The actual speech was 11k, so in the interests of respecting the 10k 
barrier, I'm only posting the first 10k or so. (Are Sonja and Jeroen the 
only ones who are bothered by posts over 10k?  Just curious....) If you 
didn't see the speech, you can read it in its entirety at:

http://www.cnn.com/2002/US/04/04/bush.transcript/index.html

WASHINGTON (CNN) --The following is a transcript of President Bush's remarks 
about the Middle East crisis delivered Thursday from the White House Rose 
Garden:

BUSH: Good morning.

During the course of one week, the situation in the Middle East has 
deteriorated dramatically. Last Wednesday, my special envoy, Anthony Zinni, 
reported to me that we were on the verge of a cease-fire agreement that 
would have spared Palestinian and Israeli lives. That hope fell away when a 
terrorist attacked a group of innocent people at a Netanya hotel, killing 
many men and women in what is a mounting toll of terror.

In the days since, the world has watched with growing concern the horror of 
bombings and burials and the stark picture of tanks in the street. Across 
the world, people are grieving for Israelis and Palestinians who have lost 
their lives.

When an 18-year-old Palestinian girl is induced to blow herself up and in 
the process kills a 17-year-old Israeli girl, the future itself is dying, 
the future of the Palestinian people and the future of the Israeli people.

We mourn the dead, and we mourn the damage done to the hope of peace, the 
hope of Israel's and the Israelis' desire for a Jewish state at peace with 
its neighbors. The hope of the Palestinian people to build their own 
independent state.

Terror must be stopped. No nation can negotiate with terrorists, for there 
is no way to make peace with those whose only goal is death.

This could be a hopeful moment in the Middle East. The proposal of Crown 
Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, supported by the Arab League, has put a 
number of countries in the Arab world closer than ever to recognizing 
Israel's right to exist.

The United States is on record supporting the legitimate aspirations of the 
Palestinian people for a Palestinian state. Israel has recognized the goal 
of a Palestinian state.

The outlines of a just settlement are clear: two states, Israel and 
Palestine, living side by side in peace and security. This can be a time for 
hope, but it calls for leadership, not for terror.
Since September 11 I've delivered this message: Everyone must choose. You're 
either with the civilized world, or you're with the terrorists. All in the 
Middle East also must choose and must move decisively in word and deed 
against terrorist acts.

The chairman of the Palestinian Authority has not consistently opposed or 
confronted terrorists.
At Oslo and elsewhere, Chairman [Yasser] Arafat renounced terror as an 
instrument of his cause, and he agreed to control it. He's not done so. The 
situation in which he finds himself today is largely of his own making. He's 
missed his opportunities and thereby betrayed the hopes of the people he's 
supposed to lead.

Given his failure, the Israeli government feels it must strike at terrorist 
networks that are killing its citizens. Yet Israel must understand that its 
response to these recent attacks is only a temporary measure. All parties 
have their own responsibilities, and all parties owe it to their own people 
to act.

We all know today's situation runs the risk of aggravating long-term 
bitterness and undermining relationships that are critical to any hope of 
peace.

I call on the Palestinian people and the Palestinian Authority and our 
friends in the Arab world to join us in delivering a clear message to 
terrorists: Blowing yourself up does not help the Palestinian cause. To the 
contrary, suicide-bombing missions could well blow up the best and only hope 
for a Palestinian state.

All states must keep their promise, made in a vote in the United Nations, to 
actively oppose terror in all its forms. No nation can pick and choose its 
terrorist friends.

I call on the Palestinian Authority and all governments in the region to do 
everything in their power to stop terrorist activities, to disrupt terrorist 
financing and to stop inciting violence by glorifying terror in state-owned 
media or telling suicide bombers they are martyrs.

They're not martyrs. They're murderers. And they undermine the cause of the 
Palestinian people.
Those governments, like Iraq, that reward parents for the sacrifice of their 
children are guilty of soliciting murder of the worst kind.

All who care about the Palestinian people should join in condemning and 
acting against groups like Al-Aqsa, Hezbollah, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and all 
groups which oppose the peace process and seek the destruction of Israel.

The recent Arab League support of Crown Prince Abdullah's initiative for 
peace is promising, is hopeful, because it acknowledges Israel's right to 
exist. And it raises the hope of sustained, constructive Arab involvement in 
the search for peace.

This builds on a tradition of visionary leadership begun by President 
[Anwar] Sadat and King Hussein and carried forward by President [Hosni] 
Mubarak and King Abdullah. Now other Arab states must rise to this occasion 
and accept Israel as a nation and as a neighbor.

Peace with Israel is the only avenue to prosperity and success for a new 
Palestinian state. The Palestinian people deserve peace and an opportunity 
to better their lives.

They need their closest neighbor, Israel, to be an economic partner, not a 
mortal enemy. They deserve a government that respects human rights and a 
government that focuses on their needs, education and health care, rather 
than feeding their resentments.

It is not enough for Arab nations to defend the Palestinian cause. They must 
truly help the Palestinian people by seeking peace and fighting terror and 
promoting development.

Israel faces hard choices of its own. Its government has supported the 
creation of a Palestinian state that is not a haven for terrorism. Yet 
Israel also must recognize that such a state needs to be politically and 
economically viable.

Consistent with the Mitchell plan, Israeli settlement activity in occupied 
territories must stop, and the occupation must end through withdrawal to 
secure and recognize boundaries consistent with United Nations Resolutions 
242 and 338. Ultimately, this approach should be the basis of agreements 
between Israel and Syria and Israel and Lebanon.

Israel should also show a respect -- a respect for and concern about the 
dignity of the Palestinian people who are and will be their neighbors. It is 
crucial to distinguish between the terrorists and ordinary Palestinians 
seeking to provide for their own families. The Israeli government should be 
compassionate at checkpoints and border crossings, sparing innocent 
Palestinians daily humiliation. Israel should take immediate action to ease 
closures and allow peaceful people to go back to work.
Israel is facing a terrible and serious challenge. For seven days, it has 
acted to rout out terrorists' nests. America recognizes Israel's right to 
defend itself from terror.

Yet, to lay the foundations of future peace, I ask Israel to halt incursions 
into Palestinian-controlled areas and begin the withdrawal from those cities 
it has recently occupied.
I speak as a committed friend of Israel. I speak out of a concern for its 
long-term security, the security that will come with a genuine peace.

As Israel steps back, responsible Palestinian leaders and Israel's Arab 
neighbors must step forward and show the world that they are truly on the 
side of peace. The choice and the burden will be theirs.

The world expects an immediate cease-fire, immediate resumption of security 
cooperation with Israel against terrorism and an immediate order to crack 
down on terrorist networks. I expect better leadership, and I expect 
results.

These are the elements of peace in the Middle East, and now we must build 
the road to those goals. Decades of bitter experience teach a clear lesson: 
Progress is impossible when nations emphasize their grievances and ignore 
their opportunities. The storms of violence cannot go on. Enough is enough.

And to those who would try to use the current crisis as an opportunity to 
widen the conflict, stay out. Iran's arms shipments and support for terror 
fuel the fire of conflict in the Middle East, and it must stop. Syria has 
spoken out against al Qaeda. We expect it to act against Hamas and Hezbollah 
as well.

It's time for Iran to focus on meeting its own people's aspirations for 
freedom and for Syria to decide which side of the war against terror it is 
on. The world finds itself at a critical moment. This is a conflict that can 
widen or an opportunity we can seize.



_________________________________________________________________
Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com

Reply via email to