PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you all for such gracious hospitality. I thought I
would drop by with the Prime Minister of Iraq. (Laughter and applause.)
I wanted him to be with some of the finest citizens in the United States
of America. (Applause.)
I appreciate our Ambassador to Iraq joining us today, Zal Khalilzad.
Mr. Ambassador, thank you for coming. Ambassador Sumaida'ie, from Iraq
to the United States, is with us. Ambassador, thank you for coming. I
appreciate the members of the United States Senate who have joined us,
Senator Warner and Senator Allen. Thank you all for being here. I
appreciate you joining us. I want to thank Congressman Jim Moran and
Congressman Tom Davis for joining us.
Mr. Prime Minister, obviously, members of the United States Congress are
interested in you. (Laughter.) They're also interested in the United
States military. And they know what I know -- that anytime we've got a
man or woman in uniform in harm's way, they deserve all the possible
support necessary to complete the mission. (Applause.)
I want to thank Colonel Lauritzen and all the folks who made this
visit possible. It's an honor to be here, and it's an honor to be with
the family members of our troops.
Mr. Prime Minister, when I speak to our troops, I also talk to their
loved ones, because you can't have a strong United States military
without the support of the military families. Our troops have
sacrificed, and as they have done so, so have our military families. And
so today we pay respect for the men and women who wear the uniform and
their loved ones. We're proud of you.
There's no better place to come than Fort Belvoir, Mr. Prime
Minister, because here there are some 120 military commands representing
the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps and Coast Guard -- all branches
of the United States military who have served with distinction in
fighting the terrorists who would like to do us harm and prevent your
good country from becoming a democracy.
I tell our folks that success in Iraq is necessary for the security
of the United States, and it's necessary for the peace of the world. One
of the things that -- one of the lessons we can learn from history is
that freedom and liberty and democracies have got the capacity to
convert enemies into allies and to lay the foundation for peace.
Mr. Prime Minister, we were deeply moved when 12 million of your
citizens went to the polls last December. It was really a remarkable
statement, wasn't it? Twelve million citizens, who at one time had lived
under the thumb of a brutal tyrant, went to the polls and said, we want
to be free. And out of that election, Mr. Prime Minister, you and your
government have emerged.
We respect the fact that your government represents the will of the
Iraqi people. One thing the Prime Minister told me getting out of the
limousine, after having flown on the helicopter -- (laughter) -- was
that he longs for the day when the Iraqi children can live in a hopeful
society. That's what he wants. He wants the Iraqi people to enjoy the
benefits that most people in other countries enjoy. It is a simple
concept in many ways, yet is profound, because my reaction upon hearing
his words was, this man will succeed if he cares first and foremost
about the people and the condition of the Iraqi people. If he's the kind
of leader like I know he is, who cares about generations of Iraqis to
come, he will be successful.
We've got hard work to do together, Mr. Prime Minister. We were talking
here at the table, and I was commenting that it's amazing, isn't it,
where some people decide to kill innocent lives to stop freedom. And,
frankly, that's a hard concept for some of us to understand. But I
understand this: that in order for freedom to succeed, those folks have
got to be brought to justice. They cannot be allowed to kill the
innocent.
And that's why we've sent some of our finest citizens to help you,
Mr. Prime Minister. We want you to succeed. It's in our nation's
interest that you succeed. And I'm confident we will succeed. The Prime
Minister came, and he didn't say this directly to me but I could tell by
looking in my eyes he wanted to make sure that this was a President who
kept his word. I've told the Iraqi people we stand with you, and that no
matter how tough it gets, we will complete this mission. We owe it to
those who have served in combat. We owe it to those who have lost a
limb. We owe it to those who have lost a life.
Fort Belvoir lost a good man recently in Sergeant First Class Scott
Smith. He was killed by an IED. He helped save lives. He helped lay that
foundation for peace. And in honor of his memory, and in the memory of
others who have gone before him, in honor of the thousands of Iraqis who
have died at the hands of terrorists, we will complete the mission. It's
in our interest, Mr. Prime Minister, that we succeed together.
And so I've asked you to come, to be in the midst of those who have
served our country. The amazing thing about our military is that people
have had to say, I want to serve. Every person you see here in uniform,
Mr. Prime Minister, has volunteered to serve the United States of
America. And in so doing, they have set a fantastic example for
generations to come, and they have made the United States of America
incredibly proud.
So I'd like to welcome you to the podium, Mr. Prime Minister. And as
you come up here and look at the folks here in uniform, you've got to
know how proud their Commander-in-Chief is to be able to serve alongside
of them as we do our duty with honor for our country.
Mr. Prime Minister. (Applause.)
PRIME MINISTER MALIKI: (As translated.) I would like to thank the
President for his invitation. I would also like to thank the members of
Congress who are with us today here, and to the sons and families of the
Armed Forces, who are here with us in this celebration. When I stand
here in front of you and I salute you, I would like to appreciate what
you have done and what you have achieved.
I appreciate your colleagues who offered their lives on the land of
Iraq, and I tell you that Iraqis will never forget these sacrifices
because they have really participated in ridding Iraq of dictatorship,
one of the ugliest regimes that the region has known. And we are happy
to be partners in this holy task of fighting terrorism and establishing
democracy.
Iraq, because of what you have offered, because of what your sons
have offered, your families have offered, has now moved from
dictatorship to democracy; from oppression, torture chambers, chemical
weapons, and now into a state of freedom, liberty and partnership; from
depravation and absolute poverty, into the condition where we now are
looking forward to economic prosperity, because Iraq is a rich country,
and the previous regime has wasted all the wealth of Iraq in his
adventures.
I sympathize with those who made sacrifices, and I sympathize with
the families who have lost some loved ones. And I appreciate this
sacrifice and this suffering, because I am one of the people who
sacrificed and suffered in Iraq. The previous regime had sentenced me to
death, and actually has executed 67 members of my family, relatives. And
I can feel the bitterness of the loss when someone loses a dear member
of his family, a son, or a spouse.
When blood mixes together in the field, aiming to achieve one goal,
this blood will help in establishing a long-lasting relationship between
us. Our relationship will stay forever.
Terrorists still carry out, on a daily basis, these crazy actions
against innocent civilians: their suicide bombs, their car bombs against
the innocent civilians who have nothing to do with the conflict in Iraq.
They want to kill democracy, as they kill humans. But they will
definitely fail, because we are committed to success, and we are
committed to democracy. And the daily killing does not prevent Iraqis
from carrying out and going along with their daily lives.
And we are confident that we will succeed, because you, and people
like you are helping us to confront terrorism -- terrorism that is
spreading in our land -- with foreign support.
Lastly, on behalf of myself and on behalf of the Iraqi people, I
would like to thank you and thank your families. I would like to
appreciate your losses, your sacrifices, appreciate the bitterness of
those who have lost loved ones. I hope that you can go past your losses
and I hope that you can compensate it with -- compensate it about what's
happened.
And we feel pain and sorrow for every drop of blood that falls in
Iraq. But once again, we give you all the salute -- we salute you and we
thank you very much for all that you've offered to Iraq. (Applause.)