This is a transcript of President George W. Bush's
address at MacDill Air Force Base, Florida on 26 March 2003. The
transcription was prepared by e-Media Millworks1,
and reformatted for E2, by GOM.
President Bush:
"Thank you all very much.
General DeLong, thanks for such a kind introduction. Laura and
I are really proud to be here with the good men and women of CENTCOM and MacDill,
Florida Air Force Base, Florida.
We are pleased to see so many family members who are here.
We thank you for coming. And I want you to know your nation appreciates your
commitment and your sacrifice in the cause of peace and freedom.
We're also proud to be here today with our friends and allies, representative
of the 48 nations across the world who have joined America in Operation Iraqi
Freedom.
Over the last week, the world has witnessed the skill and honor and resolve
of our military in the course of battle. We have seen the character of this new
generation of American armed forces. We've seen their daring against ruthless
enemies and their decency to an oppressed people.
Millions of Americans are proud of our military, and so am I.
I am honored to be the commander in chief.
I appreciate very much General Peter Pace, vice chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, who has joined us from Washington, D.C., today. He is
representative of the caliber of our generals. He's one of the finest people I
know.
I'm proud you're here, General Pace. Thank you for representing the Marine
Corps so well and all the fighting men and women.
I'm proud also to be here with Charles Holland, commander of SOCOM.
The wing commander of MacDill Air Force Base, Colonel Tanker Snyder (ph).
He told me that was his given name, Tanker (ph).
That's a heck of a name, Tanker (ph).
Of course I'm really proud of your governor.
I want to thank members of the Florida congressional delegation who flew
down with us today on Air Force One, starting with the chairman of the
Appropriations Committee, a Floridian committed to making sure our military
has what it takes to win war and therefore be able to keep the peace, the
chairman, Bill Young. As well, Congressmen Jim Davis, Mike Bilirakis,
Adam Putnam and Katherine Harris came down today.
I know we got some of the mayors from the local area here, Rick Baker (ph),
Brian (inaudible), and my old buddy, Dick Greco, the mayor of Tampa,
Florida, for being here.
I want to thank everybody in uniform who is here today. Thank you for your
service, your sacrifice and your love of America.
I appreciate the members of the United States Coast Guard who are here
today.
Our Coast Guard is deployed in the Middle East, at the same time it
protects this homeland of ours. And you're doing a fine job on behalf of the
American people all up and down the coastlines of this great country. I want to
thank members of the Florida Army National Guard who are here.
And I suspect we might have a few veterans as well as retired members of our
military. I want to thank you all for your service, for setting such a clear
example for future generations of those who wear our uniform. I think you'll
agree that our military is not letting you down when it comes to upholding the
great tradition of peace through strength.
One of the problems of being the president is you always end up being the
last guy here.
So I'm sorry I didn't get to hear Toby Keith and Darrel Worley. But I
want to thank you all for coming and providing your talents today in support of
our efforts to make the world a more peaceful place.
I also want to thank Chaplain Stone (ph). I appreciate your words of prayer
for our men and women in uniform, especially for your prayers for the loved ones
of American and British troops whose lives were lost.
People across this country are praying. They are praying that they hope those
families and loved ones will find comfort and grace in their sorrow. We pray
that God will bless and receive each of the fallen. And we thank God that
liberty found such brave defenders.
At MacDill Air Force Base, I know you're proud of a certain
Army general who
couldn't who couldn't be with us today on the account of some pressing business.
Tommy Franks has my respect, the respect of our military, and the thanks of
the United States of America.
MacDill is the command center of our Special Operations forces the silent
warriors who were first on the ground--were first on the ground there in Iraq.
And here at CENTCOM, you're coordinating the work of a grand coalition that is
disarming a dangerous enemy and freeing a proud people.
Every nation in our coalition understands the terrible threat we face from
weapons of mass destruction. Every nation represented here refuses to live in a
future of fear at the mercy of terrorists and tyrants. And every
nation here today shares the same resolve. We will be relentless in our pursuit
of victory.
Our military is making good progress in Iraq. Yet this war is far from
over. As they approach Baghdad, our fighting units are facing
the most desperate elements of a doomed regime.
We cannot know the duration of this war, but we are prepared for the battle
ahead.
We cannot predict the final day of the Iraqi regime, but I can assure
you--and I assure the long-suffering people of Iraq--there will be a day of
reckoning for the Iraqi regime, and that day is drawing near.
Many of you here today were also involved in the liberation of Afghanistan.
The military demands are very different in Iraq, yet our coalition is showing
the same spirit, the same resolve. That spirit and resolve that destroyed the
Al Qaida terror camps, that routed the Taliban and freed the people of
Afghanistan.
In Iraq today, our military is focused and unwavering. We have an effective
plan of battle and the flexibility to meet every challenge.
Nothing--nothing--will divert us from our clear mission. We will press on
through every hardship. We will overcome every danger. And we will prevail.
It has been six days since the major ground war began, it's been five days
since the major air war began, and every day has brought us closer to our
objective.
At the opening of Operation Iraqi Freedom, Special Forces helped to
secure airfields, bridges and oil fields, to clear the way for our forces and to
prevent sabotage and environmental catastrophe.
Our pilots and cruise missiles have struck vital military targets with lethal
precision. We've destroyed the base of a terrorist group in northern Iraq that
sought to attack America and Europe with deadly poisons. We have moved over 200
miles to the north toward Iraq's capital in the last three days.
And the dictator's major Republican Guard units are now under direct and
intense attack.
Day by day, Saddam Hussein is losing his grip on Iraq. Day by day, the
Iraqi people are closer to freedom.
We're also taking every action we can to prevent the Iraqi regime from using
its hidden weapons of mass destruction. We're attacking the command structure
that could order the use of those weapons.
Coalition troops have taken control of hundreds of square miles of
territory to prevent the launch of missiles and chemical or biological weapons.
Every victory in this campaign and every sacrifice serves the purpose of
defending innocent lives in America and across the world from the weapons of
terror.
We will not wait to meet this danger with firefighters and police and doctors
on the streets of our own cities. Instead, we are meeting the danger today with
our Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard and Marines.
All the nations in our coalition are contributing to our steady progress.
British ground forces have seized strategic towns and ports. The Royal Air
Force is striking targets throughout Iraq. The Royal Navy is taking command
of coastal waters.
The Australian military is providing naval gunfire support and special
forces and fighter aircraft on missions deep in Iraq.
Coalition military forces have secured an Iraqi oil platform in the Persian
Gulf.
A Danish submarine is monitoring Iraqi intelligence and providing early
warning.
Czech, Slovak, Polish and Romanian forces, soon to be joined by
Ukrainian and Bulgarian forces, are forward-deployed in the region, prepared
to respond in the event of an attack of weapons of mass destruction anywhere
in the region.
Spain is providing important logistical and humanitarian support.
Coalition forces are skilled and courageous, and we are honored to have them
by our side.
In the early stages of this war, the world is getting a clear view of the
Iraqi regime and the evil at its heart. In the ranks of that regime are men
whose idea of courage is to brutalize unarmed prisoners. They
wage attacks while posing as civilians. They use real civilians as human shields. They pretend to surrender, then fire upon those who
show them mercy.
This band of war criminals has been put on notice: The day of Iraq's
liberation will also be a day of justice.
And in the early stages of this war, we have also seen the honor of the
American military and our coalition. Protecting innocent civilians is a
central commitment of our war plan. Our enemy in this war is the Iraqi regime,
not the people who have suffered under it.
As we bring justice to a dictator, today we started bringing humanitarian
aid in large amounts to an oppressed land.
We are treating Iraqi prisoners of war according to the highest standards of
law and decency. Coalition doctors are working to save the lives of the
wounded, including Iraqi soldiers.
One of our servicemen said this about the injured Iraqis he treated: "We
can't blame them for the mistreatment that their government is doing to our
soldiers. I'm all for treating them. That's what we do. That's our job."
Our entire coalition has a job to do. And it will not end with the
liberation of Iraq. We will help the Iraqi people to find the benefits and
assume the duties of self-government.
The form of those institutions will arise from Iraq's own culture and its own
choices. Yet this much is certain: The 24 million people of Iraq have lived too
long under a violent criminal gang calling itself a government.
Iraqis are a good and gifted people. They deserve better than a life spent
bowing before a dictator. The people of Iraq deserve to stand on their feet as
free men and women, the citizens of a free country.
This goal of a free and peaceful Iraq unites our coalition, and this goal
comes from the deepest convictions of America.
The freedom you defend is the right of every person and the future of every
nation. The liberty we prize is not America's gift to the world, it is God's
gift to humanity.
The Army Special Forces define their mission in a motto: To liberate the
oppressed.
Generations of men and women in uniform have served and sacrificed in this
cause. Now the call of history has come once again to all in our military and
to all in our coalition. We're answering that call. We have no ambition in Iraq,
except the liberation of its people. We ask no reward, except a durable
peace. And we will accept no outcome short of complete and final success.
The path we are taking is not easy and it may be long, yet we know our
destination. We will stay on the path, mile-by-mile, all the way to Baghdad
and all the way to victory.
Thank you all. And may God bless America.
===================&===================
Serious subjects should be discussed seriously. I'm posting this in the
hope that we can all do a better job of understanding this situation if we
refer to the raw text of events like this report. I'm not promulgating
any conclusions here, just providing the source material for you to make up
your own mind...
1 Transcript courtesy of The NY Times & e-Media
Millworks: http://www.nytimes.com/