The Washington Post
The Present Danger
By Joe Lieberman and Jon Kyl
July 20, 2004

The successful handover of sovereignty to the Iraqi people last month offers
fresh hope for stability and democracy in their country, but it could also
mark a turning of the tide in the world war against terrorism. While the
deposed tyrant and terrorist Saddam Hussein stands trial, the people of the
great Muslim country he suppressed for so long are now standing proud and
free, and taking control of their own destiny. And they are showing strong
support for their new leadership and new optimism about their democratic
future. According to a BBC/Oxford Research International poll released this
month, 55 percent of Iraqis believe their lives today are quite good or very
good, 56 percent believe their lives will get better in the next year, and
70 percent believe Iraq needs democracy.

These survey results are significant because they show we are making real
progress in the war of values and ideas in Iraq, ideas that are at the heart
of the larger war on terrorism. Iraq has become a proving ground for the
freedom and security we are fighting for, and a tough test of our resolve in
this fight. The terrorists in Iraq and beyond will never beat us militarily.
But they can defeat us politically if they succeed in their strategy to
terrorize, demoralize and divide America and its allies.

The liberation of Iraq has important implications for the region and for the
broader war on terrorism. The leaders of the Democratic and Republican
parties have so far stood firm in their commitment to finish the job in Iraq
and to fight to victory the war on terrorism. But that bipartisan consensus
is coming under growing public pressure and could fray in the months ahead.
Although the tide is turning in the war on terrorism, a political undertow
in this country could wash out our recent gains. We must not let this
happen.

To make sure it doesn't, we are relaunching today the Committee on the
Present Danger, a group of citizens of diverse political persuasions who
will work to sustain and strengthen bipartisan support for the war on
terrorism in Iraq and beyond.

The Committee on the Present Danger was first formed at the dawn of the Cold
War in 1950 to educate Americans about the growing threat of Soviet
communism. Democratic senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson of Washington state
revitalized the group in the mid-'70s; this time it was focused on working
for a stronger stance toward the Soviets and the increased defense spending
necessary to carry out that policy.

In this third incarnation, we intend to focus the committee on the present
danger our generation faces: international terrorism from Islamic extremists
and the outlaw states that either harbor or support them. The Sept. 11,
2001, terrorist attacks awoke all Americans to the capabilities and
brutality of our new enemy, but today too many people are insufficiently
aware of our enemy's evil worldwide designs, which include waging jihad
against all Americans and reestablishing a totalitarian religious empire in
the Middle East. The past struggle against communism was, in some ways,
different from the current war against Islamist terrorism. But America's
freedom and security, which each has aimed to undermine, are exactly the
same. The national and international solidarity needed to prevail over both
enemies is also the same. In fact, the world war against Islamic terrorism
is the test of our time.

True to its history, the reborn Committee on the Present Danger will
advocate strong policies both against international terrorists and their
sponsors and in favor of freedom and security. We are committed to advancing
this common cause on a bipartisan basis.

In this war, our enemies do not distinguish between Democrats and
Republicans. All Americans are the targets of their hate, because all
Americans share the values they detest, the purpose that has defined America
since the founders declared our independence -- to secure our rights to
life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

In his inaugural address, President John F. Kennedy said, "In the long
history of the world, only a few generations have been granted the role of
defending freedom in its hour of maximum danger. I do not shrink from this
responsibility -- I welcome it." Our freedom is again in danger, this time
from Islamist terrorism. Our generation must not shrink from the
responsibility to defend it. Together, we will prevail, and freedom's reach
will expand.

Joe Lieberman is a Democratic senator from Connecticut. Jon Kyl is a
Republican senator from Arizona. They are honorary co-chairmen of the
Committee on the Present Danger.


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