Thank you very much. Well, thank you for that very warm
welcome. (Cheering.) Thank you for that warm welcome. Thank you,
Bernice, for that kind introduction and for your leadership of
this organization. I want to thank Amy Friedkin and Howard Kohr
for inviting me to address this wonderful audience. I would also
like to congratulate the new President-elect, Howard Friedman.
(Applause.) And judging by how many students I see in the
audience today, I know that AIPAC's future is clearly going to
be bright. (Applause.)
Let me begin by saying that Israel has no greater friend and
no stronger supporter than the United States of America.
(Applause.) For over half a century, AIPAC has strengthened the
religious, cultural and political bonds that unite our two great
nations, and I thank you for that. (Applause.)
The United States and Israel share much in common. We both
affirm the innate freedom and dignity of every human life, not
as prizes that people confer to one another, but as divine gifts
of the Almighty. As Thomas Jefferson once wrote, "The God that
gave us liberty and life gave them to us at the same time."
Moral clarity is an essential virtue in our world today and
for 60 years cynics and skeptics have proven that we have been
looking to false choices in the Middle East. They have claimed
that we must choose either freedom or stability, either
democracy or security. They have said that the United States
could either uphold its principles or advance its policies.
But by trying to purchase stability at the price of liberty,
we achieved neither and we saw the result of that on a fine
September morning. That is why President Bush has rejected 60
years of false choices in the Middle East. And as he said last
week at the International Republican Institute, "The United
States has a new policy, a strategy that recognizes that the
best way to defeat the ideology that uses terror as a weapon is
to spread freedom and democracy." (Applause.)
The President holds the deep belief that all human beings
desire and deserve to live in liberty. This idea, of course, did
not immediately find favor. Many continued to defend the false
choices of the past. But we knew then and we know now America's
message is clear, our principles are sound and our policies are
right, and today the nations of the world are finally joining
with the United States to support the cause of freedom.
(Applause.)
We measure our success in the democratic revolutions that
have stunned the entire world: vibrant revolutions of rose and
orange and purple and tulip and cedar. The destiny of the Middle
East is bound up in this global expansion of freedom. The days
of thinking that this region was somehow immune to democracy are
over. Working with our G-8 partners, the United States has
created the Broader Middle East and North Africa Initiative to
build partnerships with people in the region who are working for
greater liberty.
The flagship of this bold new policy is the Forum for the
Future, an unprecedented international venue to amplify the
voices of reform that are redefining the region. Together, we
will tackle the urgent goals of the Forum: political openness,
economic liberty, educational opportunity and the empowerment of
women.
Today, nations all across the world are speaking a common
language of reform and they are helping citizens throughout the
broader Middle East to transform the parameters of debate in
their societies. The people of this region are expressing ideas
and taking actions that would have been unthinkable only one
year ago.
Some in the Arab media have even asked why the only real
democracies in the Middle East are found in the "occupied lands"
of Iraq and the Palestinian territories. What an incredible
thought. Today, citizens in the region are demanding that their
governments respond to this simple, audacious question.
And many states will have to answer their people's call for
genuine reform. Jordan and Bahrain and Qatar and Morocco are all
taking steps to introduce greater openness into their political
systems. Egypt has amended its constitution with electoral
reform. And even Saudi Arabia has held multiple elections. And
just last week, remarkably, the Kuwaiti legislature granted its
women citizens the right to vote. (Applause.)
Kuwait's recognition that it must include all of its people
in political life is, hopefully, an example that its neighbors
will follow. In Lebanon, hundreds of thousands of citizens have
demanded an end to the foreign suffocation of their country.
(Applause.) With strong international support, led by the United
States and by France, and with an explicit mandate from the
United Nations Security Council, Syria has gotten the message
loud and clear that it is not welcome in Lebanon. (Applause.)
The Syrian regime has withdrawn its decades-long military
presence. And at the end of this month, the Lebanese people will
go to the polls and set a new course of action. But we cannot
rest. Syria must also remove its intelligence forces and allow
the Lebanese people to be free. (Applause.)
To be sure, a vital source of inspiration for all of these
reformers comes from the people of Iraq, who defied threats of
murder to vote in free elections in January. They declared with
one voice that the will of the people, not the whim of a
dictator, would determine Iraq's future. They declared with that
same voice that no Iraqi regime would ever again torture its
people, invade its neighbors, attack its neighbors and offer
financial incentives to Palestinian homicide bombers.
(Applause.)
Today, Iraq has a transitional government that will soon
begin framing a new national constitution. Free nations
everywhere have rallied to Iraq's side. There is a coalition of
30 countries helping the Iraqi people to defend themselves from
murderers and terrorists. NATO is training Iraq's army officers,
police forces and civilian administrators. And next month, at
the request of Iraq's new government, the United States and the
European Union will co-host an international conference to build
greater support for democracy, prosperity and security.
Now, I speak to these reform efforts because the United
States looks to a future and has a vision of a day when Israel
is no longer the sole democracy in the Middle East. (Applause.)
This aspiration shapes the very heart of our approach to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict as well. For four years, President
Bush refused to meet with Yasser Arafat. (Applause.) He did so
because Arafat valued neither Israel's security nor his own
people's liberty. (Applause.)
There were those who ridiculed this principled decision as if
the refusal to negotiate with a man who aided and abetted
terrorism somehow revealed a lack of concern for peace. America
and Israeli had tried before to gain peace where democracy did
not exist and we are not going down that road again. (Applause.)
Instead, President Bush advanced a vision of two democratic
states: Israel and Palestine living side by side in peace and
security. And today, the Palestinian people are trying to meet
this democratic challenge. In January, they voted in historic
elections for a leader who rejects violence as a path to peace.
President Abbas has committed to both freedom and security and
President Bush has offered his hand in friendship, just as he
promised he would.
In three days, when they meet together here in Washington,
they will build a relationship that is one that is based on the
good faith that only democratic leaders can bring. The President
will be clear that there are commitments to be met, that there
are goals to be met, but that democracy is a goal that is
unassailable and incontrovertible. (Applause.)
Prime Minister Sharon has also recognized that Israel is
gaining a legitimate partner for peace and he has made
courageous decisions that could change the course of history.
Beginning in August, Prime Minister Sharon will implement his
plan to withdraw from Gaza and parts of the West Bank. Israel's
disengagement strategy presents an unprecedented and incredibly
delicate opportunity for peace and we must all work together to
capitalize on this precious moment. (Applause.)
To strengthen our present opportunities, all nations must
meet their obligations. Israel must take no actions that
prejudice a final settlement or jeopardize the true viability of
the Palestinian state. And Israel must help to create the
conditions for the emergence of that democratic state.
The Palestinian Authority must advance democratic reform and
it must dismantle all terrorist networks in its society.
(Applause.)
Arab states must end incitement in their media, cut off all
support for terrorism and extremist education, and establish
normal relations with Israel. (Applause.)
To nurture our present opportunity, President Bush proposed
and the Quartet nations endorsed the appointment of James
Wolfensohn as Special Envoy for Gaza Disengagement. Jim
Wolfensohn will help the Israelis and Palestinians coordinate on
non-military aspects of their disengagement, including
disposition of assets and revitalization of the Palestinian
economy.
To protect our present opportunity, President Bush has sent
General William Ward to help the Palestinians reform their
security services. General Ward is also coordinating all
international security assistance to the Palestinians, including
training and equipment.
To expand our present opportunity, the United States has
greatly increased our financial assistance to the Palestinian
people. We are pledging $350 million to help the Palestinians
build the free institutions of their democratic state. This is
an unprecedented contribution to the future of peace and freedom
in the Middle East.
Yes, this past year has brought forth a dramatic shift in the
political landscape of the Middle East. But this moment of
transformation is very fragile and it still has committed
enemies, particularly the Government of Iran, which is the
world's leading sponsor of terrorism. (Applause.)
The United States has focused the world's attention on Iran's
pursuit of weapons of mass destruction. And along with our
allies, we are working to gain full disclosure of Iran's efforts
to obtain nuclear weapons. The world must not tolerate any
Iranian attempt to develop a nuclear weapon. (Applause.) Nor can
it tolerate Iran's efforts to subvert democratic governments
through terrorism. (Applause.)
Ladies and gentlemen, the Middle East is changing and even
the unelected leaders in Tehran must recognize this fact. They
must know that the energy of reform that is building all around
them will one day inspire Iran's citizens to demand their
liberty and their rights. The United States stands with the
people of Iran. (Applause.)
President Bush has declared that advancing the cause of
freedom is the calling of our time and in the broader Middle
East, his policies are expanding the scope of what many thought
possible. With our support, the people of the region are
demonstrating that all great human achievement begins with free
individuals who do not accept that the reality of today must
also be the reality of tomorrow. Of course, there will always be
cynics and skeptics who hold the misguided belief that if they
can not see their goal, then it cannot be possible. They will
try to elevate their cynicism by calling it realism and they
will criticize all who echo the stirring words of Theodore
Hertzel, "If you will it, it is no dream." (Applause.)
In 1776, cynics and skeptics could not see an independent
America, so they doubted that it could be so. They saw only 13
colonies that could never hang together and would surely hang
separately. But there were others who had a vision, a vision of
the United States as a free and great nation, a democracy, and
one day, a complete multiethnic society. With perseverance, the
American people made that vision a reality. In 1948, cynics and
skeptics could not see the promise of Israel, so they doubted
it, said it could never be fulfilled. They saw only a wounded
and wandering people beset on all sides by hostile armies.
But there were those who had another vision, a vision of a
Jewish state that would shelter its children, defend its sacred
homeland, turn its desert soil green and reaffirm the principles
of freedom and democracy. With courage, the Israeli people made
that vision a reality. (Applause.)
Today, cynics and skeptics cannot see a democratic Middle
East, so they doubt that it is a realistic goal. They focus only
on the despotism that has shaped the region's past and still
defines much of its present. But ladies and gentlemen, make no
mistake, freedom is on the march in Afghanistan and Iraq and in
Lebanon and in Georgia and Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan and in the
Palestinian territories.
Yes, it is hard and progress is uneven. There are violent men
who will stop at nothing to prevent democracy's rise. Yet people
all across the Middle East today are talking and demonstrating
and sharing their vision for a democratic future. Many have
given their very lives to this noble purpose.
The United States and Israel must defend the aspirations of
all people who long to be free. And with our unwavering support,
we can help to make the promise of democracy a reality for the
entire region.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
2005/543