Chamber
of the
U.S.
House of
Representatives
The
United
States
Capitol
Washington,
D.C.
In
Focus:
State of
the
Union
2005
9:10
P.M. EST
THE
PRESIDENT:
Mr.
Speaker,
Vice
President
Cheney,
members
of
Congress,
fellow
citizens:
As
a new
Congress
gathers,
all of
us in
the
elected
branches
of
government
share a
great
privilege:
We've
been
placed
in
office
by the
votes of
the
people
we
serve.
And
tonight
that is
a
privilege
we share
with
newly-elected
leaders
of
Afghanistan,
the
Palestinian
Territories,
Ukraine,
and a
free and
sovereign
Iraq.
(Applause.)
Two
weeks
ago, I
stood on
the
steps of
this
Capitol
and
renewed
the
commitment
of our
nation
to the
guiding
ideal of
liberty
for all.
This
evening
I will
set
forth
policies
to
advance
that
ideal at
home and
around
the
world.
Tonight,
with a
healthy,
growing
economy,
with
more
Americans
going
back to
work,
with our
nation
an
active
force
for good
in the
world --
the
state of
our
union is
confident
and
strong.
(Applause.)
Our
generation
has been
blessed
-- by
the
expansion
of
opportunity,
by
advances
in
medicine,
by the
security
purchased
by our
parents'
sacrifice.
Now, as
we see a
little
gray in
the
mirror
-- or a
lot of
gray --
(laughter)
-- and
we watch
our
children
moving
into
adulthood,
we ask
the
question:
What
will be
the
state of
their
union?
Members
of
Congress,
the
choices
we make
together
will
answer
that
question.
Over the
next
several
months,
on issue
after
issue,
let us
do what
Americans
have
always
done,
and
build a
better
world
for our
children
and our
grandchildren.
(Applause.)
First,
we must
be good
stewards
of this
economy,
and
renew
the
great
institutions
on which
millions
of our
fellow
citizens
rely.
America's
economy
is the
fastest
growing
of any
major
industrialized
nation.
In the
past
four
years,
we
provided
tax
relief
to every
person
who pays
income
taxes,
overcome
a
recession,
opened
up new
markets
abroad,
prosecuted
corporate
criminals,
raised
homeownership
to its
highest
level in
history,
and in
the last
year
alone,
the
United
States
has
added
2.3
million
new
jobs.
(Applause.)
When
action
was
needed,
the
Congress
delivered
-- and
the
nation
is
grateful.
Now
we must
add to
these
achievements.
By
making
our
economy
more
flexible,
more
innovative,
and more
competitive,
we will
keep
America
the
economic
leader
of the
world.
(Applause.)
America's
prosperity
requires
restraining
the
spending
appetite
of the
federal
government.
I
welcome
the
bipartisan
enthusiasm
for
spending
discipline.
I will
send you
a budget
that
holds
the
growth
of
discretionary
spending
below
inflation,
makes
tax
relief
permanent,
and
stays on
track to
cut the
deficit
in half
by 2009.
(Applause.)
My
budget
substantially
reduces
or
eliminates
more
than 150
government
programs
that are
not
getting
results,
or
duplicate
current
efforts,
or do
not
fulfill
essential
priorities.
The
principle
here is
clear:
Taxpayer
dollars
must be
spent
wisely,
or not
at all.
(Applause.)
To
make our
economy
stronger
and more
dynamic,
we must
prepare
a rising
generation
to fill
the jobs
of the
21st
century.
Under
the No
Child
Left
Behind
Act,
standards
are
higher,
test
scores
are on
the
rise,
and
we're
closing
the
achievement
gap for
minority
students.
Now we
must
demand
better
results
from our
high
schools,
so every
high
school
diploma
is a
ticket
to
success.
We will
help an
additional
200,000
workers
to get
training
for a
better
career,
by
reforming
our job
training
system
and
strengthening
America's
community
colleges.
And
we'll
make it
easier
for
Americans
to
afford a
college
education,
by
increasing
the size
of Pell
Grants.
(Applause.)
To
make our
economy
stronger
and more
competitive,
America
must
reward,
not
punish,
the
efforts
and
dreams
of
entrepreneurs.
Small
business
is the
path of
advancement,
especially
for
women
and
minorities,
so we
must
free
small
businesses
from
needless
regulation
and
protect
honest
job-creators
from
junk
lawsuits.
(Applause.)
Justice
is
distorted,
and our
economy
is held
back by
irresponsible
class-actions
and
frivolous
asbestos
claims
-- and I
urge
Congress
to pass
legal
reforms
this
year.
(Applause.)
To make
our
economy
stronger
and more
productive,
we must
make
health
care
more
affordable,
and give
families
greater
access
to good
coverage
--
(applause)
-- and
more
control
over
their
health
decisions.
(Applause.)
I ask
Congress
to move
forward
on a
comprehensive
health
care
agenda
with tax
credits
to help
low-income
workers
buy
insurance,
a
community
health
center
in every
poor
county,
improved
information
technology
to
prevent
medical
error
and
needless
costs,
association
health
plans
for
small
businesses
and
their
employees
--
(applause)
--
expanded
health
savings
accounts
--
(applause)
-- and
medical
liability
reform
that
will
reduce
health
care
costs
and make
sure
patients
have the
doctors
and care
they
need.
(Applause.)
To
keep our
economy
growing,
we also
need
reliable
supplies
of
affordable,
environmentally
responsible
energy.
(Applause.)
Nearly
four
years
ago, I
submitted
a
comprehensive
energy
strategy
that
encourages
conservation,
alternative
sources,
a
modernized
electricity
grid,
and more
production
here at
home --
including
safe,
clean
nuclear
energy.
(Applause.)
My Clear
Skies
legislation
will cut
power
plant
pollution
and
improve
the
health
of our
citizens.
(Applause.)
And my
budget
provides
strong
funding
for
leading-edge
technology
-- from
hydrogen-fueled
cars, to
clean
coal, to
renewable
sources
such as
ethanol.
(Applause.)
Four
years of
debate
is
enough:
I urge
Congress
to pass
legislation
that
makes
America
more
secure
and less
dependent
on
foreign
energy.
(Applause.)
All
these
proposals
are
essential
to
expand
this
economy
and add
new jobs
-- but
they are
just the
beginning
of our
duty. To
build
the
prosperity
of
future
generations,
we must
update
institutions
that
were
created
to meet
the
needs of
an
earlier
time.
Year
after
year,
Americans
are
burdened
by an
archaic,
incoherent
federal
tax
code.
I've
appointed
a
bipartisan
panel to
examine
the tax
code
from top
to
bottom.
And when
their
recommendations
are
delivered,
you and
I will
work
together
to give
this
nation a
tax code
that is
pro-growth,
easy to
understand,
and fair
to all.
(Applause.)
America's
immigration
system
is also
outdated
--
unsuited
to the
needs of
our
economy
and to
the
values
of our
country.
We
should
not be
content
with
laws
that
punish
hardworking
people
who want
only to
provide
for
their
families,
and deny
businesses
willing
workers,
and
invite
chaos at
our
border.
It is
time for
an
immigration
policy
that
permits
temporary
guest
workers
to fill
jobs
Americans
will not
take,
that
rejects
amnesty,
that
tells us
who is
entering
and
leaving
our
country,
and that
closes
the
border
to drug
dealers
and
terrorists.
(Applause.)
One
of
America's
most
important
institutions
-- a
symbol
of the
trust
between
generations
-- is
also in
need of
wise and
effective
reform.
Social
Security
was a
great
moral
success
of the
20th
century,
and we
must
honor
its
great
purposes
in this
new
century.
(Applause.)
The
system,
however,
on its
current
path, is
headed
toward
bankruptcy.
And so
we must
join
together
to
strengthen
and save
Social
Security.
(Applause.)
Today,
more
than 45
million
Americans
receive
Social
Security
benefits,
and
millions
more are
nearing
retirement
-- and
for them
the
system
is sound
and
fiscally
strong.
I have a
message
for
every
American
who is
55 or
older:
Do not
let
anyone
mislead
you; for
you, the
Social
Security
system
will not
change
in any
way.
(Applause.)
For
younger
workers,
the
Social
Security
system
has
serious
problems
that
will
grow
worse
with
time.
Social
Security
was
created
decades
ago, for
a very
different
era. In
those
days,
people
did not
live as
long.
Benefits
were
much
lower
than
they are
today.
And a
half-century
ago,
about
sixteen
workers
paid
into the
system
for each
person
drawing
benefits.
Our
society
has
changed
in ways
the
founders
of
Social
Security
could
not have
foreseen.
In
today's
world,
people
are
living
longer
and,
therefore,
drawing
benefits
longer.
And
those
benefits
are
scheduled
to rise
dramatically
over the
next few
decades.
And
instead
of
sixteen
workers
paying
in for
every
beneficiary,
right
now it's
only
about
three
workers.
And over
the next
few
decades
that
number
will
fall to
just two
workers
per
beneficiary.
With
each
passing
year,
fewer
workers
are
paying
ever-higher
benefits
to an
ever-larger
number
of
retirees.
So
here is
the
result:
Thirteen
years
from
now, in
2018,
Social
Security
will be
paying
out more
than it
takes
in. And
every
year
afterward
will
bring a
new
shortfall,
bigger
than the
year
before.
For
example,
in the
year
2027,
the
government
will
somehow
have to
come up
with an
extra
$200
billion
to keep
the
system
afloat
-- and
by 2033,
the
annual
shortfall
would be
more
than
$300
billion.
By the
year
2042,
the
entire
system
would be
exhausted
and
bankrupt.
If steps
are not
taken to
avert
that
outcome,
the only
solutions
would be
dramatically
higher
taxes,
massive
new
borrowing,
or
sudden
and
severe
cuts in
Social
Security
benefits
or other
government
programs.
I
recognize
that
2018 and
2042 may
seem a
long way
off. But
those
dates
are not
so
distant,
as any
parent
will
tell
you. If
you have
a
five-year-old,
you're
already
concerned
about
how
you'll
pay for
college
tuition
13 years
down the
road. If
you've
got
children
in their
20s, as
some of
us do,
the idea
of
Social
Security
collapsing
before
they
retire
does not
seem
like a
small
matter.
And it
should
not be a
small
matter
to the
United
States
Congress.
(Applause.)
You and
I share
a
responsibility.
We must
pass
reforms
that
solve
the
financial
problems
of
Social
Security
once and
for all.
Fixing
Social
Security
permanently
will
require
an open,
candid
review
of the
options.
Some
have
suggested
limiting
benefits
for
wealthy
retirees.
Former
Congressman
Tim
Penny
has
raised
the
possibility
of
indexing
benefits
to
prices
rather
than
wages.
During
the
1990s,
my
predecessor,
President
Clinton,
spoke of
increasing
the
retirement
age.
Former
Senator
John
Breaux
suggested
discouraging
early
collection
of
Social
Security
benefits.
The late
Senator
Daniel
Patrick
Moynihan
recommended
changing
the way
benefits
are
calculated.
All
these
ideas
are on
the
table.
I
know
that
none of
these
reforms
would be
easy.
But we
have to
move
ahead
with
courage
and
honesty,
because
our
children's
retirement
security
is more
important
than
partisan
politics.
(Applause.)
I will
work
with
members
of
Congress
to find
the most
effective
combination
of
reforms.
I will
listen
to
anyone
who has
a good
idea to
offer.
(Applause.)
We must,
however,
be
guided
by some
basic
principles.
We must
make
Social
Security
permanently
sound,
not
leave
that
task for
another
day. We
must not
jeopardize
our
economic
strength
by
increasing
payroll
taxes.
We must
ensure
that
lower-income
Americans
get the
help
they
need to
have
dignity
and
peace of
mind in
their
retirement.
We must
guarantee
there is
no
change
for
those
now
retired
or
nearing
retirement.
And we
must
take
care
that any
changes
in the
system
are
gradual,
so
younger
workers
have
years to
prepare
and plan
for
their
future.
As we
fix
Social
Security,
we also
have the
responsibility
to make
the
system a
better
deal for
younger
workers.
And the
best way
to reach
that
goal is
through
voluntary
personal
retirement
accounts.
(Applause.)
Here is
how the
idea
works.
Right
now, a
set
portion
of the
money
you earn
is taken
out of
your
paycheck
to pay
for the
Social
Security
benefits
of
today's
retirees.
If
you're a
younger
worker,
I
believe
you
should
be able
to set
aside
part of
that
money in
your own
retirement
account,
so you
can
build a
nest egg
for your
own
future.
Here's
why the
personal
accounts
are a
better
deal.
Your
money
will
grow,
over
time, at
a
greater
rate
than
anything
the
current
system
can
deliver
-- and
your
account
will
provide
money
for
retirement
over and
above
the
check
you will
receive
from
Social
Security.
In
addition,
you'll
be able
to pass
along
the
money
that
accumulates
in your
personal
account,
if you
wish, to
your
children
and --
or
grandchildren.
And best
of all,
the
money in
the
account
is
yours,
and the
government
can
never
take it
away.
(Applause.)
The
goal
here is
greater
security
in
retirement,
so we
will set
careful
guidelines
for
personal
accounts.
We'll
make
sure the
money
can only
go into
a
conservative
mix of
bonds
and
stock
funds.
We'll
make
sure
that
your
earnings
are not
eaten up
by
hidden
Wall
Street
fees.
We'll
make
sure
there
are good
options
to
protect
your
investments
from
sudden
market
swings
on the
eve of
your
retirement.
We'll
make
sure a
personal
account
cannot
be
emptied
out all
at once,
but
rather
paid out
over
time, as
an
addition
to
traditional
Social
Security
benefits.
And
we'll
make
sure
this
plan is
fiscally
responsible,
by
starting
personal
retirement
accounts
gradually,
and
raising
the
yearly
limits
on
contributions
over
time,
eventually
permitting
all
workers
to set
aside
four
percentage
points
of their
payroll
taxes in
their
accounts.
Personal
retirement
accounts
should
be
familiar
to
federal
employees,
because
you
already
have
something
similar,
called
the
Thrift
Savings
Plan,
which
lets
workers
deposit
a
portion
of their
paychecks
into any
of five
different
broadly-based
investment
funds.
It's
time to
extend
the same
security,
and
choice,
and
ownership
to young
Americans.
(Applause.)
Our
second
great
responsibility
to our
children
and
grandchildren
is to
honor
and to
pass
along
the
values
that
sustain
a free
society.
So many
of my
generation,
after a
long
journey,
have
come
home to
family
and
faith,
and are
determined
to bring
up
responsible,
moral
children.
Government
is not
the
source
of these
values,
but
government
should
never
undermine
them.
Because
marriage
is a
sacred
institution
and the
foundation
of
society,
it
should
not be
re-defined
by
activist
judges.
For the
good of
families,
children,
and
society,
I
support
a
constitutional
amendment
to
protect
the
institution
of
marriage.
(Applause.)
Because
a
society
is
measured
by how
it
treats
the weak
and
vulnerable,
we must
strive
to build
a
culture
of life.
Medical
research
can help
us reach
that
goal, by
developing
treatments
and
cures
that
save
lives
and help
people
overcome
disabilities
-- and I
thank
the
Congress
for
doubling
the
funding
of the
National
Institutes
of
Health.
(Applause.)
To build
a
culture
of life,
we must
also
ensure
that
scientific
advances
always
serve
human
dignity,
not take
advantage
of some
lives
for the
benefit
of
others.
We
should
all be
able to
agree --
(applause)
-- we
should
all be
able to
agree on
some
clear
standards.
I will
work
with
Congress
to
ensure
that
human
embryos
are not
created
for
experimentation
or grown
for body
parts,
and that
human
life is
never
bought
and sold
as a
commodity.
(Applause.)
America
will
continue
to lead
the
world in
medical
research
that is
ambitious,
aggressive,
and
always
ethical.
Because
courts
must
always
deliver
impartial
justice,
judges
have a
duty to
faithfully
interpret
the law,
not
legislate
from the
bench.
(Applause.)
As
President,
I have a
constitutional
responsibility
to
nominate
men and
women
who
understand
the role
of
courts
in our
democracy,
and are
well-qualified
to serve
on the
bench --
and I
have
done so.
(Applause.)
The
Constitution
also
gives
the
Senate a
responsibility:
Every
judicial
nominee
deserves
an up or
down
vote.
(Applause.)
Because
one of
the
deepest
values
of our
country
is
compassion,
we must
never
turn
away
from any
citizen
who
feels
isolated
from the
opportunities
of
America.
Our
government
will
continue
to
support
faith-based
and
community
groups
that
bring
hope to
harsh
places.
Now we
need to
focus on
giving
young
people,
especially
young
men in
our
cities,
better
options
than
apathy,
or
gangs,
or jail.
Tonight
I
propose
a
three-year
initiative
to help
organizations
keep
young
people
out of
gangs,
and show
young
men an
ideal of
manhood
that
respects
women
and
rejects
violence.
(Applause.)
Taking
on gang
life
will be
one part
of a
broader
outreach
to
at-risk
youth,
which
involves
parents
and
pastors,
coaches
and
community
leaders,
in
programs
ranging
from
literacy
to
sports.
And I am
proud
that the
leader
of this
nationwide
effort
will be
our
First
Lady,
Laura
Bush.
(Applause.)
Because
HIV/AIDS
brings
suffering
and fear
into so
many
lives, I
ask you
to
reauthorize
the Ryan
White
Act to
encourage
prevention,
and
provide
care and
treatment
to the
victims
of that
disease.
(Applause.)
And as
we
update
this
important
law, we
must
focus
our
efforts
on
fellow
citizens
with the
highest
rates of
new
cases,
African
American
men and
women.
(Applause.)
Because
one of
the main
sources
of our
national
unity is
our
belief
in equal
justice,
we need
to make
sure
Americans
of all
races
and
backgrounds
have
confidence
in the
system
that
provides
justice.
In
America
we must
make
doubly
sure no
person
is held
to
account
for a
crime he
or she
did not
commit
-- so we
are
dramatically
expanding
the use
of DNA
evidence
to
prevent
wrongful
conviction.
(Applause.)
Soon I
will
send to
Congress
a
proposal
to fund
special
training
for
defense
counsel
in
capital
cases,
because
people
on trial
for
their
lives
must
have
competent
lawyers
by their
side.
(Applause.)
Our
third
responsibility
to
future
generations
is to
leave
them an
America
that is
safe
from
danger,
and
protected
by
peace.
We will
pass
along to
our
children
all the
freedoms
we enjoy
-- and
chief
among
them is
freedom
from
fear.
In
the
three
and a
half
years
since
September
the
11th,
2001, we
have
taken
unprecedented
actions
to
protect
Americans.
We've
created
a new
department
of
government
to
defend
our
homeland,
focused
the FBI
on
preventing
terrorism,
begun to
reform
our
intelligence
agencies,
broken
up
terror
cells
across
the
country,
expanded
research
on
defenses
against
biological
and
chemical
attack,
improved
border
security,
and
trained
more
than a
half-million
first
responders.
Police
and
firefighters,
air
marshals,
researchers,
and so
many
others
are
working
every
day to
make our
homeland
safer,
and we
thank
them
all.
(Applause.)
Our
nation,
working
with
allies
and
friends,
has also
confronted
the
enemy
abroad,
with
measures
that are
determined,
successful,
and
continuing.
The al
Qaeda
terror
network
that
attacked
our
country
still
has
leaders
-- but
many of
its top
commanders
have
been
removed.
There
are
still
governments
that
sponsor
and
harbor
terrorists
-- but
their
number
has
declined.
There
are
still
regimes
seeking
weapons
of mass
destruction
-- but
no
longer
without
attention
and
without
consequence.
Our
country
is still
the
target
of
terrorists
who want
to kill
many,
and
intimidate
us all
-- and
we will
stay on
the
offensive
against
them,
until
the
fight is
won.
(Applause.)
Pursuing
our
enemies
is a
vital
commitment
of the
war on
terror
-- and I
thank
the
Congress
for
providing
our
servicemen
and
women
with the
resources
they
have
needed.
During
this
time of
war, we
must
continue
to
support
our
military
and give
them the
tools
for
victory.
(Applause.)
Other
nations
around
the
globe
have
stood
with us.
In
Afghanistan,
an
international
force is
helping
provide
security.
In Iraq,
28
countries
have
troops
on the
ground,
the
United
Nations
and the
European
Union
provided
technical
assistance
for the
elections,
and NATO
is
leading
a
mission
to help
train
Iraqi
officers.
We're
cooperating
with 60
governments
in the
Proliferation
Security
Initiative,
to
detect
and stop
the
transit
of
dangerous
materials.
We're
working
closely
with the
governments
in Asia
to
convince
North
Korea to
abandon
its
nuclear
ambitions.
Pakistan,
Saudi
Arabia,
and nine
other
countries
have
captured
or
detained
al Qaeda
terrorists.
In the
next
four
years,
my
administration
will
continue
to build
the
coalitions
that
will
defeat
the
dangers
of our
time.
(Applause.)
In
the
long-term,
the
peace we
seek
will
only be
achieved
by
eliminating
the
conditions
that
feed
radicalism
and
ideologies
of
murder.
If whole
regions
of the
world
remain
in
despair
and grow
in
hatred,
they
will be
the
recruiting
grounds
for
terror,
and that
terror
will
stalk
America
and
other
free
nations
for
decades.
The only
force
powerful
enough
to stop
the rise
of
tyranny
and
terror,
and
replace
hatred
with
hope, is
the
force of
human
freedom.
(Applause.)
Our
enemies
know
this,
and that
is why
the
terrorist
Zarqawi
recently
declared
war on
what he
called
the
"evil
principle"
of
democracy.
And
we've
declared
our own
intention:
America
will
stand
with the
allies
of
freedom
to
support
democratic
movements
in the
Middle
East and
beyond,
with the
ultimate
goal of
ending
tyranny
in our
world.
(Applause.)
The
United
States
has no
right,
no
desire,
and no
intention
to
impose
our form
of
government
on
anyone
else.
That is
one of
the main
differences
between
us and
our
enemies.
They
seek to
impose
and
expand
an
empire
of
oppression,
in which
a tiny
group of
brutal,
self-appointed
rulers
control
every
aspect
of every
life.
Our aim
is to
build
and
preserve
a
community
of free
and
independent
nations,
with
governments
that
answer
to their
citizens,
and
reflect
their
own
cultures.
And
because
democracies
respect
their
own
people
and
their
neighbors,
the
advance
of
freedom
will
lead to
peace.
(Applause.)
That
advance
has
great
momentum
in our
time --
shown by
women
voting
in
Afghanistan,
and
Palestinians
choosing
a new
direction,
and the
people
of
Ukraine
asserting
their
democratic
rights
and
electing
a
president.
We are
witnessing
landmark
events
in the
history
of
liberty.
And in
the
coming
years,
we will
add to
that
story.
(Applause.)
The
beginnings
of
reform
and
democracy
in the
Palestinian
territories
are now
showing
the
power of
freedom
to break
old
patterns
of
violence
and
failure.
Tomorrow
morning,
Secretary
of State
Rice
departs
on a
trip
that
will
take her
to
Israel
and the
West
Bank for
meetings
with
Prime
Minister
Sharon
and
President
Abbas.
She will
discuss
with
them how
we and
our
friends
can help
the
Palestinian
people
end
terror
and
build
the
institutions
of a
peaceful,
independent,
democratic
state.
To
promote
this
democracy,
I will
ask
Congress
for $350
million
to
support
Palestinian
political,
economic,
and
security
reforms.
The goal
of two
democratic
states,
Israel
and
Palestine,
living
side by
side in
peace,
is
within
reach --
and
America
will
help
them
achieve
that
goal.
(Applause.)
To
promote
peace
and
stability
in the
broader
Middle
East,
the
United
States
will
work
with our
friends
in the
region
to fight
the
common
threat
of
terror,
while we
encourage
a higher
standard
of
freedom.
Hopeful
reform
is
already
taking
hold in
an arc
from
Morocco
to
Jordan
to
Bahrain.
The
government
of Saudi
Arabia
can
demonstrate
its
leadership
in the
region
by
expanding
the role
of its
people
in
determining
their
future.
And the
great
and
proud
nation
of
Egypt,
which
showed
the way
toward
peace in
the
Middle
East,
can now
show the
way
toward
democracy
in the
Middle
East.
(Applause.)
To
promote
peace in
the
broader
Middle
East, we
must
confront
regimes
that
continue
to
harbor
terrorists
and
pursue
weapons
of mass
murder.
Syria
still
allows
its
territory,
and
parts of
Lebanon,
to be
used by
terrorists
who seek
to
destroy
every
chance
of peace
in the
region.
You have
passed,
and we
are
applying,
the
Syrian
Accountability
Act --
and we
expect
the
Syrian
government
to end
all
support
for
terror
and open
the door
to
freedom.
(Applause.)
Today,
Iran
remains
the
world's
primary
state
sponsor
of
terror
--
pursuing
nuclear
weapons
while
depriving
its
people
of the
freedom
they
seek and
deserve.
We are
working
with
European
allies
to make
clear to
the
Iranian
regime
that it
must
give up
its
uranium
enrichment
program
and any
plutonium
reprocessing,
and end
its
support
for
terror.
And to
the
Iranian
people,
I say
tonight:
As you
stand
for your
own
liberty,
America
stands
with
you.
(Applause.)
Our
generational
commitment
to the
advance
of
freedom,
especially
in the
Middle
East, is
now
being
tested
and
honored
in Iraq.
That
country
is a
vital
front in
the war
on
terror,
which is
why the
terrorists
have
chosen
to make
a stand
there.
Our men
and
women in
uniform
are
fighting
terrorists
in Iraq,
so we do
not have
to face
them
here at
home.
(Applause.)
And the
victory
of
freedom
in Iraq
will
strengthen
a new
ally in
the war
on
terror,
inspire
democratic
reformers
from
Damascus
to
Tehran,
bring
more
hope and
progress
to a
troubled
region,
and
thereby
lift a
terrible
threat
from the
lives of
our
children
and
grandchildren.
We
will
succeed
because
the
Iraqi
people
value
their
own
liberty
-- as
they
showed
the
world
last
Sunday.
(Applause.)
Across
Iraq,
often at
great
risk,
millions
of
citizens
went to
the
polls
and
elected
275 men
and
women to
represent
them in
a new
Transitional
National
Assembly.
A young
woman in
Baghdad
told of
waking
to the
sound of
mortar
fire on
election
day, and
wondering
if it
might be
too
dangerous
to vote.
She
said,
"Hearing
those
explosions,
it
occurred
to me --
the
insurgents
are
weak,
they are
afraid
of
democracy,
they are
losing.
So I got
my
husband,
and I
got my
parents,
and we
all came
out and
voted
together."
Americans
recognize
that
spirit
of
liberty,
because
we share
it. In
any
nation,
casting
your
vote is
an act
of civic
responsibility;
for
millions
of
Iraqis,
it was
also an
act of
personal
courage,
and they
have
earned
the
respect
of us
all.
(Applause.)
One
of
Iraq's
leading
democracy
and
human
rights
advocates
is Safia
Taleb
al-Suhail.
She says
of her
country,
"We were
occupied
for 35
years by
Saddam
Hussein.
That was
the real
occupation.
Thank
you to
the
American
people
who paid
the
cost,
but most
of all,
to the
soldiers."
Eleven
years
ago,
Safia's
father
was
assassinated
by
Saddam's
intelligence
service.
Three
days ago
in
Baghdad,
Safia
was
finally
able to
vote for
the
leaders
of her
country
-- and
we are
honored
that she
is with
us
tonight.
(Applause.)
The
terrorists
and
insurgents
are
violently
opposed
to
democracy,
and will
continue
to
attack
it. Yet,
the
terrorists'
most
powerful
myth is
being
destroyed.
The
whole
world is
seeing
that the
car
bombers
and
assassins
are not
only
fighting
coalition
forces,
they are
trying
to
destroy
the
hopes of
Iraqis,
expressed
in free
elections.
And the
whole
world
now
knows
that a
small
group of
extremists
will not
overturn
the will
of the
Iraqi
people.
(Applause.)
We
will
succeed
in Iraq
because
Iraqis
are
determined
to fight
for
their
own
freedom,
and to
write
their
own
history.
As Prime
Minister
Allawi
said in
his
speech
to
Congress
last
September,
"Ordinary
Iraqis
are
anxious
to
shoulder
all the
security
burdens
of our
country
as
quickly
as
possible."
That is
the
natural
desire
of an
independent
nation,
and it
is also
the
stated
mission
of our
coalition
in Iraq.
The new
political
situation
in Iraq
opens a
new
phase of
our work
in that
country.
At
the
recommendation
of our
commanders
on the
ground,
and in
consultation
with the
Iraqi
government,
we will
increasingly
focus
our
efforts
on
helping
prepare
more
capable
Iraqi
security
forces
--
forces
with
skilled
officers
and an
effective
command
structure.
As those
forces
become
more
self-reliant
and take
on
greater
security
responsibilities,
America
and its
coalition
partners
will
increasingly
be in a
supporting
role. In
the end,
Iraqis
must be
able to
defend
their
own
country
-- and
we will
help
that
proud,
new
nation
secure
its
liberty.
Recently
an Iraqi
interpreter
said to
a
reporter,
"Tell
America
not to
abandon
us." He
and all
Iraqis
can be
certain:
While
our
military
strategy
is
adapting
to
circumstances,
our
commitment
remains
firm and
unchanging.
We are
standing
for the
freedom
of our
Iraqi
friends,
and
freedom
in Iraq
will
make
America
safer
for
generations
to come.
(Applause.)
We will
not set
an
artificial
timetable
for
leaving
Iraq,
because
that
would
embolden
the
terrorists
and make
them
believe
they can
wait us
out. We
are in
Iraq to
achieve
a
result:
A
country
that is
democratic,
representative
of all
its
people,
at peace
with its
neighbors,
and able
to
defend
itself.
And when
that
result
is
achieved,
our men
and
women
serving
in Iraq
will
return
home
with the
honor
they
have
earned.
(Applause.)
Right
now,
Americans
in
uniform
are
serving
at posts
across
the
world,
often
taking
great
risks on
my
orders.
We have
given
them
training
and
equipment;
and they
have
given us
an
example
of
idealism
and
character
that
makes
every
American
proud.
(Applause.)
The
volunteers
of our
military
are
unrelenting
in
battle,
unwavering
in
loyalty,
unmatched
in honor
and
decency,
and
every
day
they're
making
our
nation
more
secure.
Some of
our
servicemen
and
women
have
survived
terrible
injuries,
and this
grateful
country
will do
everything
we can
to help
them
recover.
(Applause.)
And we
have
said
farewell
to some
very
good men
and
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