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Text 4808, 596 rader
Skriven 2007-06-14 23:47:32 av Whitehouse Press (1:3634/12.0)
Ärende: Press Release (0706141) for Thu, 2007 Jun 14
====================================================

===========================================================================
President Bush Discusses Comprehensive Immigration Reform with Associated
Builders and Contractors
===========================================================================

For Immediate Release Office of the Press Secretary June 14, 2007

President Bush Discusses Comprehensive Immigration Reform with Associated
Builders and Contractors Capital Hilton Hotel Washington, D.C.

˙ /news/releases/2007/06/20070614-1.wm.v.html ˙˙Presidential Remarks
˙˙Audio

˙˙˙˙˙ In Focus: Immigration

10:39 A.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, all. Thank you. Thanks for coming. I'm proud to
be with you, glad to be back with the Associated Builders and Contractors.
I appreciate your organization. I didn't realize you were founded in 1950
-- about the same time a piano nearly fell through the roof at the White
House. (Laughter.) Thereby causing Harry Truman to decide to renovate it.
And for that, Laura and I are very grateful. (Laughter.)

I am grateful for your organization, as well. I thank you for being
builders, doers and dreamers. I thank you for being people who are willing
to take risk to help build our nation and, at the same time, employ people.
I want to talk to you today about how to keep the entrepreneurial spirit
strong, how to keep this economy growing, and our need to protect the
American people from harm. And I appreciate you giving me a chance to come
and do so.

David Meyer, thank you, and I thank your board for inviting me. Joining us
today is one of my finest Secretaries, Secretary Carlos Gutierrez,
Secretary of the Department of Commerce. I appreciate you coming, Carlos,
and thank you for being here. (Applause.) Carlos was born in Cuba. His
folks decided that it would be best that he and they come to a free
society. He rose to become the CEO of a major U.S. corporation, and now he
sits in the Cabinet of the United States of America. That's what the
American Dream is all about. (Applause.) And it's in this nation's interest
to preserve dreams.

I want to thank Congressman Todd Platts from Pennsylvania for joining us.
There you are -- how you doing, Todd? Thanks for being here; honored you're
here. (Applause.) His mother is a manufacturer -- she manufactures peanut
fudge. And Platts always brings me some of it. (Laughter.) I can't ride
enough mountain bikes to -- (laughter.) Give her my best.

Thanks for letting me come by. I love entrepreneurs and I like to be with
them. Entrepreneurs are folks that really work hard. Nothing more exciting
than having your own business. I'm sure some of you probably wondered
growing up whether it'd be possible, whether you'd be able to have the
ingenuity and the capacity to say, this is my business. But you've
obviously overcome the difficult hurdles that face small business owners
and business owners, and you're succeeding. And I'm grateful. The role of
government is to make your jobs easier, not harder. It makes sense to
encourage entrepreneurship.

That begins with tax policy. I believe if you have more money in your
pocket, you're more likely to buy a piece of equipment, or hire a new
worker. I think the best way to overcome economic difficulties that we've
had in the past is to cut the taxes on everybody who pays taxes.
(Applause.) It requires fundamental trust, for those of us in government,
in your capacity to send your money better than the government can spend
it. But that's what I believe.

And I also believe that with more money in circulation in private hands, it
encourages small business growth and activity and commerce. And that's why
we cut taxes not only on people with children and people who are married,
but we cut taxes on small businesses. As a matter of fact, I thought it was
fair to cut taxes on everybody who pays taxes, not to say, okay, this group
pays and you get a tax cut, but this group pays and you don't get a tax
cut. That's not good tax policy, as far as I'm concerned.

We put the -- cut taxes on dividends and capital gains to encourage
investment. We put the death tax on the road to extinction. I say, on the
road to extinction -- it's not totally extinct. And I would hope that you
would prioritize getting rid of the death tax, as part of your legislative
agendas for not only this year, but next year and the years to come, to
make sure that we get rid of the death tax once and for all. It would be
good for our farmers and small business owners. (Applause.) I don't think
you ought to be taxed twice, once when you're living and once when you die.
(Laughter.)

There is a lot of political debate in Washington about tax cuts, as you can
imagine. Some would rather have your money to increase the size of
government. Others, like me, say, well, we got plenty of money, you ought
to have more money. I just want to point out the facts. Since we enacted
major tax relief in 2003, in the face of recession and corporate scandals
and attacks, our economy has added more than 8 million new jobs in 45
months of uninterrupted job growth. Unemployment is low, inflation is down.
The entrepreneurial spirit is strong, small businesses are growing. This
economy is good. And the way to keep it good, and to keep it strong, is to
make the tax cuts we passed permanent. (Applause.) You'll hear people say,
no, we can't do that because we must balance the budget. Really, I've been
around here long enough to know how it works in Washington, and that is,
they'll say, well, we're going to raise your taxes; don't worry, we're just
only going to tax the rich. Well, first of all, it doesn't work that way.
You can't raise enough money on the so-called rich in order to wet the
appetite of some of the spenders here. (Laughter.)

And secondly, the money is not going to go to balance the budget. The money
inevitably goes to new programs, expanded government. The best way to
balance the budget, in my judgment, is to keep taxes low so the economy
grows and be wise about how we spend your money. And our strategy is
working. This just isn't theory, it's actually working. This year the
Treasury Department reported that federal revenues through May are up 8
percent over the same period last year. In other words, a revenue stream is
growing because of economic activity. And because we worked with the
Congress last year to hold down spending, the budget deficit this year is
about a third lower than it was at this time last year.

And if we continue to be wise about how we spend the money, and keep the
economic vitality alive, we can balance the budget by 2012. Now this is
going to take discipline here in Washington, D.C. Sometimes this city may
be short of fiscal discipline, but that's why they give the President the
veto. And I'm looking forward to working with the Congress to make sure
that we're wise about how we spend your money. (Applause.)

A couple of other issues I want to talk briefly about. Look, I understand
the health care issues you face. Health care needs to be affordable and
available, no question. But we've got to make sure we do it without asking
the federal government to run the health care program. (Applause.) We want
decisions made by providers and patients.

I heard the word they've said about regulation and red tape. I understand
your concerns. I also understand your concerns about these junk lawsuits.
The country needs to make sure we put an end to junk lawsuits that threaten
job providers and job creators such as yourself. (Applause.)

You know, I just returned this week from Poland -- Gdansk, Poland. We had a
great trip, by the way. And it was -- it was really fantastic to represent
the United States of America overseas. It's such a beacon of hope and a
beacon of liberty. And anyway, we just came -- that's a city, by the way,
where trade union activists once risked and gave their lives for the right
to elect their government freely under a secret ballot. (Laughter and
applause.)

For the last 60 years in our country, secret ballots have allowed workers
to vote their conscience on whether to form a union or remain unaffiliated.
The House has passed, as you well know, and the Senate is considering what
they call "card check" legislation. It simply means that workers would be
denied the right to have a secret ballot. The legislation would expose
workers to intimidation. It violates the principle of our democracy. And if
it ever makes it to my desk, I'm going to veto it. (Applause.)

Supporting free enterprise also means building an immigration system that
upholds our laws and keeps this economy strong. You have made comprehensive
immigration reform one of your top legislative priorities, and I thank you
for your commitment on this vital issue. And it is a vital issue. We have
worked -- Carlos Gutierrez and Michael Chertoff, two members of my Cabinet,
have worked very closely with others in my administration with Republicans
and Democrats in the United States Senate to produce a bipartisan
immigration bill. And it took a lot of work. It took -- many months of
intense negotiations. And it represents the best hope for lasting reform.

I was disappointed last week when the bill was temporarily withdrawn by the
Senate Majority Leader. Leaders of both parties since then have expressed
their commitment to resolving the issues that led to the setback and bring
the bill back to the floor. And I appreciate that commitment and I urge
them to do so as quickly as possible so Congress can pass, and I can sign
this year, comprehensive immigration reform. (Applause.)

The need for reform is urgent. Our immigration system has been broken for
many years. Most Americans agree that the 1986 immigration law failed; it
didn't work. It failed because it did not secure our border. It failed
because it did not create a reliable system for employers to verify the
legal status of their workers. And it encouraged more people to come to
America illegally. It didn't work, and it needs to be fixed. When you find
something that doesn't work, you have a responsibility to fix it.

The number of illegal immigrants in our country has continued to grow. And
illegal immigration is now supported by criminal enterprises. In other
words, there are people who are preying on these folks that are coming to
do work that Americans aren't doing. You've got a whole system of coyotes
-- those are smugglers -- human smugglers taking advantage of a broken
system. You've got document forgers -- people wanting to work and they know
they've got to have some papers, and there are people, a whole industry of
people providing them with false documents. People are being exploited as a
result of a broken system, and this isn't right. We can do better.

I understand Americans are skeptical about immigration reform. There's a
lot of people saying, well, there's just no possible way that they can
achieve important objectives -- after all, they tried in '86 and they
failed. People are -- have got a lot of emotions on this issue. You
probably hear it in coffee shops, talking about the issue. People are very
emotional about immigration reform. And people have got different
perspectives on a course of action. Most say -- many say the most important
issue is to secure the border. Others say an important part of immigration
reform is to find the workers they need to help a growing economy. Still
others say that it's important to resolve the status of 12 million people
already here illegally, and help immigrants assimilate into our society.
There are varieties of opinions about this subject.

I believe that we must address all these concerns in order to have an
effective system. And that's why I strongly support comprehensive
immigration reform. And I appreciate you understanding that in order to
have a system that works, all the issues must be addressed. (Applause.) By
moving forward with the bill in the Senate, we will make our border more
secure. In other words, if you're worried about border security, you ought
to be supporting this bill.

For decades, we have not been in complete control of the border. I was
honored to be the governor of Texas; I know something about a large border
with Mexico. And we weren't in control of that border. A lot of people then
say, well, if you hadn't been in control, do you have the capacity to
secure the border? You'll hear a lot of people here say, well, since you
didn't do it in the past, you can't do it in the future. In other words,
people are worried about that issue.

The first step to comprehensive reform must be to enforce immigration laws
at the border and at work sites across the country. The administration --
our administration has taken significant steps, by the way, to increase
border security and work site enforcement. Since I've took office we've
more than doubled funding for border security. There's a focused effort, by
the way, to do what many Americans want us to do, which is to secure the
border. We've expanded the number of Border Patrol agents from about 9,000
to about 13,000. We've set our nation on the course to double the size of
the Border Patrol during my presidency. In other words, we're going to add
another 5,000 agents.

I was in Artesia, New Mexico, to a border training center. I watched these
good folks prepare for this very important job. We've increased the number
of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents -- I'm sure you understand
what an ICE agent is -- from about 8,000 in 2002 to more than 11,000. In
other words, on the enforcement side, we've made some serious efforts to do
what the American people expect us to do.

There used to be a problem with catch and release -- Border Patrol agents
would find somebody trying to sneak into our country illegally; they would
say, we caught you, now report back to the local immigration court so you
can have your hearing, because there was no place to hold these good people
-- or these people. And guess what would happen? They'd head off into
society and say, see you later, and never return for the court date.

So we worked with Congress and expanded the number of beds on our border,
and we've effectively ended -- effectively ended catch and release.

I want -- I want to tell you a statistic that may surprise you. Last year,
we apprehended and sent home more than about 1.1 million people entering
our country illegally. Now think about that. In one year alone, our Border
Patrol agents and law enforcement agents found 1.1 million people coming
into our country illegally, and sent them home. They're working hard down
there, and they're making progress. People are doing the jobs we expect
them to do, and now we're going to build on this progress.

So this bill sets clear benchmarks for border security that must be met
before other elements of this legislation are triggered. We make a priority
of securing the border. These benchmarks include further increasing Border
Patrol agents, building miles of fencing and modernizing the border. You
can't fence the whole border, but you can use fencing in a way to help
known -- to help stop people at known crossing points. It's a smart part of
making sure the border is secure, along with other ways to modernize the
border -- berms, and electronics, and UAVs. We're going to improve our
surveillance capability. We're modernizing the border. It hadn't been that
way. We're making progress to modernize that border.

It also includes benchmarks for giving honest employers the tools to verify
that they're hiring legal workers. Most people want to comply with the law.
I know you do. Yet, it's awfully hard for you to be a document verifier.
(Applause.) It's a burden to place on small business owners, to say, okay,
you've got to make sure that the documents that look real are real. The
document forgers are good, they know what they're doing. They're preying on
innocent people who want to simply find work, to put food on the table back
at home.

And so the bill we're talking about says, okay, enough is enough when it
comes to document forgery; we'll create a tamper-resistant identity card
for foreign workers, and a mandatory electronic system for verifying
employment eligibility. This will make sure that you're complying with the
law, that you don't have to guess, that you don't hope you're dealing with
some forged document. It will make it easier for you to do your -- run your
businesses, and at the same time, it will make it easier for the government
to punish those who hire illegal immigrants -- knowingly hire illegal
immigrants. In other words, it gives us a chance to enforce the law. And
that's what the American people want.

It's important for the people to know that their government is serious
about meeting these benchmarks. One common concern is whether the
government will provide the resources to meet the goals in the bill. They
say, it's fine to talk about it, are you actually going to do something? To
answer these concerns I support an amendment that will provide $4.4 billion
in immediate additional funding for securing our borders and enforcing our
laws at the work site. This funding will come from the fines and penalties
that we collect from those who have come to our country illegally.

By matching our benchmarks with these critical funds, we're going to show
the American people that the promises in this bill will be kept. And so I
call on the senators to pass this amendment and show the American people
that we're going to do our jobs of securing this border once and for all.

By moving forward with this bill we'll also help meet the needs of a
growing economy. When the economy grows, people are looking for workers.
That's economics one. (Laughter.) You're probably some who are looking for
workers. As you get expanded work orders, you're wondering whether you can
find the workers to meet the needs. That's what happens when the economy
grows. You need workers to make the economy grow.

The reality is, in America, that the construction industry and other
sectors depend on foreign workers to fill jobs Americans are not doing.
That's the reality of the world we live in. So once our border security and
work site enforcement measure is in place, this bill will create a new
temporary worker program. The program will establish a lawful and orderly
process for foreign workers to come to America on a temporary basis. This
will help reduce the number of people trying to sneak across our border. If
you're truly interested in border security, it makes sense to give people a
legal way to come to do work Americans aren't doing, on a temporary basis.

See, people are sneaking in because they want to work. It makes sense to me
to say, instead of sneaking in, here's a temporary worker card that's
tamper-proof, that you can go fill jobs that Americans aren't doing.
Therefore, you don't sneak across. Such a system will take pressure off the
border and let our Border Patrol agents focus on drug runners, or gun
runners, or terrorists. I strongly believe that it's in our economic
interest and our security interest to have a temporary worker program.

This legislation will also create a merit-based point system for admitting
new immigrants to our country. The system will reward new applicants based
upon skills and education so we can ensure that America continues to have
the world's most talented work force. It's a reform of an immigration
system that hadn't worked. The bill is a practical way to address problems
that have sprung up as a result of an immigration system that hasn't
worked. By moving forward, this bill will resolve the status of those who
are here illegally -- already here illegally.

Look, we need to do this without animosity and without amnesty. I know
there are some people who I guess believe that we could just kick them out
of the country. That's just totally impractical. It won't work. We need a
practical solution to a problem that has arisen as a result of a bill that
didn't work, the 1986 immigration bill.

Amnesty is forgiveness with no penalty for people who have broken our laws
to get here. In contrast, this bill requires illegal workers to pay a fine,
to register with the government, to undergo background checks, to pay their
back taxes, to hold down a steady job, and to learn English in a set period
of time. (Applause.)

At the end of eights years, if they want to apply for a green card -- in
other words, get in line for citizenship -- after eight years -- they'll
have to return to their home country so they can apply from there, pay an
additional fine. In short, they will prove themselves worthy of a great
land.

The legislation will also help newcomers to our country assimilate into our
society. One of the great beauties of America has been people can come to
this country with a dream and become Americans -- that's assimilate.
(Applause.)

Carlos Gutierrez's story is a great story. Mel Martinez's parents put him
on an airplane from Cuba to Florida because a tyrant emerged on that
island. He was in my Cabinet. I was at the Coast Guard Academy the other
day; the number one graduate at the Coast Guard Academy talked about his
migrant worker grandfather, who came to America with a dream. And now the
grandson stands in front of the President talking about the beauties of
America. You know, Americans must be confident in our ability to assimilate
newcomers. We have done so in the past, and we will do so in the future.
People newly arrived with dreams lift our soul, they invigorate our
society; they work hard to become Americans. And it's important for us to
help them assimilate.

And the key to that, the key to unlocking the full promise of America is
the ability to read, write and speak English. And so the bill affirms that
English is the language of our land, and the bill will expand opportunities
to help new immigrants learn our language and the shared ideals that make
us all Americans.

We have an historic window of opportunity to act now. Now is the time to
get it done. We've got to summon the political courage to move forward on
comprehensive reform. Doing nothing is not a solution. (Applause.) If we
fail to act, the problems of 1986 will continue. The pressures on our
border will not be alleviated. Employers will be left without a reliable
system for verifying the legal status of their workers. Jobs will go
unfulfilled, hardworking immigrants will remain in the shadows of our
society, and our nation will continue to have a broken immigration system.

The American people expect people in Washington, D.C. to solve problems. I
believe we can express our feelings, disagree on certain elements of the
legislation, and still come together on a solution. I'm confident that we
can pass a bill into law this year, and it will show the American people
that we can prove we're serious about confronting the great issues of our
time.

Now is the time to set aside all the political wrangling that tends to
dominate the scene here in Washington, D.C., and do hard work and pass a
comprehensive immigration bill. And I'm counting on your help to get it
done. (Applause.)

Thank you all.

As we work on this legislation at home, we're meeting important
responsibilities abroad. On September the 11th, 2001, we saw that problems
originating in a failed and oppressive state 7,000 miles away could bring
murder and destruction to our cities. Nine-eleven was a turning point for
our nation. We learned that our nation's security depends on fighting our
enemies overseas, so we do not have to face them here at home. And we
learned that to secure our country we must advance the cause of freedom as
a great alternative to tyranny and terror.

We're in an ideological conflict with ambitious men who have a different
view of government than we do. They don't believe in dissent. They don't
believe in freedom to worship as one sees fit. They want to extend their
power and reach throughout the Middle East. They want to reestablish a
caliphate, and they murder to achieve their objectives. You can't talk
reason to these people. You cannot negotiate with them. We must stay on the
offense and bring them to justice before they hurt us again. (Applause.)

We went into Afghanistan and helped remove an oppressive government that
harbored the terrorists who planned the 9/11 attacks. Today, because we
acted, the terrorist camps in Afghanistan have been shut down. Al Qaeda
lost its safe haven. Twenty-five million people have been liberated. The
Afghan people have elected a government that is fighting terrorists instead
of harboring them. It's in our nation's security interests, it's in our
national interest, to stand with that young democracy in Afghanistan and
give their people a chance to live in liberty. (Applause.)

In Iraq, we removed a cruel dictator who was an enemy of the United States
of America, had used -- who had used weapons of mass destruction, who was
paying the families of suicide bombers, who had invaded his neighbors, who
was given a chance to disclose or disarm by the U.N. Security Council not
once, but numerous times. He made the wrong choice. I made the choice to
uphold what the free world said. The world is better off without Saddam
Hussein in power. (Applause.) And so are the Iraqis.

And now, we're undertaking the difficult and dangerous work of helping Iraq
establish a functioning democracy that can protect our people and be an
ally in this struggle against radicals and extremists who use murder to
achieve an ideological objective. And the stakes are high. And it's tough
work.

In December, 2005, if you can remember that far back -- (laughter) --
nearly 12 million Iraqis went to the polls. I was -- I was pleased, but not
surprised. I believe in the universality of freedom. I believe people want
to be free. And here, after years of tyranny, when given a chance, 12
million people went to the polls. And by going to the polls, they chose a
new government under the most progressive democratic constitution in the
Arab world.

A thinking enemy watched all this. And in 2006, al Qaeda -- the folks who
orchestrated the attack on the United States of America on September the
11th, 2001 -- and other Sunni extremists ramped up their attacks, which led
to a tragic escalation of sectarian violence. In the face of the violence,
I had a choice to make: withdraw our troops, or to send reinforcements to
help the Iraqis quell the violence.

Had I been polled during that period of time, I'd have said I was -- I
didn't approve of what was happening in Iraq. I'd have been one "you can
put me down as not approving." The sectarian violence was getting more
severe. And I had a choice. It's what Presidents do. They make decisions.
And that's what you do. You make decisions. I made a decision. I decided to
send more troops with a new mission to help the Iraqi government secure the
population and get control of Baghdad. I put our troops under a new
commander, General David Petraeus, who wrote the Army's new manual on
counterinsurgency warfare.

It is too early to judge the results of this new strategy. General Petraeus
recently put it this way: "We haven't even started the full surge yet." He
just got his troops on the ground. Only at the end of this week will the
last of the five reinforcement brigades become fully operational. Under our
new strategy, American and Iraqi forces are now living side-by-side in
Baghdad neighborhoods. As Iraqis see forces patrolling their streets
they're gaining the trust and they're getting new cooperation from the
residents.

Just as an example of what I'm talking about, Iraqi and coalition forces
have captured more weapon caches since the beginning of the year than they
did all of last year. Why? Because people are beginning to trust that the
security situation will improve. They're willing to step forward. Most
people want to live in peace. Iraqi mothers want their children to grow up
in a peaceful world, just like our mothers do. There's something universal
about motherhood, isn't there? They want something better for their
children, and they don't like the violence, and they're expecting their
government to help them. And that's what we're doing; we're helping to
provide security.

We're also seeing gains from our new strategy in Anbar Province. Anbar is a
large Sunni area west of Baghdad that has been a hotbed for insurgents and
al Qaeda. It's where al Qaeda said they were going to establish a new safe
haven. They have made it clear they want safe havens. Why? Because they
want to attack again, they want to spread their ideology. This is what the
enemy has said. And I take the words of the enemy very seriously, and so
should the American people.

With the help of tribal sheikhs, the American and Iraqi forces have cleared
and held terrorist strongholds in Ramadi and Fallujah. The population is
tired of al Qaeda. They're tired of murder. And we're striking powerful
blows against al Qaeda in Anbar. And that helps our security here at home.

The summer is going to be a critical period for our new strategy. I've
cautioned that the enemies of free Iraq will -- particularly al Qaeda and
illegal militias -- are going to continue their campaigns of terror and
intimidation to stop the progress of a free society. We can expect heavy
fighting in the coming weeks. We can expect more casualties, both American
and Iraqi casualties.

Just yesterday, two minarets of the Golden Mosque of Samarra were blown up
in an attack that had all the hallmarks of al Qaeda. The mosque is one of
the most sacred places in Shia Islam. The same mosque that was blown up
last year -- the Golden Dome was blown up, and that caused the security --
violence to get out of hand, which caused me to make a decision to send
more troops in, as opposed to withdrawing them.

You see, these killers hope that their attacks, like this one, will create
enough confusion and chaos that we will abandon this young democracy. They
have objectives, they have goals, they want to drive us out. They thrive on
chaos. Why? Because it enables them to develop safe haven. If they ever
gain safe haven, the United States becomes even more vulnerable to attack.
One of the lessons of September the 11th is, what happens overseas matters
to the security of the United States of America. It is better to defeat
them overseas than face them here on our soil again. (Applause.)

The act of cruelty that took place yesterday, and has taken place by these
car bombs that destroy innocent life, reveals the terrorists for what they
are: the enemy of every Iraqi who seeks to live in peace. That's what they
are. They're the enemy of people who want to live in peace.

I call on Iraqis to reject this provocation. America will continue to stand
behind the Iraqi people as they fight these extremists and terrorists,
people who want to destroy both our countries. With our help, we expect the
Iraqi government to pass laws that help the people of that troubled land
reconcile their differences so that the people who voted for democracy can
raise their families in a secure environment. We all have obligations to
make sure that this young democracy survives. That's what the Iraqi people
expect our government to do, and that's what the American people expect us
to tell the Iraqi government to do.

Obviously, this is more than a military mission. There must be a political
track at the same time. It's a difficult fight, and the temptation is to
look for an easy way out. Some in Washington who want to declare defeat
before our troops even had the chance to make it work -- the consequences
of failure would be grave. If we withdraw before the Iraqi government can
defend itself, we would leave a dangerous security vacuum, which extremist
forces, like al Qaeda, would compete to fill. Sectarian violence would
multiply on a horrific scale. Fighting could engulf the entire region in
chaos.

The extremists who emerge victorious in this struggle use Iraq as a base to
launch new attacks against America. Ultimately, our troops might have to
return to Iraq in order to protect ourselves and confront an entrenched
enemy that is even more dangerous. The stakes are high.

We will not abdicate our responsibility and leave this problem to future
generations. Now is the time to confront the danger. Now is the time to do
the hard work necessary for this democracy to survive. Now is the time to
stand with the Iraqi people, not only for their security, but for our own.
And that is why we will complete the mission. (Applause.)

For all the talk about consequences of failure, we also need to remember
the consequences of success in Iraq. Success will give us a new ally in the
war on terror. This is a global war that we're fighting against ideologues
who use murder as a weapon to achieve their objectives. It's important for
us to support forms of government that defeat an ideology of hate. And the
best form of government that defeats ideology of hate is one of hope, and
that's liberty. And it's worked throughout the history of the United States
of America, and the world, for that matter. We have seen freedom's power to
transform societies before.

My dad, like many of your relatives, defended our nation in a bloody war
against the Japanese and the Germans. I doubt right after World War II
somebody would have predicted that one of George W. Bush's -- they wouldn't
have predicted I'd have been President anyway, but -- (laughter) --
particularly my friends in Midland, Texas. (Laughter.) But I doubt somebody
would have said a future President would have been sitting down at a table
with the Japanese, keeping the peace. After a bloody war, with the sworn
enemy being the Japanese and the Germans, I doubt anybody would have said
-- had the confidence necessary to say that liberty has got the capacity to
transform enemies into allies. But that's what happened.

I went to the G8, and Angela Merkel, who is a really fine leader for
Germany, was at the table. And Shinzo Abe from Japan was at the table.
We're talking about peace. We're talking about dealing with the conditions
that cause radicalism to prevail, dealing with forms of government that
frustrate people so much that 19 kids get on an airplane and kill nearly
3,000 Americans. We've got to be confident as we look at the future;
liberty has transformed enemies to allies. Liberty has got the capacity to
defeat an ideology based upon hate. Liberty has got the ability to bring
light into societies.

We've done this kind of hard work before. And it's in our interests to
secure a young generation of Americans against the threats of the 21st
century to do this work again. I'm optimistic about our future. I believe
the United States can achieve anything she sets her mind to. And so I come
to you today to talk about making this economy stronger, to dealing with
problems, and to how the United States intends to handle the biggest issue
facing us, and that's to make sure we protect the American people. The
challenges are great, but this country can handle any challenge that comes
our way.

Proud to be with you. May God bless you. (Applause.)

END 11:24 A.M. EDT
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