----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Nick Arnett" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Killer Bs Discussion" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2005 8:54 PM
Subject: Re: Peaceful change L3


> On Sun, 17 Apr 2005 20:14:08 -0500, Dan Minette wrote
>
> > > Whose definition is it?  Yours?  Bush's?  Mine?
> >
> > Bush's.
>
> Cite please, in that case.

My apologies in advance for the length of this, but it's at an Aussie site
which requires registration and the url seemed to reflect the registration.
Anyways, this speech is representative of what I think Bush's views are.

Dan M.

<quote>

Full text: Bush speech on Iraq and the Middle East
November 7, 2003 - 8:33AM
Remarks by the President at the 20th Anniversary of the National Endowment
for Democracy

United States Chamber of Commerce

Washington, D.C.

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you all very much. Please be seated. Thanks for the
warm welcome, and thanks for inviting me to join you in this 20th
anniversary of the National Endowment for Democracy. The staff and
directors of this organization have seen a lot of history over the last two
decades, you've been a part of that history. By speaking for and standing
for freedom, you've lifted the hopes of people around the world, and you've
brought great credit to America.

I appreciate Vin for the short introduction. I'm a man who likes short
introductions. And he didn't let me down. But more importantly, I
appreciate the invitation. I appreciate the members of Congress who are
here, senators from both political parties, members of the House of
Representatives from both political parties. I appreciate the ambassadors
who are here. I appreciate the guests who have come. I appreciate the
bipartisan spirit, the nonpartisan spirit of the National Endowment for
Democracy. I'm glad that Republicans and Democrats and independents are
working together to advance human liberty.
The roots of our democracy can be traced to England, and to its
Parliament -- and so can the roots of this organization. In June of 1982,
President Ronald Reagan spoke at Westminster Palace and declared, the
turning point had arrived in history. He argued that Soviet communism had
failed, precisely because it did not respect its own people -- their
creativity, their genius and their rights.

President Reagan said that the day of Soviet tyranny was passing, that
freedom had a momentum which would not be halted. He gave this organization
its mandate: to add to the momentum of freedom across the world. Your
mandate was important 20 years ago; it is equally important today.

A number of critics were dismissive of that speech by the President.
According to one editorial of the time, "It seems hard to be a
sophisticated European and also an admirer of Ronald Reagan." Some
observers on both sides of the Atlantic pronounced the speech simplistic
and naive, and even dangerous. In fact, Ronald Reagan's words were
courageous and optimistic and entirely correct.

The great democratic movement President Reagan described was already well
underway. In the early 1970s, there were about 40 democracies in the world.
By the middle of that decade, Portugal and Spain and Greece held free
elections. Soon there were new democracies in Latin America, and free
institutions were spreading in Korea, in Taiwan, and in East Asia. This
very week in 1989, there were protests in East Berlin and in Leipzig. By
the end of that year, every communist dictatorship in Central America* had
collapsed. Within another year, the South African government released
Nelson Mandela. Four years later, he was elected president of his
country -- ascending, like Walesa and Havel, from prisoner of state to head
of state.

As the 20th century ended, there were around 120 democracies in the
world -- and I can assure you more are on the way. Ronald Reagan would be
pleased, and he would not be surprised.

We've witnessed, in little over a generation, the swiftest advance of
freedom in the 2,500 year story of democracy. Historians in the future will
offer their own explanations for why this happened. Yet we already know
some of the reasons they will cite. It is no accident that the rise of so
many democracies took place in a time when the world's most influential
nation was itself a democracy.

The United States made military and moral commitments in Europe and Asia,
which protected free nations from aggression, and created the conditions in
which new democracies could flourish. As we provided security for whole
nations, we also provided inspiration for oppressed peoples. In prison
camps, in banned union meetings, in clandestine churches, men and women
knew that the whole world was not sharing their own nightmare. They knew of
at least one place -- a bright and hopeful land -- where freedom was valued
and secure. And they prayed that America would not forget them, or forget
the mission to promote liberty around the world.

Historians will note that in many nations, the advance of markets and free
enterprise helped to create a middle class that was confident enough to
demand their own rights. They will point to the role of technology in
frustrating censorship and central control -- and marvel at the power of
instant communications to spread the truth, the news, and courage across
borders.

Historians in the future will reflect on an extraordinary, undeniable fact:
Over time, free nations grow stronger and dictatorships grow weaker. In the
middle of the 20th century, some imagined that the central planning and
social regimentation were a shortcut to national strength. In fact, the
prosperity, and social vitality and technological progress of a people are
directly determined by extent of their liberty. Freedom honors and
unleashes human creativity -- and creativity determines the strength and
wealth of nations. Liberty is both the plan of Heaven for humanity, and the
best hope for progress here on Earth.

The progress of liberty is a powerful trend. Yet, we also know that
liberty, if not defended, can be lost. The success of freedom is not
determined by some dialectic of history. By definition, the success of
freedom rests upon the choices and the courage of free peoples, and upon
their willingness to sacrifice. In the trenches of World War I, through a
two-front war in the 1940s, the difficult battles of Korea and Vietnam, and
in missions of rescue and liberation on nearly every continent, Americans
have amply displayed our willingness to sacrifice for liberty.

The sacrifices of Americans have not always been recognized or appreciated,
yet they have been worthwhile. Because we and our allies were steadfast,
Germany and Japan are democratic nations that no longer threaten the world.
A global nuclear standoff with the Soviet Union ended peacefully -- as did
the Soviet Union. The nations of Europe are moving towards unity, not
dividing into armed camps and descending into genocide. Every nation has
learned, or should have learned, an important lesson: Freedom is worth
fighting for, dying for, and standing for -- and the advance of freedom
leads to peace.

And now we must apply that lesson in our own time. We've reached another
great turning point -- and the resolve we show will shape the next stage of
the world democratic movement.

Our commitment to democracy is tested in countries like Cuba and Burma and
North Korea and Zimbabwe -- outposts of oppression in our world. The people
in these nations live in captivity, and fear and silence. Yet, these
regimes cannot hold back freedom forever -- and, one day, from prison camps
and prison cells, and from exile, the leaders of new democracies will
arrive. Communism, and militarism and rule by the capricious and corrupt
are the relics of a passing era. And we will stand with these oppressed
peoples until the day of their freedom finally arrives.

Our commitment to democracy is tested in China. That nation now has a
sliver, a fragment of liberty. Yet, China's people will eventually want
their liberty pure and whole. China has discovered that economic freedom
leads to national wealth. China's leaders will also discover that freedom
is indivisible -- that social and religious freedom is also essential to
national greatness and national dignity. Eventually, men and women who are
allowed to control their own wealth will insist on controlling their own
lives and their own country.

Our commitment to democracy is also tested in the Middle East, which is my
focus today, and must be a focus of American policy for decades to come. In
many nations of the Middle East -- countries of great strategic
importance -- democracy has not yet taken root. And the questions arise:
Are the peoples of the Middle East somehow beyond the reach of liberty? Are
millions of men and women and children condemned by history or culture to
live in despotism? Are they alone never to know freedom, and never even to
have a choice in the matter? I, for one, do not believe it. I believe every
person has the ability and the right to be free.

Some skeptics of democracy assert that the traditions of Islam are
inhospitable to the representative government. This "cultural
condescension," as Ronald Reagan termed it, has a long history. After the
Japanese surrender in 1945, a so-called Japan expert asserted that
democracy in that former empire would "never work." Another observer
declared the prospects for democracy in post-Hitler Germany are, and I
quote, "most uncertain at best" -- he made that claim in 1957. Seventy-four
years ago, The Sunday London Times declared nine-tenths of the population
of India to be "illiterates not caring a fig for politics." Yet when Indian
democracy was imperiled in the 1970s, the Indian people showed their
commitment to liberty in a national referendum that saved their form of
government.

Time after time, observers have questioned whether this country, or that
people, or this group, are "ready" for democracy -- as if freedom were a
prize you win for meeting our own Western standards of progress. In fact,
the daily work of democracy itself is the path of progress. It teaches
cooperation, the free exchange of ideas, and the peaceful resolution of
differences. As men and women are showing, from Bangladesh to Botswana, to
Mongolia, it is the practice of democracy that makes a nation ready for
democracy, and every nation can start on this path.

It should be clear to all that Islam -- the faith of one-fifth of
humanity -- is consistent with democratic rule. Democratic progress is
found in many predominantly Muslim countries -- in Turkey and Indonesia,
and Senegal and Albania, Niger and Sierra Leone. Muslim men and women are
good citizens of India and South Africa, of the nations of Western Europe,
and of the United States of America.

More than half of all the Muslims in the world live in freedom under
democratically constituted governments. They succeed in democratic
societies, not in spite of their faith, but because of it. A religion that
demands individual moral accountability, and encourages the encounter of
the individual with God, is fully compatible with the rights and
responsibilities of self-government.

Yet there's a great challenge today in the Middle East. In the words of a
recent report by Arab scholars, the global wave of democracy has -- and I
quote -- "barely reached the Arab states." They continue: "This freedom
deficit undermines human development and is one of the most painful
manifestations of lagging political development." The freedom deficit they
describe has terrible consequences, of the people of the Middle East and
for the world. In many Middle Eastern countries, poverty is deep and it is
spreading, women lack rights and are denied schooling. Whole societies
remain stagnant while the world moves ahead. These are not the failures of
a culture or a religion. These are the failures of political and economic
doctrines.

As the colonial era passed away, the Middle East saw the establishment of
many military dictatorships. Some rulers adopted the dogmas of socialism,
seized total control of political parties and the media and universities.
They allied themselves with the Soviet bloc and with international
terrorism. Dictators in Iraq and Syria promised the restoration of national
honor, a return to ancient glories. They've left instead a legacy of
torture, oppression, misery, and ruin.

Other men, and groups of men, have gained influence in the Middle East and
beyond through an ideology of theocratic terror. Behind their language of
religion is the ambition for absolute political power. Ruling cabals like
the Taliban show their version of religious piety in public whippings of
women, ruthless suppression of any difference or dissent, and support for
terrorists who arm and train to murder the innocent. The Taliban promised
religious purity and national pride. Instead, by systematically destroying
a proud and working society, they left behind suffering and starvation.

Many Middle Eastern governments now understand that military dictatorship
and theocratic rule are a straight, smooth highway to nowhere. But some
governments still cling to the old habits of central control. There are
governments that still fear and repress independent thought and creativity,
and private enterprise -- the human qualities that make for a -- strong and
successful societies. Even when these nations have vast natural resources,
they do not respect or develop their greatest resources -- the talent and
energy of men and women working and living in freedom.

Instead of dwelling on past wrongs and blaming others, governments in the
Middle East need to confront real problems, and serve the true interests of
their nations. The good and capable people of the Middle East all deserve
responsible leadership. For too long, many people in that region have been
victims and subjects -- they deserve to be active citizens.

Governments across the Middle East and North Africa are beginning to see
the need for change. Morocco has a diverse new parliament; King Mohammed
has urged it to extend the rights to women. Here is how His Majesty
explained his reforms to parliament: "How can society achieve progress
while women, who represent half the nation, see their rights violated and
suffer as a result of injustice, violence, and marginalization,
notwithstanding the dignity and justice granted to them by our glorious
religion?" The King of Morocco is correct: The future of Muslim nations
will be better for all with the full participation of women.

In Bahrain last year, citizens elected their own parliament for the first
time in nearly three decades. Oman has extended the vote to all adult
citizens; Qatar has a new constitution; Yemen has a multiparty political
system; Kuwait has a directly elected national assembly; and Jordan held
historic elections this summer. Recent surveys in Arab nations reveal broad
support for political pluralism, the rule of law, and free speech. These
are the stirrings of Middle Eastern democracy, and they carry the promise
of greater change to come.

As changes come to the Middle Eastern region, those with power should ask
themselves: Will they be remembered for resisting reform, or for leading
it? In Iran, the demand for democracy is strong and broad, as we saw last
month when thousands gathered to welcome home Shirin Ebadi, the winner of
the Nobel Peace Prize. The regime in Teheran must heed the democratic
demands of the Iranian people, or lose its last claim to legitimacy.

For the Palestinian people, the only path to independence and dignity and
progress is the path of democracy. And the Palestinian leaders who block
and undermine democratic reform, and feed hatred and encourage violence are
not leaders at all. They're the main obstacles to peace, and to the success
of the Palestinian people.

The Saudi government is taking first steps toward reform, including a plan
for gradual introduction of elections. By giving the Saudi people a greater
role in their own society, the Saudi government can demonstrate true
leadership in the region.

The great and proud nation of Egypt has shown the way toward peace in the
Middle East, and now should show the way toward democracy in the Middle
East. Champions of democracy in the region understand that democracy is not
perfect, it is not the path to utopia, but it's the only path to national
success and dignity.

As we watch and encourage reforms in the region, we are mindful that
modernization is not the same as Westernization. Representative governments
in the Middle East will reflect their own cultures. They will not, and
should not, look like us. Democratic nations may be constitutional
monarchies, federal republics, or parliamentary systems. And working
democracies always need time to develop -- as did our own. We've taken a
200-year journey toward inclusion and justice -- and this makes us patient
and understanding as other nations are at different stages of this journey.

There are, however, essential principles common to every successful
society, in every culture. Successful societies limit the power of the
state and the power of the military -- so that governments respond to the
will of the people, and not the will of an elite. Successful societies
protect freedom with the consistent and impartial rule of law, instead of
selecting applying -- selectively applying the law to punish political
opponents. Successful societies allow room for healthy civic
institutions -- for political parties and labor unions and independent
newspapers and broadcast media. Successful societies guarantee religious
liberty -- the right to serve and honor God without fear of persecution.
Successful societies privatize their economies, and secure the rights of
property. They prohibit and punish official corruption, and invest in the
health and education of their people. They recognize the rights of women.
And instead of directing hatred and resentment against others, successful
societies appeal to the hopes of their own people.

These vital principles are being applies in the nations of Afghanistan and
Iraq. With the steady leadership of President Karzai, the people of
Afghanistan are building a modern and peaceful government. Next month, 500
delegates will convene a national assembly in Kabul to approve a new Afghan
constitution. The proposed draft would establish a bicameral parliament,
set national elections next year, and recognize Afghanistan's Muslim
identity, while protecting the rights of all citizens. Afghanistan faces
continuing economic and security challenges -- it will face those
challenges as a free and stable democracy.

In Iraq, the Coalition Provisional Authority and the Iraqi Governing
Council are also working together to build a democracy -- and after three
decades of tyranny, this work is not easy. The former dictator ruled by
terror and treachery, and left deeply ingrained habits of fear and
distrust. Remnants of his regime, joined by foreign terrorists, continue
their battle against order and against civilization. Our coalition is
responding to recent attacks with precision raids, guided by intelligence
provided by the Iraqis, themselves. And we're working closely with Iraqi
citizens as they prepare a constitution, as they move toward free elections
and take increasing responsibility for their own affairs. As in the defense
of Greece in 1947, and later in the Berlin Airlift, the strength and will
of free peoples are now being tested before a watching world. And we will
meet this test.

Securing democracy in Iraq is the work of many hands. American and
coalition forces are sacrificing for the peace of Iraq and for the security
of free nations. Aid workers from many countries are facing danger to help
the Iraqi people. The National Endowment for Democracy is promoting women's
rights, and training Iraqi journalists, and teaching the skills of
political participation. Iraqis, themselves -- police and borders guards
and local officials -- are joining in the work and they are sharing in the
sacrifice.

This is a massive and difficult undertaking -- it is worth our effort, it
is worth our sacrifice, because we know the stakes. The failure of Iraqi
democracy would embolden terrorists around the world, increase dangers to
the American people, and extinguish the hopes of millions in the region.
Iraqi democracy will succeed -- and that success will send forth the news,
from Damascus to Teheran -- that freedom can be the future of every nation.
The establishment of a free Iraq at the heart of the Middle East will be a
watershed event in the global democratic revolution.

Sixty years of Western nations excusing and accommodating the lack of
freedom in the Middle East did nothing to make us safe -- because in the
long run, stability cannot be purchased at the expense of liberty. As long
as the Middle East remains a place where freedom does not flourish, it will
remain a place of stagnation, resentment, and violence ready for export.
And with the spread of weapons that can bring catastrophic harm to our
country and to our friends, it would be reckless to accept the status quo.

Therefore, the United States has adopted a new policy, a forward strategy
of freedom in the Middle East. This strategy requires the same persistence
and energy and idealism we have shown before. And it will yield the same
results. As in Europe, as in Asia, as in every region of the world, the
advance of freedom leads to peace.

The advance of freedom is the calling of our time; it is the calling of our
country. From the Fourteen Points to the Four Freedoms, to the Speech at
Westminster, America has put our power at the service of principle. We
believe that liberty is the design of nature; we believe that liberty is
the direction of history. We believe that human fulfillment and excellence
come in the responsible exercise of liberty. And we believe that freedom -- 
the freedom we prize -- is not for us alone, it is the right and the
capacity of all mankind.

Working for the spread of freedom can be hard. Yet, America has
accomplished hard tasks before. Our nation is strong; we're strong of
heart. And we're not alone. Freedom is finding allies in every country;
freedom finds allies in every culture. And as we meet the terror and
violence of the world, we can be certain the author of freedom is not
indifferent to the fate of freedom.

With all the tests and all the challenges of our age, this is, above all,
the age of liberty. Each of you at this Endowment is fully engaged in the
great cause of liberty. And I thank you. May God bless your work. And may
God continue to bless America.
<end quote>


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