United Nations Headquarters
New York, New York
11:00 A.M. EDT
PRESIDENT BUSH: Mr. Secretary
General, Mr. President,
distinguished delegates, ladies and
gentlemen: Thank you for the honor
of addressing this General Assembly.
The American people respect the
idealism that gave life to this
organization. And we respect the men
and women of the U.N., who stand for
peace and human rights in every part
of the world. Welcome to New York
City, and welcome to the United
States of America.
During the past three years, I've
addressed this General Assembly in a
time of tragedy for my country, and
in times of decision for all of us.
Now we gather at a time of
tremendous opportunity for the U.N.
and for all peaceful nations. For
decades, the circle of liberty and
security and development has been
expanding in our world. This
progress has brought unity to
Europe, self-government to Latin
America and Asia, and new hope to
Africa. Now we have the historic
chance to widen the circle even
further, to fight radicalism and
terror with justice and dignity, to
achieve a true peace, founded on
human freedom.
The United Nations and my country
share the deepest commitments. Both
the American Declaration of
Independence and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights proclaim
the equal value and dignity of every
human life. That dignity is honored
by the rule of law, limits on the
power of the state, respect for
women, protection of private
property, free speech, equal
justice, and religious tolerance.
That dignity is dishonored by
oppression, corruption, tyranny,
bigotry, terrorism and all violence
against the innocent. And both of
our founding documents affirm that
this bright line between justice and
injustice -- between right and wrong
-- is the same in every age, and
every culture, and every nation.
Wise governments also stand for
these principles for very practical
and realistic reasons. We know that
dictators are quick to choose
aggression, while free nations
strive to resolve differences in
peace. We know that oppressive
governments support terror, while
free governments fight the
terrorists in their midst. We know
that free peoples embrace progress
and life, instead of becoming the
recruits for murderous ideologies.
Every nation that wants peace
will share the benefits of a freer
world. And every nation that seeks
peace has an obligation to help
build that world. Eventually, there
is no safe isolation from terror
networks, or failed states that
shelter them, or outlaw regimes, or
weapons of mass destruction.
Eventually, there is no safety in
looking away, seeking the quiet life
by ignoring the struggles and
oppression of others.
In this young century, our world
needs a new definition of security.
Our security is not merely found in
spheres of influence, or some
balance of power. The security of
our world is found in the advancing
rights of mankind.
These rights are advancing across
the world -- and across the world,
the enemies of human rights are
responding with violence. Terrorists
and their allies believe the
Universal Declaration of Human
Rights and the American Bill of
Rights, and every charter of liberty
ever written, are lies, to be burned
and destroyed and forgotten. They
believe that dictators should
control every mind and tongue in the
Middle East and beyond. They believe
that suicide and torture and murder
are fully justified to serve any
goal they declare. And they act on
their beliefs.
In the last year alone,
terrorists have attacked police
stations, and banks, and commuter
trains, and synagogues -- and a
school filled with children. This
month in Beslan we saw, once again,
how the terrorists measure their
success -- in the death of the
innocent, and in the pain of
grieving families. Svetlana Dzebisov
was held hostage, along with her son
and her nephew -- her nephew did not
survive. She recently visited the
cemetery, and saw what she called
the "little graves." She said, "I
understand that there is evil in the
world. But what have these little
creatures done?"
Members of the United Nations,
the Russian children did nothing to
deserve such awful suffering, and
fright, and death. The people of
Madrid and Jerusalem and Istanbul
and Baghdad have done nothing to
deserve sudden and random murder.
These acts violate the standards of
justice in all cultures, and the
principles of all religions. All
civilized nations are in this
struggle together, and all must
fight the murderers.
We're determined to destroy
terror networks wherever they
operate, and the United States is
grateful to every nation that is
helping to seize terrorist assets,
track down their operatives, and
disrupt their plans. We're
determined to end the state
sponsorship of terror -- and my
nation is grateful to all that
participated in the liberation of
Afghanistan. We're determined to
prevent proliferation, and to
enforce the demands of the world --
and my nation is grateful to the
soldiers of many nations who have
helped to deliver the Iraqi people
from an outlaw dictator.
The dictator agreed in 1991, as a
condition of a cease-fire, to fully
comply with all Security Council
resolutions -- then ignored more
than a decade of those resolutions.
Finally, the Security Council
promised serious consequences for
his defiance. And the commitments we
make must have meaning. When we say
"serious consequences," for the sake
of peace, there must be serious
consequences. And so a coalition of
nations enforced the just demands of
the world.
Defending our ideals is vital,
but it is not enough. Our broader
mission as U.N. members is to apply
these ideals to the great issues of
our time. Our wider goal is to
promote hope and progress as the
alternatives to hatred and violence.
Our great purpose is to build a
better world beyond the war on
terror.
Because we believe in human
dignity, America and many nations
have established a global fund to
fight AIDS, tuberculosis, and
malaria. In three years the
contributing countries have funded
projects in more than 90 countries,
and pledged a total of $5.6 billion
to these efforts. America has
undertaken a $15 billion effort to
provide prevention and treatment and
humane care in nations afflicted by
AIDS, placing a special focus on 15
countries where the need is most
urgent. AIDS is the greatest health
crisis of our time, and our
unprecedented commitment will bring
new hope to those who have walked
too long in the shadow of death.
Because we believe in human
dignity, America and many nations
have joined together to confront the
evil of trafficking in human beings.
We're supporting organizations that
rescue the victims, passing stronger
anti-trafficking laws, and warning
travelers that they will be held to
account for supporting this modern
form of slavery. Women and children
should never be exploited for
pleasure or greed, anywhere on
Earth.
Because we believe in human
dignity, we should take seriously
the protection of life from
exploitation under any pretext. In
this session, the U.N. will consider
a resolution sponsored by Costa Rica
calling for a comprehensive ban on
human cloning. I support that
resolution and urge all governments
to affirm a basic ethical principle:
No human life should ever be
produced or destroyed for the
benefit of another.
Because we believe in human
dignity, America and many nations
have changed the way we fight
poverty, curb corruption, and
provide aid. In 2002 we created the
Monterrey Consensus, a bold approach
that links new aid from developed
nations to real reform in developing
ones. And through the Millennium
Challenge Account, my nation is
increasing our aid to developing
nations that expand economic freedom
and invest in the education and
health of their own people.
Because we believe in human
dignity, America and many nations
have acted to lift the crushing
burden of debt that limits the
growth of developing economies, and
holds millions of people in poverty.
Since these efforts began in 1996,
poor countries with the heaviest
debt burdens have received more than
$30 billion of relief. And to
prevent the build-up of future debt,
my country and other nations have
agreed that international financial
institutions should increasingly
provide new aid in the form of
grants, rather than loans.
Because we believe in human
dignity, the world must have more
effective means to stabilize regions
in turmoil, and to halt religious
violence and ethnic cleansing. We
must create permanent capabilities
to respond to future crises. The
United States and Italy have
proposed a Global Peace Operations
Initiative. G-8 countries will train
75,000 peacekeepers, initially from
Africa, so they can conduct
operations on that continent and
elsewhere. The countries of the G-8
will help this peacekeeping force
with deployment and logistical
needs.
At this hour, the world is
witnessing terrible suffering and
horrible crimes in the Darfur region
of Sudan, crimes my government has
concluded are genocide. The United
States played a key role in efforts
to broker a cease-fire, and we're
providing humanitarian assistance to
the Sudanese people. Rwanda and
Nigeria have deployed forces in
Sudan to help improve security so
aid can be delivered. The Security
Council adopted a new resolution
that supports an expanded African
Union force to help prevent further
bloodshed, and urges the government
of Sudan to stop flights by military
aircraft in Darfur. We congratulate
the members of the Council on this
timely and necessary action. I call
on the government of Sudan to honor
the cease-fire it signed, and to
stop the killing in Darfur.
Because we believe in human
dignity, peaceful nations must stand
for the advance of democracy. No
other system of government has done
more to protect minorities, to
secure the rights of labor, to raise
the status of women, or to channel
human energy to the pursuits of
peace. We've witnessed the rise of
democratic governments in
predominantly Hindu and Muslim,
Buddhist, Jewish and Christian
cultures. Democratic institutions
have taken root in modern societies,
and in traditional societies. When
it comes to the desire for liberty
and justice, there is no clash of
civilizations. People everywhere are
capable of freedom, and worthy of
freedom.
Finding the full promise of
representative government takes
time, as America has found in two
centuries of debate and struggle.
Nor is there any -- only one form of
representative government -- because
democracies, by definition, take on
the unique character of the peoples
that create them. Yet this much we
know with certainty: The desire for
freedom resides in every human
heart. And that desire cannot be
contained forever by prison walls,
or martial laws, or secret police.
Over time, and across the Earth,
freedom will find a way.
Freedom is finding a way in Iraq
and Afghanistan -- and we must
continue to show our commitment to
democracies in those nations. The
liberty that many have won at a cost
must be secured. As members of the
United Nations, we all have a stake
in the success of the world's newest
democracies.
Not long ago, outlaw regimes in
Baghdad and Kabul threatened the
peace and sponsored terrorists.
These regimes destabilized one of
the world's most vital -- and most
volatile -- regions. They brutalized
their peoples, in defiance of all
civilized norms. Today, the Iraqi
and Afghan people are on the path to
democracy and freedom. The
governments that are rising will
pose no threat to others. Instead of
harboring terrorists, they're
fighting terrorist groups. And this
progress is good for the long-term
security of us all.
The Afghan people are showing
extraordinary courage under
difficult conditions. They're
fighting to defend their nation from
Taliban holdouts, and helping to
strike against the terrorists
killers. They're reviving their
economy. They've adopted a
constitution that protects the
rights of all, while honoring their
nation's most cherished traditions.
More than 10 million Afghan citizens
-- over 4 million of them women --
are now registered to vote in next
month's presidential election. To
any who still would question whether
Muslim societies can be democratic
societies, the Afghan people are
giving their answer.
Since the last meeting of this
General Assembly, the people of Iraq
have regained sovereignty. Today, in
this hall, the Prime Minister of
Iraq and his delegation represent a
country that has rejoined the
community of nations. The government
of Prime Minister Allawi has earned
the support of every nation that
believes in self-determination and
desires peace. And under Security
Council resolutions 1511 and 1546,
the world is providing that support.
The U.N., and its member nations,
must respond to Prime Minister
Allawi's request, and do more to
help build an Iraq that is secure,
democratic, federal, and free.
A democratic Iraq has ruthless
enemies, because terrorists know the
stakes in that country. They know
that a free Iraq in the heart of the
Middle East will be a decisive blow
against their ambitions for that
region. So a terrorists group
associated with al Qaeda is now one
of the main groups killing the
innocent in Iraq today -- conducting
a campaign of bombings against
civilians, and the beheadings of
bound men. Coalition forces now
serving in Iraq are confronting the
terrorists and foreign fighters, so
peaceful nations around the world
will never have to face them within
our own borders.
Our coalition is standing beside
a growing Iraqi security force. The
NATO Alliance is providing vital
training to that force. More than 35
nations have contributed money and
expertise to help rebuild Iraq's
infrastructure. And as the Iraqi
interim government moves toward
national elections, officials from
the United Nations are helping
Iraqis build the infrastructure of
democracy. These selfless people are
doing heroic work, and are carrying
on the great legacy of Sergio de
Mello.
As we have seen in other
countries, one of the main terrorist
goals is to undermine, disrupt, and
influence election outcomes. We can
expect terrorist attacks to escalate
as Afghanistan and Iraq approach
national elections. The work ahead
is demanding. But these difficulties
will not shake our conviction that
the future of Afghanistan and Iraq
is a future of liberty. The proper
response to difficulty is not to
retreat, it is to prevail.
The advance of freedom always
carries a cost, paid by the bravest
among us. America mourns the losses
to our nation, and to many others.
And today, I assure every friend of
Afghanistan and Iraq, and every
enemy of liberty: We will stand with
the people of Afghanistan and Iraq
until their hopes of freedom and
security are fulfilled.
These two nations will be a model
for the broader Middle East, a
region where millions have been
denied basic human rights and simple
justice. For too long, many nations,
including my own, tolerated, even
excused, oppression in the Middle
East in the name of stability.
Oppression became common, but
stability never arrived. We must
take a different approach. We must
help the reformers of the Middle
East as they work for freedom, and
strive to build a community of
peaceful, democratic nations.
This commitment to democratic
reform is essential to resolving the
Arab-Israeli conflict. Peace will
not be achieved by Palestinian
rulers who intimidate opposition,
tolerate corruption, and maintain
ties to terrorist groups. The
longsuffering Palestinian people
deserve better. They deserve true
leaders capable of creating and
governing a free and peaceful
Palestinian state.
Even after the setbacks and
frustrations of recent months,
goodwill and hard effort can achieve
the promise of the road map to
peace. Those who would lead a new
Palestinian state should adopt
peaceful means to achieve the rights
of their people, and create the
reformed institutions of a stable
democracy. Arab states should end
incitement in their own media, cut
off public and private funding for
terrorism, and establish normal
relations with Israel. Israel should
impose a settlement freeze,
dismantle unauthorized outposts, end
the daily humiliation of the
Palestinian people, and avoid any
actions that prejudice final
negotiations. And world leaders
should withdraw all favor and
support from any Palestinian ruler
who fails his people and betrays
their cause.
The democratic hopes we see
growing in the Middle East are
growing everywhere. In the words of
the Burmese democracy advocate, Aung
San Suu Kyi: "We do not accept the
notion that democracy is a Western
value. To the contrary; democracy
simply means good government rooted
in responsibility, transparency, and
accountability." Here at the United
Nations, you know this to be true.
In recent years, this organization
has helped create a new democracy in
East Timor, and the U.N. has aided
other nations in making the
transition to self-rule.
Because I believe the advance of
liberty is the path to both a safer
and better world, today I propose
establishing a Democracy Fund within
the United Nations. This is a great
calling for this great organization.
The fund would help countries lay
the foundations of democracy by
instituting the rule of law and
independent courts, a free press,
political parties and trade unions.
Money from the fund would also help
set up voter precincts and polling
places, and support the work of
election monitors. To show our
commitment to the new Democracy
Fund, the United States will make an
initial contribution. I urge other
nations to contribute, as well.
Today, I've outlined a broad
agenda to advance human dignity, and
enhance the security of all of us.
The defeat of terror, the protection
of human rights, the spread of
prosperity, the advance of democracy
-- these causes, these ideals, call
us to great work in the world. Each
of us alone can only do so much.
Together, we can accomplish so much
more.
History will honor the high
ideals of this organization. The
charter states them with clarity:
"to save succeeding generations from
the scourge of war," "to reaffirm
faith in fundamental human rights,"
"to promote social progress and
better standards of life in larger
freedom."
Let history also record that our
generation of leaders followed
through on these ideals, even in
adversity. Let history show that in
a decisive decade, members of the
United Nations did not grow weary in
our duties, or waver in meeting
them. I'm confident that this young
century will be liberty's century. I
believe we will rise to this moment,
because I know the character of so
many nations and leaders represented
here today. And I have faith in the
transforming power of freedom.
May God bless you. (Applause.)
END 11:21 A.M. EDT