment,
we are
building
a more
welcoming
society
-- a
culture
that
values
every
life.
And in
this
work we
must not
overlook
the
weakest
among
us. I
ask you
to
protect
infants
at the
very
hour of
their
birth
and end
the
practice
of
partial-birth
abortion.
(Applause.)
And
because
no human
life
should
be
started
or ended
as the
object
of an
experiment,
I ask
you to
set a
high
standard
for
humanity,
and pass
a law
against
all
human
cloning.
(Applause.)
The
qualities
of
courage
and
compassion
that we
strive
for in
America
also
determine
our
conduct
abroad.
The
American
flag
stands
for more
than our
power
and our
interests.
Our
founders
dedicated
this
country
to the
cause of
human
dignity,
the
rights
of every
person,
and the
possibilities
of every
life.
This
conviction
leads us
into the
world to
help the
afflicted,
and
defend
the
peace,
and
confound
the
designs
of evil
men.
In
Afghanistan,
we
helped
liberate
an
oppressed
people.
And we
will
continue
helping
them
secure
their
country,
rebuild
their
society,
and
educate
all
their
children
-- boys
and
girls.
(Applause.)
In the
Middle
East, we
will
continue
to seek
peace
between
a secure
Israel
and a
democratic
Palestine.
(Applause.)
Across
the
Earth,
America
is
feeding
the
hungry
-- more
than 60
percent
of
international
food aid
comes as
a gift
from the
people
of the
United
States.
As our
nation
moves
troops
and
builds
alliances
to make
our
world
safer,
we must
also
remember
our
calling
as a
blessed
country
is to
make
this
world
better.
Today,
on the
continent
of
Africa,
nearly
30
million
people
have the
AIDS
virus --
including
3
million
children
under
the age
15.
There
are
whole
countries
in
Africa
where
more
than
one-third
of the
adult
population
carries
the
infection.
More
than 4
million
require
immediate
drug
treatment.
Yet
across
that
continent,
only
50,000
AIDS
victims
-- only
50,000
-- are
receiving
the
medicine
they
need.
Because
the AIDS
diagnosis
is
considered
a death
sentence,
many do
not seek
treatment.
Almost
all who
do are
turned
away. A
doctor
in rural
South
Africa
describes
his
frustration.
He says,
"We have
no
medicines.
Many
hospitals
tell
people,
you've
got
AIDS, we
can't
help
you. Go
home and
die." In
an age
of
miraculous
medicines,
no
person
should
have to
hear
those
words.
(Applause.)
AIDS
can be
prevented.
Anti-retroviral
drugs
can
extend
life for
many
years.
And the
cost of
those
drugs
has
dropped
from
$12,000
a year
to under
$300 a
year --
which
places a
tremendous
possibility
within
our
grasp.
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
seldom
has
history
offered
a
greater
opportunity
to do so
much for
so many.
We
have
confronted,
and will
continue
to
confront,
HIV/AIDS
in our
own
country.
And to
meet a
severe
and
urgent
crisis
abroad,
tonight
I
propose
the
Emergency
Plan for
AIDS
Relief
-- a
work of
mercy
beyond
all
current
international
efforts
to help
the
people
of
Africa.
This
comprehensive
plan
will
prevent
7
million
new AIDS
infections,
treat at
least 2
million
people
with
life-extending
drugs,
and
provide
humane
care for
millions
of
people
suffering
from
AIDS,
and for
children
orphaned
by AIDS.
(Applause.)
I ask
the
Congress
to
commit
$15
billion
over the
next
five
years,
including
nearly
$10
billion
in new
money,
to turn
the tide
against
AIDS in
the most
afflicted
nations
of
Africa
and the
Caribbean.
(Applause.)
This
nation
can lead
the
world in
sparing
innocent
people
from a
plague
of
nature.
And this
nation
is
leading
the
world in
confronting
and
defeating
the
man-made
evil of
international
terrorism.
(Applause.)
There
are days
when our
fellow
citizens
do not
hear
news
about
the war
on
terror.
There's
never a
day when
I do not
learn of
another
threat,
or
receive
reports
of
operations
in
progress,
or give
an order
in this
global
war
against
a
scattered
network
of
killers.
The war
goes on,
and we
are
winning.
(Applause.)
To
date,
we've
arrested
or
otherwise
dealt
with
many key
commanders
of al
Qaeda.
They
include
a man
who
directed
logistics
and
funding
for the
September
the 11th
attacks;
the
chief of
al Qaeda
operations
in the
Persian
Gulf,
who
planned
the
bombings
of our
embassies
in East
Africa
and the
USS
Cole; an
al Qaeda
operations
chief
from
Southeast
Asia; a
former
director
of al
Qaeda's
training
camps in
Afghanistan;
a key al
Qaeda
operative
in
Europe;
a major
al Qaeda
leader
in
Yemen.
All
told,
more
than
3,000
suspected
terrorists
have
been
arrested
in many
countries.
Many
others
have met
a
different
fate.
Let's
put it
this way
-- they
are no
longer a
problem
to the
United
States
and our
friends
and
allies.
(Applause.)
We
are
working
closely
with
other
nations
to
prevent
further
attacks.
America
and
coalition
countries
have
uncovered
and
stopped
terrorist
conspiracies
targeting
the
American
embassy
in
Yemen,
the
American
embassy
in
Singapore,
a Saudi
military
base,
ships in
the
Straits
of
Hormuz
and the
Straits
the
Gibraltar.
We've
broken
al Qaeda
cells in
Hamburg,
Milan,
Madrid,
London,
Paris,
as well
as,
Buffalo,
New
York.
We
have the
terrorists
on the
run.
We're
keeping
them on
the run.
One by
one, the
terrorists
are
learning
the
meaning
of
American
justice.
(Applause.)
As we
fight
this
war, we
will
remember
where it
began --
here, in
our own
country.
This
government
is
taking
unprecedented
measures
to
protect
our
people
and
defend
our
homeland.
We've
intensified
security
at the
borders
and
ports of
entry,
posted
more
than
50,000
newly-trained
federal
screeners
in
airports,
begun
inoculating
troops
and
first
responders
against
smallpox,
and are
deploying
the
nation's
first
early
warning
network
of
sensors
to
detect
biological
attack.
And this
year,
for the
first
time, we
are
beginning
to field
a
defense
to
protect
this
nation
against
ballistic
missiles.
(Applause.)
I
thank
the
Congress
for
supporting
these
measures.
I ask
you
tonight
to add
to our
future
security
with a
major
research
and
production
effort
to guard
our
people
against
bioterrorism,
called
Project
Bioshield.
The
budget I
send you
will
propose
almost
$6
billion
to
quickly
make
available
effective
vaccines
and
treatments
against
agents
like
anthrax,
botulinum
toxin,
Ebola,
and
plague.
We must
assume
that our
enemies
would
use
these
diseases
as
weapons,
and we
must act
before
the
dangers
are upon
us.
(Applause.)
Since
September
the
11th,
our
intelligence
and law
enforcement
agencies
have
worked
more
closely
than
ever to
track
and
disrupt
the
terrorists.
The FBI
is
improving
its
ability
to
analyze
intelligence,
and is
transforming
itself
to meet
new
threats.
Tonight,
I am
instructing
the
leaders
of the
FBI, the
CIA, the
Homeland
Security,
and the
Department
of
Defense
to
develop
a
Terrorist
Threat
Integration
Center,
to merge
and
analyze
all
threat
information
in a
single
location.
Our
government
must
have the
very
best
information
possible,
and we
will use
it to
make
sure the
right
people
are in
the
right
places
to
protect
all our
citizens.
(Applause.)
Our
war
against
terror
is a
contest
of will
in which
perseverance
is
power.
In the
ruins of
two
towers,
at the
western
wall of
the
Pentagon,
on a
field in
Pennsylvania,
this
nation
made a
pledge,
and we
renew
that
pledge
tonight:
Whatever
the
duration
of this
struggle,
and
whatever
the
difficulties,
we will
not
permit
the
triumph
of
violence
in the
affairs
of men
-- free
people
will set
the
course
of
history.
(Applause.)
Today,
the
gravest
danger
in the
war on
terror,
the
gravest
danger
facing
America
and the
world,
is
outlaw
regimes
that
seek and
possess
nuclear,
chemical,
and
biological
weapons.
These
regimes
could
use such
weapons
for
blackmail,
terror,
and mass
murder.
They
could
also
give or
sell
those
weapons
to
terrorist
allies,
who
would
use them
without
the
least
hesitation.
This
threat
is new;
America's
duty is
familiar.
Throughout
the 20th
century,
small
groups
of men
seized
control
of great
nations,
built
armies
and
arsenals,
and set
out to
dominate
the weak
and
intimidate
the
world.
In each
case,
their
ambitions
of
cruelty
and
murder
had no
limit.
In each
case,
the
ambitions
of
Hitlerism,
militarism,
and
communism
were
defeated
by the
will of
free
peoples,
by the
strength
of great
alliances,
and by
the
might of
the
United
States
of
America.
(Applause.)
Now,
in this
century,
the
ideology
of power
and
domination
has
appeared
again,
and
seeks to
gain the
ultimate
weapons
of
terror.
Once
again,
this
nation
and all
our
friends
are all
that
stand
between
a world
at
peace,
and a
world of
chaos
and
constant
alarm.
Once
again,
we are
called
to
defend
the
safety
of our
people,
and the
hopes of
all
mankind.
And we
accept
this
responsibility.
(Applause.)
America
is
making a
broad
and
determined
effort
to
confront
these
dangers.
We have
called
on the
United
Nations
to
fulfill
its
charter
and
stand by
its
demand
that
Iraq
disarm.
We're
strongly
supporting
the
International
Atomic
Energy
Agency
in its
mission
to track
and
control
nuclear
materials
around
the
world.
We're
working
with
other
governments
to
secure
nuclear
materials
in the
former
Soviet
Union,
and to
strengthen
global
treaties
banning
the
production
and
shipment
of
missile
technologies
and
weapons
of mass
destruction.
In
all
these
efforts,
however,
America's
purpose
is more
than to
follow a
process
-- it is
to
achieve
a
result:
the end
of
terrible
threats
to the
civilized
world.
All free
nations
have a
stake in
preventing
sudden
and
catastrophic
attacks.
And
we're
asking
them to
join us,
and many
are
doing
so. Yet
the
course
of this
nation
does not
depend
on the
decisions
of
others.
(Applause.)
Whatever
action
is
required,
whenever
action
is
necessary,
I will
defend
the
freedom
and
security
of the
American
people.
(Applause.)
Different
threats
require
different
strategies.
In Iran,
we
continue
to see a
government
that
represses
its
people,
pursues
weapons
of mass
destruction,
and
supports
terror.
We also
see
Iranian
citizens
risking
intimidation
and
death as
they
speak
out for
liberty
and
human
rights
and
democracy.
Iranians,
like all
people,
have a
right to
choose
their
own
government
and
determine
their
own
destiny
-- and
the
United
States
supports
their
aspirations
to live
in
freedom.
(Applause.)
On
the
Korean
Peninsula,
an
oppressive
regime
rules a
people
living
in fear
and
starvation.
Throughout
the
1990s,
the
United
States
relied
on a
negotiated
framework
to keep
North
Korea
from
gaining
nuclear
weapons.
We now
know
that
that
regime
was
deceiving
the
world,
and
developing
those
weapons
all
along.
And
today
the
North
Korean
regime
is using
its
nuclear
program
to
incite
fear and
seek
concessions.
America
and the
world
will not
be
blackmailed.
(Applause.)
America
is
working
with the
countries
of the
region
-- South
Korea,
Japan,
China,
and
Russia
-- to
find a
peaceful
solution,
and to
show the
North
Korean
government
that
nuclear
weapons
will
bring
only
isolation,
economic
stagnation,
and
continued
hardship.
(Applause.)
The
North
Korean
regime
will
find
respect
in the
world
and
revival
for its
people
only
when it
turns
away
from its
nuclear
ambitions.
(Applause.)
Our
nation
and the
world
must
learn
the
lessons
of the
Korean
Peninsula
and not
allow an
even
greater
threat
to rise
up in
Iraq. A
brutal
dictator,
with a
history
of
reckless
aggression,
with
ties to
terrorism,
with
great
potential
wealth,
will not
be
permitted
to
dominate
a vital
region
and
threaten
the
United
States.
(Applause.)
Twelve
years
ago,
Saddam
Hussein
faced
the
prospect
of being
the last
casualty
in a war
he had
started
and
lost. To
spare
himself,
he
agreed
to
disarm
of all
weapons
of mass
destruction.
For the
next 12
years,
he
systematically
violated
that
agreement.
He
pursued
chemical,
biological,
and
nuclear
weapons,
even
while
inspectors
were in
his
country.
Nothing
to date
has
restrained
him from
his
pursuit
of these
weapons
-- not
economic
sanctions,
not
isolation
from the
civilized
world,
not even
cruise
missile
strikes
on his
military
facilities.
Almost
three
months
ago, the
United
Nations
Security
Council
gave
Saddam
Hussein
his
final
chance
to
disarm.
He has
shown
instead
utter
contempt
for the
United
Nations,
and for
the
opinion
of the
world.
The 108
U.N.
inspectors
were
sent to
conduct
-- were
not sent
to
conduct
a
scavenger
hunt for
hidden
materials
across a
country
the size
of
California.
The job
of the
inspectors
is to
verify
that
Iraq's
regime
is
disarming.
It is up
to Iraq
to show
exactly
where it
is
hiding
its
banned
weapons,
lay
those
weapons
out for
the
world to
see, and
destroy
them as
directed.
Nothing
like
this has
happened.
The
United
Nations
concluded
in 1999
that
Saddam
Hussein
had
biological
weapons
sufficient
to
produce
over
25,000
liters
of
anthrax
--
enough
doses to
kill
several
million
people.
He
hasn't
accounted
for that
material.
He's
given no
evidence
that he
has
destroyed
it.
The
United
Nations
concluded
that
Saddam
Hussein
had
materials
sufficient
to
produce
more
than
38,000
liters
of
botulinum
toxin --
enough
to
subject
millions
of
people
to death
by
respiratory
failure.
He
hadn't
accounted
for that
material.
He's
given no
evidence
that he
has
destroyed
it.
Our
intelligence
officials
estimate
that
Saddam
Hussein
had the
materials
to
produce
as much
as 500
tons of
sarin,
mustard
and VX
nerve
agent.
In such
quantities,
these
chemical
agents
could
also
kill
untold
thousands.
He's not
accounted
for
these
materials.
He has
given no
evidence
that he
has
destroyed
them.
U.S.
intelligence
indicates
that
Saddam
Hussein
had
upwards
of
30,000
munitions
capable
of
delivering
chemical
agents.
Inspectors
recently
turned
up 16 of
them --
despite
Iraq's
recent
declaration
denying
their
existence.
Saddam
Hussein
has not
accounted
for the
remaining
29,984
of these
prohibited
munitions.
He's
given no
evidence
that he
has
destroyed
them.
From
three
Iraqi
defectors
we know
that
Iraq, in
the late
1990s,
had
several
mobile
biological
weapons
labs.
These
are
designed
to
produce
germ
warfare
agents,
and can
be moved
from
place to
a place
to evade
inspectors.
Saddam
Hussein
has not
disclosed
these
facilities.
He's
given no
evidence
that he
has
destroyed
them.
The
International
Atomic
Energy
Agency
confirmed
in the
1990s
that
Saddam
Hussein
had an
advanced
nuclear
weapons
development
program,
had a
design
for a
nuclear
weapon
and was
working
on five
different
methods
of
enriching
uranium
for a
bomb.
The
British
government
has
learned
that
Saddam
Hussein
recently
sought
significant
quantities
of
uranium
from
Africa.
Our
intelligence
sources
tell us
that he
has
attempted
to
purchase
high-strength
aluminum
tubes
suitable
for
nuclear
weapons
production.
Saddam
Hussein
has not
credibly
explained
these
activities.
He
clearly
has much
to hide.
The
dictator
of Iraq
is not
disarming.
To the
contrary;
he is
deceiving.
From
intelligence
sources
we know,
for
instance,
that
thousands
of Iraqi
security
personnel
are at
work
hiding
documents
and
materials
from the
U.N.
inspectors,
sanitizing
inspection
sites
and
monitoring
the
inspectors
themselves.
Iraqi
officials
accompany
the
inspectors
in order
to
intimidate
witnesses.
Iraq
is
blocking
U-2
surveillance
flights
requested
by the
United
Nations.
Iraqi
intelligence
officers
are
posing
as the
scientists
inspectors
are
supposed
to
interview.
Real
scientists
have
been
coached
by Iraqi
officials
on what
to say.
Intelligence
sources
indicate
that
Saddam
Hussein
has
ordered
that
scientists
who
cooperate
with
U.N.
inspectors
in
disarming
Iraq
will be
killed,
along
with
their
families.
Year
after
year,
Saddam
Hussein
has gone
to
elaborate
lengths,
spent
enormous
sums,
taken
great
risks to
build
and keep
weapons
of mass
destruction.
But why?
The only
possible
explanation,
the only
possible
use he
could
have for
those
weapons,
is to
dominate,
intimidate,
or
attack.
With
nuclear
arms or
a full
arsenal
of
chemical
and
biological
weapons,
Saddam
Hussein
could
resume
his
ambitions
of
conquest
in the
Middle
East and
create
deadly
havoc in
that
region.
And this
Congress
and the
America
people
must
recognize
another
threat.
Evidence
from
intelligence
sources,
secret
communications,
and
statements
by
people
now in
custody
reveal
that
Saddam
Hussein
aids and
protects
terrorists,
including
members
of al
Qaeda.
Secretly,
and
without
fingerprints,
he could
provide
one of
his
hidden
weapons
to
terrorists,
or help
them
develop
their
own.
Before
September
the
11th,
many in
the
world
believed
that
Saddam
Hussein
could be
contained.
But
chemical
agents,
lethal
viruses
and
shadowy
terrorist
networks
are not
easily
contained.
Imagine
those 19
hijackers
with
other
weapons
and
other
plans --
this
time
armed by
Saddam
Hussein.
It would
take one
vial,
one
canister,
one
crate
slipped
into
this
country
to bring
a day of
horror
like
none we
have
ever
known.
We will
do
everything
in our
power to
make
sure
that
that day
never
comes.
(Applause.)
Some
have
said we
must not
act
until
the
threat
is
imminent.
Since
when
have
terrorists
and
tyrants
announced
their
intentions,
politely
putting
us on
notice
before
they
strike?
If this
threat
is
permitted
to fully
and
suddenly
emerge,
all
actions,
all
words,
and all
recriminations
would
come too
late.
Trusting
in the
sanity
and
restraint
of
Saddam
Hussein
is not a
strategy,
and it
is not
an
option.
(Applause.)
The
d |