President Bush's address to the United Nations
CNN

September 12, 2002 Posted: 11:37 AM EDT (1537 GMT)

BUSH: Mr. Secretary-General, Mr. President, distinguished delegates and
ladies and gentlemen. We meet one year and one day after a terrorist attack
brought grief to my country and brought grief to many citizens of our world.

Yesterday we remembered the innocent lives taken that terrible morning.
Today we turn to the urgent duty of protecting other lives without illusion
and without fear.

We've accomplished much in the last year in Afghanistan and beyond. We have
much yet to do in Afghanistan and beyond. Many nations represented here have
joined in the fight against global terror and the people of the United
States are grateful.

The United Nations was born in the hope that survived a world war, the hope
of a world moving toward justice, escaping old patterns of conflict and
fear. The founding members resolved that the peace of the world must never
again be destroyed by the will and wickedness of any man.

We created a United Nations Security Council so that, unlike the League of
Nations, our deliberations would be more than talk, our resolutions would be
more than wishes. After generations of deceitful dictators and broken
treaties and squandered lives, we've dedicated ourselves to standards of
human dignity shared by all and to a system of security defended by all.

Today, these standards and this security are challenged.

Our commitment to human dignity is challenged by persistent poverty and
raging disease. The suffering is great. And our responsibilities are clear.
The United States is joining with the world to supply aid where it reaches
people and lifts up lives, to extend trade and the prosperity it brings, and
to bring medical care where it is desperately needed. As a symbol of our
commitment to human dignity. The United States will return to UNESCO.

This organization has been reformed, and America will participate fully in
its mission to advance human rights and tolerance and learning. Our common
security is challenged by regional conflicts, ethnic and religious strife
that is ancient, but not inevitable.

In the Middle East there can be no peace for either side without freedom for
both sides.

America stands committed to an independent and democratic Palestine, living
side-by-side with Israel in peace and security. Like all other people,
Palestinians deserve a government that serves their interests and listens to
their voices. My nation will continue to encourage all parties to step up to
their responsibilities as we seek a just and comprehensive settlement to the
conflict.

Above all, our principles and our security are challenged today by outlaw
groups and regimes that accept no law of morality and have no limit to their
violent ambitions. In the attacks on America a year ago, we saw the
destructive intentions of our enemies. This threat hides within many
nations, including my own.

In cells, in camps, terrorists are plotting further destruction and building
new bases for their war against civilization. And our greatest fear is that
terrorists will find a shortcut to their mad ambitions when an outlaw regime
supplies them with the technologies to kill on a massive scale. In one place
and one regime, we find all these dangers in their most lethal and
aggressive forms, exactly the kind of aggressive threat the United Nations
was born to confront.

Twelve years ago, Iraq invaded Kuwait without provocation. And the regime's
forces were poised to continue their march to seize other countries and
their resources. Had Saddam Hussein been appeased instead of stopped, he
would have endangered the peace and stability of the world. Yet this
aggression was stopped by the might of coalition forces and the will of the
United Nations.

To suspend hostilities, to spare himself, Iraq's dictator accepted a series
of commitments. The terms were clear to him and to all, and he agreed to
prove he is complying with every one of those obligations. He has proven
instead only his contempt for the United Nations and for all his pledges. By
breaking every pledge, by his deceptions and by his cruelties, Saddam
Hussein has made the case against himself.

In 1991, Security Council Resolution 688 demanded that the Iraqi regime
cease at once the repression of its own people, including the systematic
repression of minorities, which the council said threatened international
peace and security in the region. This demand goes ignored.

Last year, the U.N. Commission on Human Rights found that Iraq continues to
commit extremely grave violations of human rights and that the regime's
repression is all-pervasive.

Tens of thousands of political opponents and ordinary citizens have been
subjected to arbitrary arrest and imprisonment, summary execution and
torture by beating and burning, electric shock, starvation, mutilation and
rape.

Wives are tortured in front of their husbands; children in the presence of
their parents; and all of these horrors concealed from the world by the
apparatus of a totalitarian state.

In 1991, the U.N. Security Council, through Resolutions 686 and 687,
demanded that Iraq return all prisoners from Kuwait and other lands. Iraq's
regime agreed. It broke this promise.

Last year, the Secretary General's high-level coordinator for this issue
reported that Kuwaiti, Saudi, Indian, Syrian, Lebanese, Iranian, Egyptian,
Bahraini and Armeni nationals remain unaccounted for; more than 600 people.
One American pilot is among them.

In 1991, the U.N. Security Council through Resolution 687 demanded that Iraq
renounce all involvement with terrorism and permit no terrorist
organizations to operate in Iraq.

Iraq's regime agreed that broke this promise.

In violation of Security Council Resolution 1373, Iraq continues to shelter
and support terrorist organizations that direct violence against Iran,
Israel and Western governments. Iraqi dissidents abroad are targeted for
murder.

In 1993, Iraq attempted to assassinate the Amir of Kuwait and a former
American president. Iraq's government openly praised the attacks of
September 11. And Al Qaeda terrorists escaped from Afghanistan and are known
to be in Iraq.

In 1991, the Iraqi regime agreed destroy and stop developing all weapons of
mass destruction and long range missiles and to prove to the world it has
done so by complying with rigorous inspections.

Iraq has broken every aspect of this fundamental pledge.

>From 1991 to 1995, the Iraqi regime said it had no biological weapons. After
a senior official in its weapons program defected and exposed this lie, the
regime admitted to producing tens of thousands of liters of anthrax and
other deadly biological agents for use with scud warheads, aerial bombs and
aircraft spray tanks.

U.N. inspectors believe Iraq has produced two to four times the amount of
biological agents it declared and has failed to account for more than three
metric tons of material that could be used to produce biological weapons.
Right now, Iraq is expanding and improving facilities that were used for the
production of biological weapons.

United Nations' inspections also reviewed that Iraq like maintains
stockpiles of VX, mustard and other chemical agents, and that the regime is
rebuilding and expanding facilities capable of producing chemical weapons.

And in 1995, after four years of deception, Iraq finally admitted it had a
crash nuclear weapons program prior to the Gulf War.

We know now, were it not for that war, the regime in Iraq would likely have
possessed a nuclear weapon no later than 1993.

Today, Iraq continues to withhold important information about its nuclear
program, weapons design, procurement logs, experiment data, and accounting
of nuclear materials and documentation of foreign assistance. Iraq employs
capable nuclear scientists and technicians. It retains physical
infrastructure needed to build a nuclear weapon.

Iraq has made several attempts to buy high-strength aluminum tubes used to
enrich uranium for a nuclear weapon. Should Iraq acquire fissile material,
it would be able to build a nuclear weapon within a year.

And Iraq's state-controlled media has reported numerous meetings between
Saddam Hussein and his nuclear scientists, leaving little doubt about his
continued appetite for these weapons.

Iraq also possesses a force of SCUD type missiles with ranges beyond the 150
kilometers permitted by the U.N. Work at testing and production facilities
shows that Iraq is building more long range missiles that can inflict mass
death throughout the region.

In 1990, after Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, the world imposed economic
sanctions on Iraq. Those sanctions were maintained after the war to compel
the regime's compliance with Security Council Resolutions.

In time, Iraq was allowed to use oil revenues to buy food. Saddam Hussein
has subverted this program, working around the sanctions to buy missile
technology and military materials. He blames the suffering of Iraq's people
on the United Nations, even as he uses his oil wealth to build lavish
palaces for himself and to buy arms for his country.

By refusing to comply with his own agreements, he bears full guilt for the
hunger and misery of innocent Iraqi citizens. In 1991, Iraq promised U.N.
inspectors immediate and unrestricted access to verify Iraq's commitment to
rid itself of weapons of mass destruction and long range missiles. Iraq
broke this promise, spending seven years deceiving, evading and harassing
U.N. inspectors before ceasing cooperation entirely.

Just months after the 1991 cease-fire, the Security Council twice renewed
its demand that the Iraqi regime cooperate fully with inspectors, condemning
Iraq's serious violations of its obligations.

The Security Council again renewed that demand in 1994, and twice more in
1996, deploring Iraq's clear violations of its obligations. The Security
Council renewed its demand three more times in 1997, citing flagrant
violations, and three more times in 1998, calling Iraq's behavior totally
unacceptable. And in 1999, the demand was renewed yet again.

As we meet today, it's been almost four years since the last U.N. inspector
set foot in Iraq -- four years for the Iraqi regime to plan and to build and
to test behind the cloak of secrecy. We know that Saddam Hussein pursued
weapons of mass murder even when inspectors were in his country. Are we to
assume that he stopped when they left?

The history, the logic and the facts lead to one conclusion: Saddam Hussein
regime is a grave and gathering danger.

To suggest otherwise is to hope against the evidence. To assume this
regime's good faith is to bet the lives of millions and the peace of the
world in a reckless gamble, and this is a risk we must not take.

Delegates to the General Assembly, we have been more than patient. We've
tried sanctions. We've tried the carrot of oil for food and the stick of
coalition military strikes. But Saddam Hussein has defied all these efforts
and continues to develop weapons of mass destruction.

The first time we may be completely certain he has nuclear weapons is when,
God forbid, he uses one. We owe it to all our citizens to do everything in
our power to prevent that day from coming.

The conduct of the Iraqi regime is a threat to the authority of the United
Nations and a threat to peace. Iraq has answered a decade of U.N. demands
with a decade of defiance. All the world now faces a test, and the United
Nations a difficult and defining moment.

Are Security Council resolutions to be honored and enforced or cast aside
without consequence?

Will the United Nations serve the purpose of its founding or will it be
irrelevant?

The United States help found the United Nations. We want the United Nations
to be effective and respectful and successful. We want the resolutions of
the world's most important multilateral body to be enforced. And right now
those resolutions are being unilaterally subverted by the Iraqi regime.

Our partnership of nations can meet the test before us by making clear what
we now expect of the Iraqi regime.

If the Iraqi regime wishes peace, it will immediately and unconditionally
forswear, disclose and remove or destroy all weapons of mass destruction,
long-range missiles and all related material.

If the Iraqi regime wishes peace, it will immediately end all support for
terrorism and act to suppress it -- as all states are required to do by U.N.
Security Council resolutions.

If the Iraqi regime wishes peace, it will cease persecution of its civilian
population, including Shi'a, Sunnis, Kurds, Turkemens and others -- again,
as required by Security Council resolutions.

If the Iraqi regime wishes peace, it will release or account for all Gulf
War personnel whose fate is still unknown.

It will return the remains of any who are deceased, return stolen property,
accept liability for losses resulting from the invasion of Kuwait and fully
cooperate with international efforts to resolve these issues as required by
Security Council resolutions.

If the Iraqi regime wishes peace, it will immediately end all illicit trade
outside the oil-for-food program. It will accept U.N. administration of
funds from that program to ensure that the money is used fairly and promptly
for the benefit of the Iraqi people.

If all these steps are taken, it will signal a new openness and
accountability in Iraq and it could open the prospect of the United Nations
helping to build a government that represents all Iraqis, a government based
on respect for human rights, economic liberty and internationally supervised
elections.

The United States has no quarrel with the Iraqi people. They've suffered too
long in silent captivity. Liberty for the Iraqi people is a great moral
cause and a great strategic goal.

The people of Iraq deserve it. The security of all nations requires it. Free
societies do not intimidate through cruelty and conquest. And open societies
do not threaten the world with mass murder. The United States supports
political and economic liberty in a unified Iraq.

We can harbor no illusions, and that's important today to remember. Saddam
Hussein attacked Iran in 1980 and Kuwait in 1990. He's fired ballistic
missiles at Iran and Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Israel. His regime once
ordered the killing of every person between the ages of 15 and 70 in certain
Kurdish villages in northern Iraq. He has gassed many Iranians and 40 Iraqi
villages.

My nation will work with the U.N. Security Council to meet our common
challenge. If Iraq's regime defies us again, the world must move
deliberately, decisively to hold Iraq to account. We will work with the U.N.
Security Council for the necessary resolutions.

But the purposes of the United States should not be doubted. The Security
Council resolutions will be enforced, the just demands of peace and security
will be met or action will be unavoidable and a regime that has lost its
legitimacy will also lose its power.

Events can turn in one of two ways. If we fail to act in the face of danger,
the people of Iraq will continue to live in brutal submission. The regime
will have new power to bully and dominate and conquer its neighbors,
condemning the Middle East to more years of bloodshed and fear. The regime
will remain unstable -- the region will remain unstable, with little hope of
freedom and isolated from the progress of our times.

With every step the Iraqi regime takes toward gaining and deploying the most
terrible weapons, our own options to confront that regime will narrow. And
if an emboldened regime were to supply these weapons to terrorists allies,
then the attacks of September 11 would be a prelude to far greater horrors.

If we meet our responsibilities, if we overcome this danger, we can arrive
at a very different future. The people of Iraq can shake off their
captivity. They can one day join a democratic Afghanistan and a democratic
Palestine inspiring reforms throughout the Muslim world. These nations can
show by their example that honest government and respect for women and the
great Islamic tradition of learning can triumph in the Middle East and
beyond. And we will show that the promise of the United Nations can be
fulfilled in our time.

Neither of these outcomes is certain. Both have been set before us. We must
choose between a world of fear and a world of progress. We cannot stand by
and do nothing while dangers gather. We must stand up for our security and
for the permanent rights and the hopes of mankind.

By heritage and by choice, the United States of America will make that
stand. And, delegates to the United Nations, you have the power to make that
stand, as well.

Thank you very much.

-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international
--
In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht



_______________________________________________
Leninist-International mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international

Reply via email to