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24/05/2006 |
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| Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert's address before Congress |
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Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice
President, distinguished members of the U.S. Congress,
ladies and gentlemen:
On behalf of the people in the state of Israel, I wish to
express my profound gratitude to you for your privilege of
addressing this joint meeting of the U.S. Congress.
This building, this chamber, and all of you stand as a
testament to the enduring principles of liberty and
democracy.
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More than 30 years
ago, I came to Washington as a young legislator thanks to a
program sponsored by the State Department. I had a chance to
tour this building, and I saw then what I believe today,
that this institution, the United States Congress, is the
greatest deliberative body of the world.
(APPLAUSE)
I did not imagine then that a day would actually come when I
would have the honor of addressing this forum as the prime
minister of my nation, the state of Israel. Thank you.
(APPLAUSE)
The United States is a superpower whose influence reaches
across oceans and beyond borders. Your continued support,
which I am happy to say transcends parties and affiliations,
is of paramount importance to us.
We revere the principles and values represented by your
great country and are grateful for the unwavering support
and friendship we have received from the U.S. Congress, from
President George W. Bush, and from the American people.
(APPLAUSE)
Abraham Lincoln once said, "I am a success today because I
had a friend who believed in me and I didn't have the heart
to let him down."
Israel is grateful that America believes in us.
Let me assure you that we will not let you down.
(APPLAUSE)
Thank you.
The similarities in our economic, social and cultural
identities are obvious, but there is something much deeper
and everlasting. The unbreakable ties between our two
nations extend far beyond mutual interests. They are based
on our shared goals and values stemming from the very
essence of our mutual foundations.
This coming Monday, the 29th of May, you commemorate
Memorial Day for America's fallen. The graves of brave
American soldiers are scattered throughout the world, in
Asia and in the Pacific, throughout Europe and Africa, in
Iraq and throughout the Middle East. The pain of the
families never heals and the void they leave is never
filled.
It is impossible to think of a world in which America was
not there in the honorable service of humanity.
On Monday, when the stars and the stripes are lowered to
half mast, we, the people of Israel, will bow our heads for
you.
(APPLAUSE)
Our two great nations share a profound belief in the
importance of freedom and a common pioneering spirit deeply
rooted in optimism. It was the energetic spirit of our
pioneers that enabled our two countries to implement the
impossible: to build cities where swamps once existed and to
make the desert bloom.
My parents, Bella and Mordechai Olmert, were lucky. They
escaped the persecutions in the Ukraine and Russia and found
sanctuary in Harbin, China. They immigrated to Israel to
fulfill their dream of building a Jewish and democratic
state living in peace in the land of our ancestors.
My parents came to the holy land following a verse in the
Old Testament, in the Book of 2 Samuel: "I will appoint a
place for my people, Israel, and I will plant them in their
land, and they will dwell in their own place and be
disturbed no more."
(APPLAUSE)
Distinguished members of Congress, I come here to this home
of liberty and democracy to tell you that my parents' dream,
our dream, has only been partly fulfilled. We have succeed
in building a Jewish democratic homeland.
We have succeeded in creating an oasis of hope and
opportunity in a troubled region. But there has not been one
year, one week, even one day of peace in our tortured land.
Our Israeli pioneers suffered and their struggle was long
and hard. Yet even today, almost 60 years after our
independence, that struggle still endures.
Since the birth of the state of Israel and until this very
moment, we have been continually at war and amidst
confrontation. The confrontation has become even more
violent, the enemy turned even more inhumane due to the
scourge of suicide terrorism.
But we are not alone.
Today, Israel, America, Europe and democracies across the
globe, unfortunately, face this enemy.
Over the past six years, more than 20,000 attempted
terrorist attacks have been initiated against the people of
Israel. Most, thankfully, have been foiled by our security
forces. But those which have succeeded have resulted in the
death of hundreds of innocent civilians and the injury of
thousands, many of them children guilty only of being in
what proved to be the wrong place at the wrong time.
These are not statistics; these are real people with
beautiful souls that have left this Earth far too soon.
In the decade I served as mayor of my beloved city
Jerusalem, we faced the lion's share of the seemingly
endless wave of terrorism.
I remember Galila, a 12-year-old Ethiopian immigrant whose
parents worked in the King David Hotel. On one particular
morning her parents, overwhelmed by the fear of riding a bus
in the city of Jerusalem, told their daughter: "Galila,
perhaps this morning, just this morning, we'll take you in
the family car to your school."
And Galila said to her parents, "Oh, come on. Don't be
silly. I know where to sit in the bus. I will be safe in the
bus. Don't worry for me."
And it so happened that on that same day the suicide
attacker ascended to that same bus and chose to sit just
next to her.
When I visited her grieving parents, her mother came to me
sobbing and she said: "You are the mayor. You have so much
influence in this city. Will you do us just one last favor:
Please try to find out something, just one item of
remembrance that we will be able to take with us for the
rest of our lives. Maybe just a shoelace of Galila's."
And I did everything a mayor could do. I summoned the
police, I summoned the security forces, I instructed the
municipal workers, I told them: Go look out everywhere you
can.
And then they came back and they say to me: Mr. Mayor,
nothing, nothing, not even a shoelace.
Among the victims of this brutal and unremitting terror, I
am sorry to tell you, are also American citizens. Only last
week, Daniel Cantor Wultz, a 16-years-old high school
student from western Florida, who came to spend the Passover
holiday with his parents in Israel, succumbed to his severe
injuries incurred in Israel's most recent suicide attack.
I asked Daniel's parents and sister, Yekutiel, Cheryl and
Amanda Wultz, who only finished the traditional period of
mourning two days ago, to be with us here today. Daniel was
a relative of Congressman Eric Cantor of Virginia, an
honorable member of this house.
Our thoughts and prayers are with you.
(APPLAUSE)
I bring Galili's memory, Daniel's memory, and the loss of so
many others with me to my new post as prime minister.
I also bring with me the horrific scenes I saw with my own
eyes when I visited New York just a few days after the
devastating attacks on September 11th, a tragedy that
transcends any other terrorist attack that has ever
occurred.
As I told my good friend Rudy Giuliani, on that dreadful day
our hearts went out to you, not only because of the
friendship between us, but because, tragically and
personally, we both know what it is to confront the evil of
terrorism at home.
Our countries do not just share the experience and pain of
terrorism, we share the commitment and resolve to confront
the brutal terrorists that took these innocent people from
us. We share the commitment to extract from our grief a
renewed dedication to providing our people with a better
future.
Let me state this as clearly as I can: We will not yield to
terror.
(APPLAUSE)
We will not surrender to terror. We will not surrender to
terror, and we will win the war on terror and restore peace
to our societies.
(APPLAUSE)
The Palestinian Authority is ruled by Hamas, an organization
committed to vehement anti-Semitism, the glorification of
terror and the total destruction of Israel. As long as these
are their guiding principles, they can never be a partner.
Therefore, while Israel works to ensure that the
humanitarian needs of the Palestinian populations are met,
we can never capitulate to terrorists or terrorism.
(APPLAUSE)
I pay tribute to the firmness and the clarity with which the
president and this Congress uphold this crucial principle
which we both firmly share.
Israel commends this Congress for initiating the Palestinian
Anti-Terrorism Act, which sends a firm, clear message that
the United States of America will not tolerate terrorism in
any form.
(APPLAUSE)
Like America, Israel seeks to rid itself of the horrors of
terrorism. Israel yearns for peace and security. Israel is
determined to take responsibility for its own future and
take concrete steps to turn its dreams into reality.
The painful but necessary process of disengagement from the
Gaza Strip and northern Samaria was an essential step.
At this moment, my thoughts turn especially to the great
leader, who in normal circumstances should have stood here.
Ariel Sharon, the legendary statesman and visionary, my
friend and colleague, could not be here with us, but I am
emboldened by the promise of continuing his mission.
(APPLAUSE)
I pray, as I am sure you all do, too, for his recovery.
Ariel Sharon was a man of few words and great principles.
His vision and dream of peace and security transcended time,
philosophy and politics.
Israel must still meet the momentous challenge of
guaranteeing the future of Israel as a democratic state with
a Jewish majority, within permanent and defensible borders,
and a united Jerusalem as its capital that is open and
accessible for the worship of all religions.
(APPLAUSE)
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This was the dream to which
Ariel Sharon was loyally committed. This was the mission he
began to fulfill. It is the goal and the purpose of the
Kadima Party that he founded and to which I was the first to
join. And it is this legacy of liberty, identity and
security that I embrace.
(APPLAUSE)
It is what I am working toward. It is what I am so
passionately hoping for.
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Although our
government has changed, Israel's goal remains the same. As
Prime Minister Sharon clearly stated, the Palestinians will
forever be our neighbors. They are an inseparable part of
this land, as are we. Israel has not desired to rule over
them, nor to oppress them. They, too, have a right for
freedom and national aspirations.
(APPLAUSE)
With the vision of Ariel Sharon guiding my actions from this
podium today, I extend my hand in peace to Mahmoud Abbas,
the elected president of the Palestinian Authority.
(APPLAUSE)
On behalf of the state of Israel, we are willing to
negotiate with the Palestinian Authority. This authority
must renounce terrorism, dismantle the terrorist
infrastructure, accept previous agreements and commitments,
and recognize the right of Israel to exist.
(APPLAUSE)
Let us be clear: Peace without security will bring neither
peace nor security. We will not -- we cannot -- compromise
on these basic tests of partnership.
With a genuine Palestinian partner for peace, I believe we
can reach an agreement on all the issues that divide us. Our
past experience shows us it is possible to bridge the
differences between our two peoples.
I believe this. I know this because we have done it before
in our peace treaties with Egypt and with Jordan.
These treaties involved painful and difficult compromises.
It required Israel to take real risks. But if there is to be
a just, fair and lasting peace, we need a partner who will
reject violence and who values life more than death.
(APPLAUSE)
We need a partner that affirms in action, not just in words,
the rejection, prevention, and elimination of terror.
(APPLAUSE)
Peace with Egypt became possible only after President Anwar
Sadat came to Knesset and declared no more war, no more
bloodshed.
And peace with Jordan became possible only after the late
King Hussein, here in Washington, declared the end of the
state of belligerence, signed a peace treaty with us, and
wholeheartedly acknowledged Israel's right to exist.
The lesson for the Palestinian people is clear. In a few
years, they could be living in a Palestinian state, side by
side in peace and security with Israel.
(APPLAUSE)
A Palestinian state which Israel and the international
community would help thrive. But no one can make this happen
for them if they refuse to make it happen for themselves.
(APPLAUSE)
For thousands of years, we Jews have been nourished and
sustained by a yearning for our historic land. I, like many
others, was raised with a deep conviction that the day would
never come when we would have to relinquish parts of the
land of our forefathers. I believed and to this day still
believe in our people's eternal and historic right to this
entire land.
(APPLAUSE)
But I also believe that dreams alone will not quiet the guns
that have fired unceasingly for nearly 100 years. Dreams
alone will not enable us to preserve a secure democratic
Jewish state.
Jews all around the world read in this week's Torah portion,
"And you will dwell in your land safely, and I will give you
peace in the land, and there shall be no cause for fear,
neither shall the sword cross through the promised land."
Painfully, we, the people of Israel, have learned to change
our perspective.
We have to compromise in the name of peace, to give up parts
of our promised land in which every hill and every valley is
saturated with Jewish history and in which our heroes are
buried.
We have to relinquish part of our dream to leave room for
the dream of others so that all of us can enjoy a better
future.
(APPLAUSE)
For this painful but necessary task, my government was
elected. And to this, I am fully committed.
We hope and pray that our Palestinian neighbors will also
awaken. We hope they will make the crucial distinction
between implementing visions that can inspire us to build a
better reality and measures that will only lead us further
into the darkness.
We hope and pray for this because no peace is more stable
than one reached out of mutual understanding, not just for
the past, but for the future.
We owe a quiet and normal life to ourselves, our children
and our grandchildren. After defending ourselves for almost
60 years against attacks, all our children should be allowed
to live free of fear and terror.
And so I ask of the Palestinians: How can a child growing up
in a culture of hate dream of the possibility of peace? It
is so important that all schools and all educational
institutions in the region teach our children to be
hate-free.
(APPLAUSE)
The key to a true, lasting peace in the Middle East is in
the education of the next generation. So let us today call
out to all peoples of the Middle East: Replace the culture
of hate with an outlook of hope.
(APPLAUSE)
It is three years since the road map for peace was
presented. The road map was and remains the right plan.
A Palestinian leadership that fulfills its commitments and
obligations will find us a willing partner in peace. But if
they refuse, we will not give a terrorist regime a veto over
progress or allow it to take hope hostage.
(APPLAUSE)
We cannot wait for the Palestinians forever. Our deepest
wish is to build a better future for our region,
hand-in-hand with a Palestinian partner.
But if not, we will move forward -- but not alone. We could
never have implemented the disengagement plan without your
firm support.
(APPLAUSE)
The disengagement could never have happened without the
commitments set out by President Bush in his letter of April
14th, 2003, endorsed by both houses of Congress in
unprecedented majorities.
In the name of the people of Israel, I thank President Bush
for his
commitment and for his support and friendship.
(APPLAUSE)
The next step is even more vital to our future and to the
prospects of finally bringing peace to the Middle East.
Success will only be possible with America as an active
participant, leading the support of our friends in Europe
and across the world.
Should we realize that the bilateral track with the
Palestinians is of no consequence, should the Palestinians
ignore our outstretched hand for peace, Israel will seek
other alternatives to promote our future and the prospects
of hope in the Middle East. At that juncture, the time for
realignment will occur.
Realignment would be a process to allow Israel to build its
future without being held hostage to Palestinian terrorist
activities.
Realignment would significantly reduce the friction between
Israelis and Palestinians and prevent much of the conflict
between our two battered nations.
The goal is to break the chains that have tangled our two
peoples in unrelenting violence for far too many
generations. With our future unbound, peace and stability
might finally find its way to the doorsteps of this troubled
region.
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, allow me to turn to another
dark and gathering storm casting its shadow over the world.
Every generation is confronted with a moment of truth and
trial. From the savagery of slavery to the horrors of World
War II to the gulags of the communist bloc that which is
right and good in this world has always been at war with the
horrific evil permitted by human indifference.
Iran, the world's leading sponsor of terror and a notorious
violator of fundamental human rights, stands on the verge of
acquiring nuclear weapons. With these weapons, the security
of the entire world is put in jeopardy.
We deeply appreciate America's leadership on this issue and
the strong bipartisan conviction that a nuclear-armed Iran
is an intolerable threat to the peace and security of the
world.
(APPLAUSE)
It cannot be permitted to materialize.
(APPLAUSE)
This Congress has proven its conviction by initiating the
Iran Freedom and Support Act. We applaud these efforts.
(APPLAUSE)
A nuclear Iran means a terrorist state could achieve the
primary mission for which terrorists live and die: the mass
destruction of innocent human life.
This challenge, which I believe is the test of our time, is
one the West cannot afford to fail.
The radical Iranian regime has declared the United States
its enemy. The president believes it is his religious duty
and his destiny to lead his country in a violent conflict
against the infidels. With pride, he denies the Jewish
Holocaust and speaks brazenly, calling to wipe Israel off
the map.
For us, this is an existential threat, a threat to which we
cannot consent.
But it is not Israel's threat alone. It is a threat to all
those committed to stability in the Middle East and the
well-being of the world at large.
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, our moment is now. History
will judge our generation by the actions we take now, by our
willingness to stand up for peace and security and freedom,
and by our courage to do what is right.
The international community will be measured not by its
intentions but by its results.
(APPLAUSE)
The international community will be judged by its ability to
convince nations and peoples to turn their backs on hatred
and zealotry.
If we don't take Iran's bellicose rhetoric seriously now, we
will be forced to take its nuclear aggression seriously
later.
(APPLAUSE)
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, the true Israel is not one
you can understand through the tragic experiences of the
complex geopolitical realities. Israel has impressive
credentials in the realms of science, technology, high tech
and the arts. And many Israelis are Nobel Prize laureates in
various fields.
A land with limited resources, eager to facilitate
cooperation with the United States, Israel devotes its best
and brightest scientists to research and development for new
generations of safe, reliable, efficient and environmentally
friendly sources of energy.
(APPLAUSE)
Both our countries share a desire for energy security and
prevention of global warming. Therefore, through the United
States- Israel Energy Cooperation Act and other joint
frameworks, in collaboration with our U.S. counterparts,
Israel will increase its efforts to find advanced scientific
and technological solutions designed to develop new energy
sources and encourage conservation.
(APPLAUSE)
Just one example of Israel's remarkable achievement is the
recent $4 billion purchase by an American company of
Israel's industrial giant, Iscar.
This is an important endorsement of the Israeli economy,
which has more companies listed on NASDAQ than any country
other than the United States and Canada.
It is also a vote of confidence in Israel's strategic
initiative to enhance the economic and social development of
our Negev and Galilee regions.
But above all, it is recognition that what unites us, Israel
and America, is a commitment to tap the greatest resources
of all: the human mind and the human spirit.
(APPLAUSE)
Ladies and gentlemen, we believe in the moral principles
shared by our two nations. And they guide our political
decisions.
We believe that life is sacred and fanaticism is not.
(APPLAUSE)
We believe that every democracy has the right and the duty
to defend its citizens and its values against all enemies.
We believe that terrorism not only leads to war but that
terrorism is war...
(APPLAUSE)
... a war that must be won every day, a war in which all men
and women of good will must be allies.
We believe that peace amongst nations remains not just the
noblest idea but a genuine reality.
We believe that peace based on mutual respect must be and is
attainable in the near future.
(APPLAUSE)
We as Jews and citizens of Israel believe that our
Palestinian neighbors want to live in peace. We believe that
they have the desire and, hopefully, the courage to reject
violence and hatred as means to obtain national
independence.
The Bible tells us that, as Joshua stood on the verge of the
promised land, he was given one exhortation: "Chazak v'ematz";
"Be strong and of good courage."
Strength without courage will lead only to brutality.
Courage without strength will lead only to futility. Only
genuine courage and commitment to our values, backed by the
will and the power to defend them, will lead us forward in
the service of humanity.
To the Congress of the United States and to the great people
of America, on behalf of the people of Israel, I want to say
today: Be strong and of good courage. And we, all people who
cherish freedom, will be with you.
God bless you, and God bless America.
Thank you.
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