Visit of President Bush to the United Kingdom June 2008
Documents & Texts from the White House
13 June 2008 President Bush Speaks to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
The White House
Office of the Press Secretary
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
Paris, France
PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you very much. Mr. Secretary General, thank you for
your hospitality. It's good to see you again. I remember our days
together in the la frontera de Tejas y México, when I was the Governor of
Texas and you were one of the leading officials of Mexico. And it's great
to see you here in Paris, también su esposa. Madam Secretary, thank you;
Ambassadors; World War II veterans, and distinguished guests. Laura and I
are having a wonderful trip through Europe, and we are so pleased to be
back in Paris. It's been a little more than four years since we were last
in Paris together, and a lot has changed. Laura wrote a book. (Laughter.)
Our daughter got married. (Laughter.) My dad jumped out of an airplane.
(Laughter.) And my hair is a lot grayer. (Laughter.)
What has not changed is the friendship between America and France. Recent
history has made clear that no disagreement can diminish the deep ties
between our nations. France was America's first friend. And over the
centuries, our nations stood united in moments of testing -- from the
Marne, to Omaha Beach to the long vigil of the Civil War* [sic]. After
September the 11th, 2001, a major French newspaper published a headline my
nation will never forget: "Nous sommes tous Americains." America is
grateful to the people of France. We're proud to call you friends. And
our alliance will stand the test of time.
We gather to commemorate a landmark in the moment of that alliance, and
that's the 60th anniversary of the start of the Marshall Plan. In 1948,
the United States Congress passed, President Harry Truman signed,
legislation to fund this unprecedented effort. Just steps from here at the
Chateau de la Muette -- the headquarters for the organization that
implemented the Marshall Plan and worked with our allies to promote open
economies and strong free market policies across Europe. Through this
building flowed "friendly aid" that helped renew the spirit of the
continent -- what one magazine called "the D-Day for peace." From this
building came money for fuel and vehicles and machinery that helped bring
Europe's economies back to life. And in this building were written the
first chapters of European unity -- a story of cooperation that eventually
resulted in institutions like NATO and the European Union and the
organization that carries the spirit of the Marshall Plan into a new
century, the OECD.
Marshall Plan was the source of aid and assistance, and it wisely gave
Europeans a leading role in reconstruction. By doing so, the Plan conveyed
a message of partnership and respect. And by offering help to nations
across Europe --including communist nations -- the Plan also had the effect
of clarifying the new ideological struggle that was unfolding.
When he announced the Plan, Secretary Marshall made it clear it was
"directed not against any country or doctrine, but against hunger and
poverty and desperation and chaos." With these words, he showed that we
stood for a future of unity and prosperity and freedom throughout Europe.
Yet the leaders in the Kremlin denied the Marshall Plan aid to the
suffering people of the Soviet Union and its captive nations. What
followed was nearly a half century of repression and fear in the East,
until at last freedom arrived. In an ironic final scene, the Soviets did
accept some Western assistance after all: As the last Secretary General
[sic] sat down to sign the papers ending the Soviet Union, he discovered
that his pen was out of ink, so he borrowed one from an American news crew.
In the years since the Cold War ended, Europe has taken inspiring strides
toward a continent whole, free, and at peace. Over the past eight years,
we have watched nations from the Baltics to the Balkans complete the
transition from the Soviet bloc to the European Union. We've seen former
members of the Warsaw Pact proudly sign the treaty to join NATO. We
witnessed an Orange Revolution in Ukraine, a Rose Revolution in Georgia, a
declaration of independence in Kosovo, and the rise of a democratic
movement in Belarus. America admires these brave stands for liberty. We
look forward to the day when all free people on this continent take their
rightful place in the institutions of Europe.
With these changes has come a revitalization between the relationship -- of
the relationship between Europe and the United States. Instead of focusing
on issues within Europe, we're increasingly looking to matters of global
reach. Instead of dwelling on our differences, we're increasingly united
in our interests and ideals. On my first trip abroad of my second term as
President, I traveled to Brussels and called for "a new era of
transatlantic unity." This week, I have seen the outlines of that new era.
In leaders like Berlusconi and Brown and Merkel and Sarkozy, I see a
commitment to a powerful and purposeful Europe that advances the values of
liberty within its borders, and beyond. And when the time comes to welcome
the new American President next January, I will be pleased to report to him
that the relationship between the United States and Europe is the broadest
and most vibrant it has ever been.
We see this broad and vibrant relationship in the expansive agenda for our
meetings this week:
America and Europe are cooperating to open new opportunities for trade and
investment -- and we're determined to help make this the year the world
completes an ambitious Doha Round.
America and Europe are cooperating to address the twin challenges of energy
security and climate change while keeping our economies strong. We will
continue working to diversify our energy supplies by developing and
financing new clean energy technologies. We will continue working toward
an international agreement that commits every major economy to slow, stop,
and eventually reverse the growth of greenhouse gases.
America and Europe are cooperating to widen the circle of development and
prosperity. We lead the world in providing food aid, improving education
for boys and girls, and fighting disease. Through the historic commitments
of the United States and other G8 countries, we are working to turn the
tide against HIV/AIDS and malaria in Africa. To achieve this noble goal,
all nations must keep their promises to deliver this urgent aid.
America and Europe are cooperating on our most solemn duty of all --
protecting our citizens. From New York and Washington, to London and
Madrid, to Copenhagen and Amsterdam, we have seen terrorists and extremists
rejoice in the murder of the innocent. So America and Europe are applying
the tools of intelligence and finance and law enforcement and diplomacy,
and -- when necessary -- military power to break up terror networks and
deny them safe havens. To protect the people of Europe from the prospect
of ballistic missile attacks emanating from the Middle East, we're
developing a shared system of missile defense.
These measures are critical to the success in the fight against terror.
Yet as in the Cold War, we must also prevail in a wider struggle -- the
battle of ideas. On one side are all who embrace the fundamental tenets of
civilization -- the natural right to liberty, freedom of conscience and
dissent, and the obligation of the strong to protect the weak. On the
other side are men who place no value on life, allow no room for dissent,
and use terror to impose their harsh ideology on as many people as
possible.
Ultimately, the only way to defeat the advocates of this ideology is to
defeat their ideas. So the central aim of our foreign policy is to advance
a more hopeful and compelling vision, especially in the broader Middle
East, a vision on the ideals of liberty and justice and tolerance and hope.
These ideals are the foundation of France's Declaration of the Rights of
Man and America's Declaration of Independence. Yet these ideals do not
belong to our nations alone. They are universal ideals. And the lesson of
history is that by extending these ideals -- it's more than a moral
obligation, that by expending these -- extending these ideals is the only
practical and realistic way to protect -- to provide our security and to
spread the peace.
The rise of free and prosperous societies in the broader Middle East is
essential to peace in the 21st century, just as the rise of a free and
prosperous Europe was essential to peace in the 20th century. So Europe
and America must stand with reformers, democratic leaders, and millions of
ordinary people across the Middle East who seek a future of hope and
liberty and peace.
In Afghanistan, we must stand with a brave young democracy determined to
defeat al Qaeda and the Taliban. NATO has accepted an historic mission in
Afghanistan. And I applaud the leadership of President Sarkozy, who hosted
an international support conference yesterday, and will soon deploy
additional forces to Afghanistan. President Sarkozy has said: "What is at
stake in that country is the future of our values and that of the Atlantic
Alliance." He is right. Our nations must ensure that Afghanistan is never
again a safe haven for terror.
In Lebanon, we must stand with those struggling to protect their
sovereignty and independence. We must counter the dangers posed by
Hezbollah terrorists supported by Iran and Syria. Together, we must show
the people of Lebanon that they will have the lasting support of the free
world.
In the Holy Land, we must stand with Palestinians and Israelis and all
others committed to a two-state solution -- a permanent peace based on two
democratic states, Israel and Palestine, living side by side in security
and peace. I firmly believe that with leadership and courage, a peace
agreement is possible this year.
In Iran and Syria, we must stand with the decent people of those two
nations who deserve much better than the life they have today. We must
stand -- we must firmly oppose Iran and Syria's support for terror. And
for the security of Europe and for the peace of the world, we must not
allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon.
In Iraq, we must stand with the courageous people who have turned the
momentum against al Qaeda and extremists. From Anbar province, to mixed
neighborhoods in Baghdad, to the cities of Basra and Mosul, Iraqis of all
backgrounds have made it clear they reject extremism and terror. Today,
violence in Iraq is down to the lowest point since March of 2004. Civilian
deaths are down. Sectarian killings are down. And as security has
improved, economic life has been revived. Reconciliation is taking place
in communities across that country. And the government in Baghdad is
showing strong leadership and progress on the path to a free society. With
the terrorists on the run and freedom on the rise, it is in the interests
of every nation on this continent to support a stable and democratic Iraq.
Since 2001, the freedom movement has been advancing in the Middle East.
Kuwait has had elections in which women were allowed to vote and hold
office for the first time. Algeria held its first competitive presidential
elections. Citizens have voted in municipal elections in Saudi Arabia, in
competitive parliamentary elections in Jordan and Morocco and Bahrain, and
in a multiparty presidential election in Yemen.
Liberty takes hold in different places in different ways, so we must
continue to adapt and find innovative ways to support those movements for
freedom. The way to do so is to stand with civil society groups, human
rights organizations, dissidents, independent journalists and bloggers, and
others on the leading edge of reform. We have taken important steps in
this area, such as the Broader Middle East and North America Initiative**
[sic] led by the United States, the Forum for Freedom*** [sic] led by the
G8, and the Partnership for Democratic Governance led by the OECD.
Spreading the hope of freedom is the calling of our time. And as we look
ahead to the great task, we can be guided by four key principles: unity,
confidence, vision, and resolve.
We must go forward with unity. Over the course of the Cold War, the
transatlantic alliance faced moments of serious tension -- from the Suez
Crisis in the 1950s to the basing of missiles in Europe in the 1980s. Yet
with the distance of time, we can see these differences for what they were
-- fleeting disagreements between friends. We'll have more disagreements
in the decades ahead, but we must never allow those disagreements to
undermine our shared purposes. Dividing democracies is one of our enemies'
goals, and they must not be allowed to succeed.
We must go forward with confidence. Our vision of freedom and peace in the
Middle East and beyond is ambitious, and of course there will be voices
that will say it will never arrive. And that's natural, and it's not new.
There were times when it seemed impossible that there could ever be peace
between Britain and France, or France and Germany, or between Germany and
Poland. Yet today all those nations are at peace, and war in Europe is
virtually unimaginable. Something happened in Europe that defied the
skeptics and the pattern of the centuries, and that was the spread of human
freedom.
In truth, this is a strange time to doubt the power of liberty. Over the
past 30 years, the number of democracies has grown from 45 to more than
120, which is the fastest advance of freedom in history. As some of the
world's oldest democracies, we should never be surprised by the appeal of
freedom. We should stand against the moral relativism that views all forms
of government as equally acceptable. And we should be confident that one
day, the same determination and desire that brought freedom to Paris and
Berlin and Riga will bring freedom to Gaza, Damascus, and Tehran.
We must go forward with a clear vision. In the Cold War, we laid out a
vision of liberty and trusted its power to transform societies. And that
transformation took place in ways almost no one could foresee. In the late
1970s, for example, many in the West worried we were losing. And then one
October afternoon, there came a sign as bright as the white smoke above the
Sistine Chapel. Onto the balcony of St. Peter's stepped the first Polish
pope in history, who inspired millions behind the Iron Curtain with his
call, "Be not afraid." John Paul's election was followed by the elections
of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan -- who helped restore confidence in
freedom's power, and pursued a policy of peace through strength. And
HishIsoon other remarkable events began unfolding: shipyard workers in
Gdansk brought down a government, a jailed playwright in Prague touched off
a Velvet Revolution, and citizens of Berlin prayed for the end of a wall
and then found the strength to tear it down.
Today's struggle we have again laid out a clear vision of freedom, and it
will transform lives in the Middle East and beyond in ways we cannot fully
predict. We can see some of the sources of change. Sixty percent of the
Middle East population is under 30 years old, and over time these young
people -- surfing the Internet, and watching satellite television, and
studying abroad -- will demand that their societies fully join the free
world. The women's movement in the region is growing, and over time this
movement will spark reform, as mothers and daughters make clear that it is
costly and unwise to keep half the population from fully contributing to
the life of a nation. Middle Eastern immigrants here in Europe are seeing
the benefits of freedom, and over time they will insist that the liberty of
their adopted homelands also belongs in the lands of their birth. The
future of the region is the hands of its people, and those of us who live
in free societies must continue to encourage these early stirrings of
reform.
Finally, we must go forward with resolve. In the years ahead, there will
be periods of difficulty, yet history shows that freedom can endure even
the hardest tests. Picture what the future of Europe must have looked like
for leaders meeting here in Paris 60 years ago: Moscow had occupied much
of Central and Eastern Europe after World War II. Communist parties had
threatened governments in Italy and here in France. A severe Soviet threat
imperiled Greece and Turkey. A communist coup had toppled the elected
government of Czechoslovakia. Stalin ordered a blockade of Berlin.
Yet in America and in free capitals of Europe, we summoned the resolve to
prevail. We launched the Marshall Plan and the Berlin Airlift. Then came
the signing of the North Atlantic Treaty and the formation of West Germany.
Looking back over the decades, we can see that these brave early measures
put us on the path to victory in the Cold War.
There are moments today when the situation in places like the Middle East
can look as daunting as it did in Europe six decades ago. Yet we can have
confidence that liberty once again will prevail. We can have confidence
because freedom is the longing of every soul, and it is the direction of
history. We can have confidence because men and women in the Middle East
and beyond are determined to claim their liberty, just as the people of
Europe did in the last century.
Near the end of his life, George Marshall made a final trip to Europe. He
came not for a military meeting or a diplomatic summit, but to accept the
Nobel Peace Prize. In his address, Marshall offered a bold prediction:
"Tyranny inevitably must retire before the tremendous moral strength of the
gospel of freedom." Sixty years ago, the faith in liberty helped the
gospel of freedom ring out in nations devastated by war. Today, freedom
rings out across this continent. And one day, freedom will ring out across
the world.
Thank you for having me. God bless.
END
3:56 P.M. (Local)
*Cold War
**North Africa Initiative
***Forum for the Future
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