President Bush Addresses United Nations General Assembly
The United Nations
September 23, 2003
10:59 A.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Mr. Secretary General; Mr. President; distinguished
delegates; ladies and gentlemen: Twenty-four months ago — and
yesterday in the memory of America — the center of New York City
became a battlefield, and a graveyard, and the symbol of an unfinished
war. Since that day, terrorists have struck in Bali, Mombassa, in
Casablanca, in Riyadh, in Jakarta, in Jerusalem — measuring the
advance of their cause in the chaos and innocent suffering they leave
behind.
Last month, terrorists brought their war to the United Nations
itself. The U.N. headquarters in Baghdad stood for order and
compassion — and for that reason, the terrorists decided it must be
destroyed. Among the 22 people who were murdered was Sergio Vieira de
Mello. Over the decades, this good and brave man from Brazil gave help
to the afflicted in Bangladesh, Cyprus, Mozambique, Lebanon, Cambodia,
Central Africa, Kosovo, and East Timor, and was aiding the people of
Iraq in their time of need. America joins you, his colleagues, in
honoring the memory of Senor Vieira de Mello, and the memory of all who
died with him in the service to the United Nations.
By the victims they choose, and by the means they use, the
terrorists have clarified the struggle we are in. Those who target
relief workers for death have set themselves against all humanity.
Those who incite murder and celebrate suicide reveal their contempt for
life, itself. They have no place in any religious faith; they have no
claim on the world's sympathy; and they should have no friend in this
chamber.
Events during the past two years have set before us the clearest of
divides: between those who seek order, and those who spread chaos;
between those who work for peaceful change, and those who adopt the
methods of gangsters; between those who honor the rights of man, and
those who deliberately take the lives of men and women and children
without mercy or shame.
Between these alternatives there is no neutral ground. All
governments that support terror are complicit in a war against
civilization. No government should ignore the threat of terror,
because to look the other way gives terrorists the chance to regroup
and recruit and prepare. And all nations that fight terror, as if the
lives of their own people depend on it, will earn the favorable
judgment of history.
The former regimes of Afghanistan and Iraq knew these alternatives,
and made their choices. The Taliban was a sponsor and servant of
terrorism. When confronted, that regime chose defiance, and that
regime is no more. Afghanistan's President, who is here today, now
represents a free people who are building a decent and just society;
they're building a nation fully joined in the war against terror.
The regime of Saddam Hussein cultivated ties to terror while it
built weapons of mass destruction. It used those weapons in acts of
mass murder, and refused to account for them when confronted by the
world. The Security Council was right to be alarmed. The Security
Council was right to demand that Iraq destroy its illegal weapons and
prove that it had done so. The Security Council was right to vow
serious consequences if Iraq refused to comply. And because there were
consequences, because a coalition of nations acted to defend the peace,
and the credibility of the United Nations, Iraq is free, and today we
are joined by representatives of a liberated country.
Saddam Hussein's monuments have been removed and not only his
statues. The true monuments of his rule and his character — the
torture chambers, and the rape rooms, and the prison cells for innocent
children — are closed. And as we discover the killing fields and mass
graves of Iraq, the true scale of Saddam's cruelty is being revealed.
The Iraqi people are meeting hardships and challenges, like every
nation that has set out on the path of democracy. Yet their future
promises lives of dignity and freedom, and that is a world away from
the squalid, vicious tyranny they have known. Across Iraq, life is
being improved by liberty. Across the Middle East, people are safer
because an unstable aggressor has been removed from power. Across the
world, nations are more secure because an ally of terror has fallen.
Our actions in Afghanistan and Iraq were supported by many
governments, and America is grateful to each one. I also recognize
that some of the sovereign nations of this assembly disagreed with our
actions. Yet there was, and there remains, unity among us on the
fundamental principles and objectives of the United Nations. We are
dedicated to the defense of our collective security, and to the advance
of human rights. These permanent commitments call us to great work in
the world, work we must do together. So let us move forward.
First, we must stand with the people of Afghanistan and Iraq as
they build free and stable countries. The terrorists and their allies
fear and fight this progress above all, because free people embrace
hope over resentment, and choose peace over violence.
The United Nations has been a friend of the Afghan people,
distributing food and medicine, helping refugees return home, advising
on a new constitution, and helping to prepare the way for nationwide
elections. NATO has taken over the U.N.-mandated security force in
Kabul. American and coalition forces continue to track and defeat al
Qaeda terrorists and remnants of the Taliban. Our efforts to rebuild
that country go on. I have recently proposed to spend an additional
$1.2 billion for the Afghan reconstruction effort, and I urge other
nations to continue contributing to this important cause.
In the nation of Iraq, the United Nations is carrying out vital and
effective work every day. By the end of 2004, more than 90 percent of
Iraqi children under age five will have been immunized against
preventable diseases such as polio, tuberculosis and measles, thanks to
the hard work and high ideals of UNICEF. Iraq's food distribution
system is operational, delivering nearly a half-million tons of food
per month, thanks to the skill and expertise of the World Food
Program.
Our international coalition in Iraq is meeting it
responsibilities. We are conducting precision raids against terrorists
and holdouts of the former regime. These killers are at war with the
Iraqi people. They have made Iraq the central front in the war on
terror, and they will be defeated. Our coalition has made sure that
Iraq's former dictator will never again use weapons of mass
destruction. We are interviewing Iraqi citizens and analyzing records
of the old regime to reveal the full extent of its weapons programs and
its long campaign of deception. We're training Iraqi police and border
guards and a new army, so the Iraqi people can assume full
responsibility for their own security.
And at the same time, our coalition is helping to improve the daily
lives of the Iraqi people. The old regime built palaces while letting
schools decay, so we are rebuilding more than a thousand schools. The
old regime starved hospitals of resources, so we have helped to supply
and reopen hospitals across Iraq. The old regime built up armies and
weapons, while allowing the nation's infrastructure to crumble, so we
are rehabilitating power plants, water and sanitation facilities,
bridges and airports. I proposed to Congress that the United States
provide additional funding for our work in Iraq, the greatest financial
commitment of its kind since the Marshall Plan. Having helped to
liberate Iraq, we will honor our pledges to Iraq, and by helping the
Iraqi people build a stable and peaceful country, we will make our own
countries more secure.
The primary goal of our coalition in Iraq is self-government for
the people of Iraq, reached by orderly and democratic process. This
process must unfold according to the needs of Iraqis, neither hurried,
nor delayed by the wishes of other parties. And the United Nations can
contribute greatly to the cause of Iraq self-government. America is
working with friends and allies on a new Security Council resolution,
which will expand the U.N.'s role in Iraq. As in the aftermath of
other conflicts, the United Nations should assist in developing a
constitution, in training civil servants, and conducting free and fair
elections.
Iraq now has a Governing Council, the first truly representative
institution in that country. Iraq's new leaders are showing the
openness and tolerance that democracy requires, and they're also
showing courage. Yet every young democracy needs the help of friends.
Now the nation of Iraq needs and deserves our aid, and all nations of
goodwill should step forward and provide that support.
The success of a free Iraq will be watched and noted throughout the
region. Millions will see that freedom, equality, and material
progress are possible at the heart of the Middle East. Leaders in the
region will face the clearest evidence that free institutions and open
societies are the only path to long-term national success and dignity.
And a transformed Middle East would benefit the entire world, by
undermining the ideologies that export violence to other lands.
Iraq as a dictatorship had great power to destabilize the Middle
East; Iraq as a democracy will have great power to inspire the Middle
East. The advance of democratic institutions in Iraq is setting an
example that others, including the Palestinian people, would be wise to
follow. The Palestinian cause is betrayed by leaders who cling to
power by feeding old hatreds and destroying the good work of others.
The Palestinian people deserve their own state, and they will gain that
state by embracing new leaders committed to reform, to fighting terror,
and to building peace. All parties in the Middle East must meet their
responsibilities and carry out the commitments they made at Aqaba.
Israel must work to create the conditions that will allow a peaceful
Palestinian state to emerge. And Arab nations must cut off funding and
other support for terrorist organizations. America will work with
every nation in the region that acts boldly for the sake of peace.
A second challenge we must confront together is the proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction. Outlaw regimes that possess nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons — and the means to deliver them —
would be able to use blackmail and create chaos in entire regions.
These weapons could be used by terrorists to bring sudden disaster and
suffering on a scale we can scarcely imagine. The deadly combination
of outlaw regimes and terror networks and weapons of mass murder is a
peril that cannot be ignored or wished away. If such a danger is
allowed to fully materialize, all words, all protests, will come too
late. Nations of the world must have the wisdom and the will to stop
grave threats before they arrive.
One crucial step is to secure the most dangerous materials at their
source. For more than a decade, the United States has worked with
Russia and other states of the former Soviet Union to dismantle,
destroy, or secure weapons and dangerous materials left over from
another era. Last year in Canada, the G8 nations agreed to provide up
to $20 billion — half of it from the United States — to fight this
proliferation risk over the next 10 years. Since then, six additional
countries have joined the effort. More are needed, and I urge other
nations to help us meet this danger.
We're also improving our capability to interdict lethal materials
in transit. Through our Proliferation Security Initiative, 11 nations
are preparing to search planes and ships, trains and trucks carrying
suspect cargo, and to seize weapons or missile shipments that raise
proliferation concerns. These nations have agreed on a set of
interdiction principles, consistent with legal — current legal
authorities. And we're working to expand the Proliferation Security
Initiative to other countries. We're determined to keep the world's
most destructive weapons away from all our shores, and out of the hands
of our common enemies.
Because proliferators will use any route or channel that is open to
them, we need the broadest possible cooperation to stop them. Today, I
ask the U.N. Security Council to adopt a new anti-proliferation
resolution. This resolution should call on all members of the U.N. to
criminalize the proliferation of weapons — weapons of mass
destruction, to enact strict export controls consistent with
international standards, and to secure any and all sensitive materials
within their own borders. The United States stands ready to help any
nation draft these new laws, and to assist in their enforcement.
A third challenge we share is a challenge to our conscience. We
must act decisively to meet the humanitarian crises of our time. The
United States has begun to carry out the Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief, aimed at preventing AIDS on a massive scale, and treating
millions who have the disease already. We have pledged $15 billion
over five years to fight AIDS around the world.
My country is acting to save lives from famine, as well. We're
providing more than $1.4 billion in global emergency food aid, and I've
asked our United States Congress for $200 million for a new famine
fund, so we can act quickly when the first signs of famine appear.
Every nation on every continent should generously add their resources
to the fight against disease and desperate hunger.
There's another humanitarian crisis spreading, yet hidden from
view. Each year, an estimated 800,000 to 900,000 human beings are
bought, sold or forced across the world's borders. Among them are
hundreds of thousands of teenage girls, and others as young as five,
who fall victim to the sex trade. This commerce in human life
generates billions of dollars each year — much of which is used to
finance organized crime.
There's a special evil in the abuse and exploitation of the most
innocent and vulnerable. The victims of sex trade see little of life
before they see the very worst of life — an underground of brutality
and lonely fear. Those who create these victims and profit from their
suffering must be severely punished. Those who patronize this industry
debase themselves and deepen the misery of others. And governments
that tolerate this trade are tolerating a form of slavery.
This problem has appeared in my own country, and we are working to
stop it. The PROTECT Act, which I signed into law this year, makes it
a crime for any person to enter the United States, or for any citizen
to travel abroad, for the purpose of sex tourism involving children.
The Department of Justice is actively investigating sex tour operators
and patrons, who can face up to 30 years in prison. Under the
Trafficking Victims Protection Act, the United States is using
sanctions against governments to discourage human trafficking.
The victims of this industry also need help from members of the
United Nations. And this begins with clear standards and the certainty
of punishment under laws of every country. Today, some nations make it
a crime to sexually abuse children abroad. Such conduct should be a
crime in all nations. Governments should inform travelers of the harm
this industry does, and the severe punishments that will fall on its
patrons. The American government is committing $50 million to support
the good work of organizations that are rescuing women and children
from exploitation, and giving them shelter and medical treatment and
the hope of a new life. I urge other governments to do their part.
We must show new energy in fighting back an old evil. Nearly two
centuries after the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade, and
more than a century after slavery was officially ended in its last
strongholds, the trade in human beings for any purpose must not be
allowed to thrive in our time.
All the challenges I have spoken of this morning require urgent
attention and moral clarity. Helping Afghanistan and Iraq to succeed
as free nations in a transformed region, cutting off the avenues of
proliferation, abolishing modern forms of slavery — these are the
kinds of great tasks for which the United Nations was founded. In each
case, careful discussion is needed, and also decisive action. Our good
intentions will be credited only if we achieve good outcomes.
As an original signer of the U.N. Charter, the United States of
America is committed to the United Nations. And we show that
commitment by working to fulfill the U.N.'s stated purposes, and give
meaning to its ideals. The founding documents of the United Nations
and the founding documents of America stand in the same tradition.
Both assert that human beings should never be reduced to objects of
power or commerce, because their dignity is inherent. Both require —
both recognize a moral law that stands above men and nations, which
must be defended and enforced by men and nations. And both point the
way to peace, the peace that comes when all are free. We secure that
peace with our courage, and we must show that courage together.
May God bless you all. (Applause.)
END 11:25 A.M. EDT
The Future of Iraq | Justifications and Ramifications of the War | The War and the Wider World | A Violent Month | Events of the Past Year | Maps