Speech by US President George W. Bush to the German Bundestag, Berlin, May 23, 2002
President, thank you very much for your kind introduction. And
thank you for giving me this chance to be here today. President
Rau, thank you very much; Chancellor Schroeder. I understand former
Chancellor Kohl is here. I want to thank the members of the
Bundestag. How are you, sir?
I was all nervous when the President told me that you all are on
vacation. I can just imagine how my Congress would react if I
called them back to hear a speech of mine when they were on
vacation. But thank you for coming. I'm so honored to be here. And
my wife, Laura, and I really appreciate the hospitality that you've
shown us.
I've had the pleasure of welcoming your Chancellor to Washington
three times, and we have established a strong relationship. Mr.
Chancellor, I'm grateful.
And now I am honored to visit this great city. The history of our
time is written in the life of Berlin. In this building, fires of
hatred were set that swept across the world. To this city, Allied
planes brought food and hope during 323 days and nights of siege.
Across an infamous divide, men and women jumped from tenement
buildings and crossed through razor wire to live in freedom or to
die in the attempt. One American President came here to proudly
call himself a citizen of Berlin. Another President dared the
Soviets to "tear down that wall." And on a night in November,
Berliners took history into their hands, and made your city
whole.
In a single lifetime, the people of this capital and this country
endured 12 years of dictatorial rule, suffered 40 years of bitter
separation, and persevered through this challenging decade of
unification. For all these trials, Germany has emerged a
responsible, a prosperous and peaceful nation. More than a decade
ago, as the President pointed out, my dad spoke of Germany and
America as partners in leadership - and this has come to pass. A
new era has arrived - the strong Germany you have built is good for
the world.
On both sides of the Atlantic, the generation of our fathers was
called to shape great events - and they built the great
transatlantic alliance of democracies. They built the most
successful alliance in history. After the Cold War, during the
relative quiet of the 1990s, some questioned whether our
transatlantic partnership still had a purpose. History has given
its answer. Our generation faces new and grave threats to liberty,
to the safety of our people, and to civilization, itself. We face
an aggressive force that glorifies death, that targets the innocent
and seeks the means to matter - murder on a massive scale.
We face the global tragedy of disease and poverty that take
uncounted lives and leave whole nations vulnerable to oppression
and terror.
We'll face these challenges together. We must face them together.
Those who despise human freedom will attack it on every continent.
Those who seek missiles and terrible weapons are also familiar with
the map of Europe. Like the threats of another era, this threat
cannot be appeased or cannot be ignored. By being patient,
relentless and resolute, we will defeat the enemies of
freedom.
By remaining united we are meeting - we are meeting modern threats
with the greatest resources of wealth and will ever assembled by
free nations. Together, Europe and the United States have the
creative genius, the economic power, the moral heritage, and the
democratic vision to protect our liberty and to advance our cause
of peace.
Different as we are, we are building and defending the same house
of freedom - its doors open to all of Europe's people, its windows
looking out to global challenges beyond. We must lay the foundation
with a Europe that is whole and free and at peace for the first
time in its history. This dream of the centuries is close at
hand.
From the Argonne Forest to the Anzio beachhead, conflicts in Europe
have drawn the blood of millions, squandering and shattering lives
across the earth. There are thousands, thousands of monuments in
parks and squares across my country to young men of 18 and 19 and
20 whose lives ended in battle on this continent. Ours is the first
generation in a hundred years that does not expect and does not
fear the next European war. And that achievement - your achievement
- is one of the greatest in modern times.
When Europe grows in unity, Europe and America grow in security.
When you integrate your markets and share a currency in the
European Union, you are creating the conditions for security and
common purpose. In all these steps, Americans do not see the rise
of a rival, we see the end of old hostilities. We see the success
of our allies, and we applaud your progress.
The expansion of NATO will also extend the security on this
continent, especially for nations that knew little peace or
security in the last century. We have moved cautiously in this
direction. Now we must act decisively.
As our summit in Prague approaches, America is committed to NATO
membership for all of Europe's democracies that are ready to share
in the responsibilities that NATO brings. Every part of Europe
should share in the security and success of this continent. A
broader alliance will strengthen NATO - it will fulfill NATO's
promise.
Another mission we share is to encourage the Russian people to find
their future in Europe, and with America. Russia has its best
chance since 1917 to become a part of Europe's family. Russia's
transformation is not finished; the outcome is not yet determined.
But for all the problems and challenges, Russia is moving toward
freedom - more freedom in its politics and its markets; freedom
that will help Russia to act as a great and a just power. A Russia
at peace with its neighbors, respecting the legitimate rights of
minorities, is welcome in Europe.
A new Russian-American partnership is being forged. Russia is
lending crucial support in the war on global terror. A Russian
colonel works on the staff of U.S. Army General Tommy Franks,
commander of the war in Afghanistan. And in Afghanistan, itself,
Russia is helping to build hospitals and a better future for the
Afghan people.
America and Europe must throw off old suspicions and realize our
common interests with Russia. Tomorrow in Moscow, President Putin
and I will again act upon these interests.
The United States and Russia are ridding ourselves of the last
vestiges of Cold War confrontation. We have moved beyond an ABM
treaty that prevented us from defending our people and our friends.
Some warned that moving beyond the ABM treaty would cause an arms
race. Instead, President Putin and I are about to sign the most
dramatic nuclear arms reduction in history. Both the United States
and Russia will reduce our nuclear arsenals by about two-thirds -
to the lowest levels in decades.
Old arms agreements sought to manage hostility and to maintain a
balance of terror. This new agreement recognizes that Russia and
the West are no longer enemies.
The entire transatlantic alliance is forming a new relationship
with Russia. Next week in Rome, Chancellor Schroeder, NATO allies,
and I will meet as equal partners with President Putin at the
creation of the NATO-Russia Council. The Council gives us an
opportunity to build common security against common threats. We
will start with projects on nonproliferation, counterterrorism, and
search-and-rescue operations. Over time, we will expand this
cooperation, even as we preserve the core mission of NATO. Many
generations have looked at Russia with alarm. Our generation can
finally lift this shadow from Europe by embracing the friendship of
a new democratic Russia.
As we expand our alliance, as we reach out to Russia, we must also
look beyond Europe to gathering dangers and important
responsibilities. As we build the house of freedom, we must meet
the challenges of a larger world. And we must meet them
together.
For the United States, September the 11th, 2001 cut a deep dividing
line in our history - a change of eras as sharp and clear as Pearl
Harbor, or the first day of the Berlin Blockade. There can be no
lasting security in a world at the mercy of terrorists - for my
nation, or for any nation.
Given this threat, NATO's defining purpose - our collective defense
- is as urgent as ever. America and Europe need each other to fight
and win the war against global terror. My nation is so grateful for
the sympathy of the German people, and for the strong support of
Germany and all of Europe.
Troops from more than a dozen European countries have deployed in
and around Afghanistan, including thousands from this country - the
first deployment of German forces outside of Europe since 1945.
German soldiers have died in this war, and we mourn their loss as
we do our own. German authorities are on the trail of terrorist
cells and finances. And German police are helping Afghans build
their own police force. And we're so grateful for the
support.
Together, we oppose an enemy that thrives on violence and the grief
of the innocent. The terrorists are defined by their hatreds: they
hate democracy and tolerance and free expression and women and Jews
and Christians and all Muslims who disagree with them. Others
killed in the name of racial purity or the class struggle. These
enemies kill in the name of a false religious purity, perverting
the faith they claim to hold. In this war we defend not just
America or Europe; we are defending civilization, itself.
The evil that has formed against us has been termed the "new
totalitarian threat." The authors of terror are seeking nuclear,
chemical and biological weapons. Regimes that sponsor terror are
developing these weapons and the missiles to deliver them. If these
regimes and their terrorist allies were to perfect these
capabilities, no inner voice of reason, no hint of conscience would
prevent their use.
Wishful thinking might bring comfort, but not security. Call this a
strategic challenge; call it, as I do, axis of evil; call it by any
name you choose, but let us speak the truth. If we ignore this
threat, we invite certain blackmail, and place millions of our
citizens in grave danger.
Our response will be reasoned, and focused, and deliberate. We will
use more than our military might. We will cut off terrorist
finances, apply diplomatic pressure, and continue to share
intelligence. America will consult closely with our friends and
allies at every stage. But make no mistake about it, we will and we
must confront this conspiracy against our liberty and against our
lives.
As it faces new threats, NATO needs a new strategy and new
capabilities. Dangers originating far from Europe can now strike at
Europe's heart - so NATO must be able and willing to act whenever
threats emerge. This will require all the assets of modern defense
- mobile and deployable forces, sophisticated special operations,
the ability to fight under the threat of chemical and biological
weapons. Each nation must focus on the military strengths it can
bring to this alliance, with the hard choices and financial
commitment that requires. We do not know where the next threat
might come from, we really don't know what form it might take. But
we must be ready, as full military partners, to confront these
urgent threats to our common security.
One way to make ourselves more secure is to address the regional
conflicts that enflame violence. Our work in the Balkans and
Afghanistan shows how much we can achieve when we stand together.
We must continue to stand for peace in the Middle East. That peace
must assure the permanent safety of the Jewish people. And that
peace must provide the Palestinian people with a state of their
own.
In the midst of terrorist violence in the Middle East, the hope of
a lasting accord may seem distant. That's how many once viewed the
prospect of peace between Poland and Germany, Germany and France,
France and England, Protestant and Catholic. Yet, after generations
of traded violence and humiliation, we have seen enemies become
partners and allies in a new Europe. We pray the same healing, the
same shedding of hatred, might come to the Middle East. And we will
be unrelenting in our quest for that peace.
We must recognize that violence and resentment are defeated by the
advance of health, and learning, and prosperity. Poverty doesn't
create terror - yet, terror takes root in failing nations that
cannot police themselves or provide for their people. Our
conscience and our interests speak as one: to achieve a safer
world, we must create a better world.
The expansion of trade in our time is one of the primary reasons
for our progress against poverty. At Doha, we committed to build on
this progress, and we must keep that commitment. Trans-Atlantic
nations must resolve the small, disputed portion of our vast
trading relationship within the rules and settlement mechanisms of
the World Trade Organization - whether those disputes concern tax
law, steel, agricultural or biotechnology.
For all nations - for all nations to gain the benefit of global
markets, they need populations that are healthy and literate. To
help developing nations achieve these goals, leaders of wealthy
nations have a duty of conscience. We have a duty to share our
wealth generously and wisely. Those who lead poor nations have a
duty to their own people - but they have a duty as well: to pursue
reforms that turn temporary aid into lasting progress.
I've proposed that new American aid be directed to nations on that
path of reform. The United States will increase our core
development assistance by 50 percent over the next three budget
years. It will be up to a level of $5 billion a year, above and
beyond that which we already contribute to development.
When nations are governed justly, the people benefit. When nations
are governed unjustly, for the benefit of a corrupt few, no amount
of aid will help the people in need. When nations are governed
justly - when nations are governed justly, investing in education
and health, and encouraging economic freedom, they will have our
help. And more importantly, these rising nations will have their
own ability and, eventually, the resources necessary to battle
disease and improve their environment, and build lives of dignity
for their people.
Members of the Bundestag, we are joined in serious purpose - very
serious purposes - on which the safety of our people and the fate
of our freedom now rest. We build a world of justice, or we will
live in a world of coercion. The magnitude of our shared
responsibilities makes our disagreements look so small. And those
who exaggerate our differences play a shallow game and hold a
simplistic view of our relationship.
America and the nations in Europe are more than military allies,
we're more than trading partners; we are heirs to the same
civilization. The pledges of the Magna Charta, the learning of
Athens, the creativity of Paris, the unbending conscience of
Luther, the gentle faith of St. Francis - all of these are part of
the American soul. The New World has succeeded by holding to the
values of the Old.
Our histories have diverged, yet we seek to live by the same
ideals. We believe in free markets, tempered by compassion. We
believe in open societies that reflect unchanging truths. We
believe in the value and dignity of every life.
These convictions bind our civilization together and set our
enemies against us. These convictions are universally true and
right. And they define our nations and our partnership in a unique
way. And these beliefs lead us to fight tyranny and evil, as others
have done before us.
One of the greatest Germans of the 20th century was Pastor Dietrich
Bonhoeffer, who left the security of America to stand against Nazi
rule. In a dark hour, he gave witness to the Gospel of life, and
paid the cost of his discipleship, being put to death only days
before his camp was liberated.
"I believe," said Bonhoeffer, "that God can and wants to create
good out of everything, even evil."
That belief is proven in the history of Europe since that day -- in
the reconciliation and renewal that have transformed this
continent. In America, very recently, we have also seen the horror
of evil and the power of good. In the tests of our time, we are
affirming our deepest values and our closest friendships. Inside
this chamber, across this city, throughout this nation and
continent, America has valued friends. And with our friends we are
building that house of freedom - for our time and for all
time.
May God bless.
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