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Remarks
by President Bush at Galatasary University
Istanbul, Turkey
June 29, 2004
THE PRESIDENT:
Thank you all very much. Distinguished guests, Director of
this fine university, ladies and gentlemen: Laura and I are
grateful for the warm and gracious hospitality we have received
these past three days in the Republic of Turkey. I am honored
to visit this beautiful country where two continents meet
-- a nation that upholds great tradition, and faces the future
with confidence. America is honored to call Turkey an ally
and a friend.
Many Americans
trace their heritage to Turkey, and Turks have contributed
greatly to our national life -- including, most recently,
a lot of baskets for the Detroit Pistons from Mehmet Okur.
I know you're proud of this son of your country, and there's
a lot of people in Detroit really grateful for his talents.
I'm grateful
to my friend, the Prime Minister, for his leadership and his
hospitality. I also want to thank my friend, the President,
President Sezer, for his hospitality. These men and your country
have hosted members of NATO in an historic time in our alliance.
For most of its history, NATO existed to deter aggression
from a powerful army at the heart of Europe. In this century,
NATO looks outward to new threats that gather in secret and
bring sudden violence to peaceful cities. We face terrorist
networks that rejoice when parents bury their murdered children,
or rejoice when bound men plead for mercy. We face outlaw
regimes that give aid and shelter to these killers, and seek
weapons of mass murder. We face the challenges of corruption
and poverty and disease, which throw whole nations into chaos
and despair. These are the conditions in which terrorism can
survive.
Some on
both sides of the Atlantic have questioned whether the NATO
alliance still has a great purpose. To find that purpose,
they only need to open their eyes. The dangers are in plain
sight. The only question is whether we will confront them,
or look away and pay a terrible cost.
Over the
last few years, NATO has made its decision. Our alliance is
restructuring to oppose threat that arise beyond the borders
of Europe. NATO is providing security in Afghanistan. NATO
has agreed to help train the security forces of a sovereign
Iraq, which is a great advantage and crucial success for the
Iraqi people. And in Istanbul we have dedicated ourselves
to the advance of reform in the broader Middle East, because
all people deserve a just government, and because terror is
not the tool of the free. Through decades of the Cold War,
our great alliance of liberty never failed in its duties,
and we are rising to our duties once again.
The Turkish
people understand the terrorists, because you have seen their
work, even in the last weeks. You've heard the sirens, and
witnessed the carnage, and mourned the dead. After the murders
of Muslims, and Christians, and Jews in Istanbul last November,
a resident of this city said of the terrorists, "They
don't have any religion, they are friends of evil." In
one of the attacks, a Muslim woman lost her son Ahmet, her
daughter-in-law Berta, and her unborn grandchild. This is
what she said: "Today I am saying goodbye to my son.
Tomorrow I'm saying farewell to my Berta. I don't know what
[the killers] wanted from my kids. Were they jealous of their
happiness?"
The Turkish
people have grieved, but your nation is showing how terrorist
violence will be overcome -- with courage, and with a firm
resolve to defend your just and tolerant society. This land
has always been important for its geography -- here at the
meeting place of Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Now Turkey
has assumed even greater historical importance, because of
your character as a nation. Turkey is a strong, secular democracy,
a majority Muslim society, and a close ally of free nations.
Your country, with 150 years of democratic and social reform,
stands as a model to others, and as Europe's bridge to the
wider world. Your success is vital to a future of progress
and peace in Europe and in the broader Middle East -- and
the Republic of Turkey can depend on the support and friendship
of the United States of America.
For decades,
my country has supported greater unity in Europe -- to secure
liberty, to build prosperity, and to remove sources of conflict
on this continent. Now the European Union is considering the
admission of Turkey, and you are moving rapidly to meet the
criteria for membership. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk had a vision
of Turkey as a strong nation among other European nations.
That dream can be realized by this generation of Turks. America
believes that as a European power, Turkey belongs in the European
Union. Your membership would also be a crucial advance in
relations between the Muslim world and the West, because you
are part of both. Including Turkey in the EU would prove that
Europe is not the exclusive club of a single religion; it
would expose the "clash of civilizations" as a passing
myth of history. Fifteen years ago, an artificial line that
divided Europe -- drawn at Yalta -- was erased. And now this
continent has the opportunity to erase another artificial
division -- by including Turkey in the future of Europe.
Turkey
has found its place in the community of democracies by living
out its own principles. Muslims are called to seek justice
-- fairness to all, care for the stranger, compassion for
those in need. And you have learned that democracy is the
surest way to build a society of justice. The best way to
prevent corruption and abuse of power is to hold rulers accountable.
The best way to ensure fairness to all is to establish the
rule of law. The best way to honor human dignity is to protect
human rights. Turkey has found what nations of every culture
and every region have found: If justice is the goal, then
democracy is the answer.
In some
parts of the world, especially in the Middle East, there is
a wariness toward democracy, often based on misunderstanding.
Some people in Muslim cultures identify democracy with the
worst of Western popular culture, and want no part of it.
And I assure them, when I speak about the blessings of liberty,
coarse videos and crash -- crass commercialism are not what
I have in mind. There is nothing incompatible between democratic
values and high standards of decency. For the sake of their
families and their culture, citizens of a free society have
every right to strive peacefully for a moral society.
Democratic
values also do not require citizens to abandon their faith.
No democracy can allow religious people to impose their own
view of perfection on others, because this invites cruelty
and arrogance that are foreign to every faith. And all people
in a democracy have the right to their own religious beliefs.
But all democracies are made stronger when religious people
teach and demonstrate upright conduct -- family commitment,
respect for the law, and compassion for the weak. Democratic
societies should welcome, not fear, the participation of the
faithful.
In addition,
democracy does not involve automatic agreement with other
democracies. Free governments have a reputation for independence,
which Turkey has certainly earned. And that is the way that
democracy works. We deal honestly with each other, we make
our own decisions, and yet, in the end, the disagreements
of the moment are far outweighed by the ideals we share.
Because
representative governments reflect their people, every democracy
has its own structure, traditions, and opinions. There are,
however, certain commitments of free government that do not
change from place to place. The promise of democracy is fulfilled
in freedom of speech, the rule of law, limits on the power
of the state, economic freedom, respect for women, and religious
tolerance. These are the values that honor the dignity of
every life, and set free the creative energies that lead to
progress.
Achieving
these commitments of democracy can require decades of effort
and reform. In my own country it took generations to throw
off slavery, racial segregation, and other practices that
violated our ideals. So we do not expect that other societies
can be transformed in a day. But however long the journey,
there is only one destination worth striving for, and that
is a society of self-rule and freedom.
Democracy
leads to justice within a nation, and the advance of democracy
leads to greater security among nations. The reason is clear:
Free peoples do not live in endless stagnation, and seethe
in resentment, and lash out in envy, rage, and violence. Free
peoples do not cling to every grievance of the past; they
build and live for the future. This is the experience of countries
in the NATO alliance. Bitterness and hostility once divided
France and Germany, Germany and Poland, Romania and Hungary.
But as these nations grew in liberty, ancient disputes and
hatreds have been left to history. And because the people
of Europe now live in hope, Europe no longer produces armed
ideologies that threaten the peace of the world. Freedom in
Europe has brought peace to Europe, and now freedom can bring
peace to the broader Middle East.
I believe
that freedom is the future of the Middle East, because I believe
that freedom is the future of all humanity. And the historic
achievement of democracy in the broader Middle East will be
a victory shared by all. Millions who now live in oppression
and want will finally have a chance to provide for their families
and lead hopeful lives. Nations in the region will have greater
stability because governments will have greater legitimacy.
And nations like Turkey and America will be safer, because
a hopeful Middle East will no longer produce ideologies and
movements that seek to kill our citizens. This transformation
is one of the great and difficult tasks of history. And by
our own patience and hard effort, and with confidence in the
peoples of the Middle East, we will finish the work that history
has given us.
Democracy,
by definition, must be chosen and defended by the people themselves.
The future of freedom in the Islamic world will be determined
by the citizens of Islamic nations, not by outsiders. And
for citizens of the broader Middle East, the alternatives
could not be more clear. One alternative is a political doctrine
of tyranny, suicide, and murder that goes against the standards
of justice found in Islam and every other great religion.
The other alternative is a society of justice, where men and
women live peacefully and build better lives for themselves
and their children. This is the true cause of the people of
the Middle East, and that cause can never be served by the
murder of the innocent.
This struggle
between political extremism and civilized values is unfolding
in many places. We see the struggle in Iraq, where killers
are attempting to undermine and intimidate a free government.
We see the struggle in Iran, where tired, discredited autocrats
are trying to hold back the democratic will of a rising generation.
We see that struggle in Turkey, where the PKK has abandoned
its cease-fire with the Turkish people and resumed violence.
We see it in the Holy Land, where terrorist murderers are
setting back the good cause of the Palestinian people, who
deserve a reformed, peaceful, and democratic state of their
own.
The terrorists
are ruthless and resourceful, but they will not prevail. Already
more than half of the world's Muslims live under democratically-constituted
governments -- from Indonesia to West Africa, from Europe
to North America. And the ideal of democracy is also powerful
and popular in the Middle East. Surveys in Arab nations reveal
broad support for representative government and individual
liberty. We are seeing reform in Kuwait and Qatar, Bahrain
and Yemen, Jordan and Morocco. We're seeing men and women
of conscience and courage step forward to advocate democracy
and justice in the broader Middle East.
As we
found in the Soviet Union, and behind the Iron Curtain, this
kind of moral conviction was more powerful than vast armies
and prison walls and the will of dictators. And this kind
of moral conviction is also more powerful than the whips of
the Taliban, the police state of Saddam Hussein, or the cruel
designs of terrorists. The way ahead is long and difficult,
yet people of conscience go forward with hope. The rule of
fear did not survive in Europe; the rule of free peoples will
come to the Middle East.
Leaders
throughout that region, including some friends of the United
States, must recognize the direction of the events of the
day. Any nation that compromises with violent extremists only
emboldens them, and invites future violence. Suppressing dissent
only increases radicalism. The long-term stability of any
government depends on being open to change, and responsive
to citizens. By learning these lessons, Turkey has become
a great and stable democracy -- and America shares your hope
that other nations will take this path.
Western
nations, including my own, want to be helpful in the democratic
progress of the Middle East, yet we know there are suspicions,
rooted in centuries of conflict and colonialism. And in the
last 60 years, many in the West have added to this distrust
by excusing tyranny in the region, hoping to purchase stability
at the price of liberty. But it did not serve the people of
the Middle East to betray their hope of freedom. It has not
made Western nations more secure to ignore the cycle of dictatorship
and extremism. Instead we've seen the malice grow deeper,
and the violence spread, until both have appeared on the streets
of our own cities. Some types of hatred will never be appeased;
they must be opposed and discredited and defeated by a hopeful
alternative -- and that alternative is freedom.
Reformers
in the broader Middle East are working to build freer and
more prosperous societies -- and America and Turkey, the G-8,
the EU and NATO have now agreed to support them. Many nations
are helping the people of Afghanistan to secure a free government.
And NATO now leads a military operation in Afghanistan, in
the first action by the alliance outside of Europe. In Iraq,
a broad coalition -- including the military forces of many
NATO countries -- is helping the people of that country to
build a decent and democratic government after decades of
corrupt oppression. And NATO is providing support to a Polish-led
division.
The government
of Iraq has now taken a crucial step forward. In a nation
that suffered for decades under tyranny, we have witnessed
the transfer of sovereignty and the beginning of self-government.
In just 15 months, the Iraqi people have left behind one of
the worst regimes in the Middle East, and their country is
becoming the world's newest democracy. The world has seen
a great event in the history of Iraq, in the history of the
Middle East, and in the history of liberty.
The rise
of Iraqi democracy is bringing hope to reformers across the
Middle East, and sending a very different message to Teheran
and Damascus. A free and sovereign Iraq is a decisive defeat
for extremists and terrorists, because their hateful ideology
will lose its appeal in a free and tolerant and successful
country. The terrorists are doing everything they can to undermine
Iraqi democracy, by attacking all who stand for order and
justice, and by committing terrible crimes to break the will
of free nations. These terrorists have the ability to cause
suffering and grief, but they do not have the power to alter
the outcome in Iraq. The civilized world will keep its resolve,
the leaders of Iraq are strong and determined, and the people
of Iraq will live in freedom.
Iraq still
faces hard challenges in the days and months ahead. Iraq's
leaders are eager to assume responsibility for their own security,
and that is our wish, as well. So this week at our summit,
NATO agreed to provide assistance in training Iraqi security
forces. I am grateful to Turkey and other NATO allies for
helping our friends in Iraq to build a nation that governs
itself and defends itself.
Our efforts
to promote reform and democracy in the Middle East are moving
forward. At the NATO summit, we approved the Istanbul Cooperative
Initiative, offering to work together with nations of the
broader Middle East to fight terrorism, to control their borders,
and to aid victims of disaster. We're thankful for the important
role that Turkey is playing as a democratic partner in the
Broader Middle East Initiative.
For all
of our efforts to succeed, however, more is needed than plans
and policies. We must strengthen the ties of trust and good
will between ourselves and the peoples of the Middle East.
And trust and good will come more easily when men and women
clear their minds, and their hearts, of suspicion and prejudice
and unreasoned fear. When some in my country speak in an ill-informed
and insulting manner about the Muslim faith, their words are
heard abroad, and do great harm to our cause in the Middle
East. When some in the Muslim world incite hatred and murder
with conspiracy theories and propaganda, their words are also
heard -- by a generation of young Muslims who need truth and
hope, not lies and anger. All such talk, in America or in
the Middle East, is dangerous and reckless and unworthy of
any religious tradition. Whatever our culture differences
may be, there should be respect and peace in the House of
Abraham.
The Turkish
writer Orhan Pamuk has said that the finest view of Istanbul
is not from the shores of Europe, or from the shores of Asia,
but from a bridge that unites them, and lets you see both.
His work has been a bridge between cultures, and so is the
Republic of Turkey. The people of this land understand, as
that great writer has observed, that "What is important
is not [a] clash of parties, civilizations, cultures, East
and West." What is important, he says, is to realize
"that other people in other continents and civilizations"
are "exactly like you."
Ladies
and gentlemen, in their need for hope, in their desire for
peace, in their right to freedom, the peoples of the Middle
East are exactly like you and like me. Their birthright of
freedom has denied -- been denied for too long. We will do
all in our power to help them find the blessings of liberty.
Thank
you for your hospitality. May God bless Turkey, may God continue
to bless the United States.
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