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ARLINGTON,
Va., March 26 /Standard
Newswire/ -- U.S. Senator John McCain's will deliver the following
remarks as prepared for delivery today at the World Affairs Council in Los Angeles, California:
When I was
five years old, a car pulled up in front of our house in
New London,
Connecticut, and a Navy officer rolled down the
window, and shouted at my father that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor. My father immediately left for the
submarine base where he was stationed. I rarely saw him again for four
years. My grandfather, who commanded the fast carrier task force under
Admiral Halsey, came home from the war exhausted from the burdens he had
borne, and died the next day. In Vietnam, where I formed the closest
friendships of my life, some of those friends never came home to the country
they loved so well. I detest war. It might not be the worst thing to
befall human beings, but it is wretched beyond all description. When
nations seek to resolve their differences by force of arms, a million
tragedies ensue. The lives of a nation's finest patriots are sacrificed.
Innocent people suffer and die. Commerce is disrupted; economies are
damaged; strategic interests shielded by years of patient statecraft are
endangered as the exigencies of war and diplomacy conflict. Not the valor
with which it is fought nor the nobility of the cause it serves, can glorify
war. Whatever gains are secured, it is loss the veteran remembers most
keenly. Only a fool or a fraud sentimentalizes the merciless reality of
war. However heady the appeal of a call to arms, however just the cause, we
should still shed a tear for all that is lost when war claims its wages from
us.
I am an
idealist, and I believe it is possible in our time to make the world we live
in another, better, more peaceful place, where our interests and those of
our allies are more secure, and American ideals that are transforming the
world, the principles of free people and free markets, advance even farther
than they have. But I am, from hard experience and the judgment it informs,
a realistic idealist. I know we must work very hard and very creatively to
build new foundations for a stable and enduring peace. We cannot wish the
world to be a better place than it is. We have enemies for whom no attack
is too cruel, and no innocent life safe, and who would, if they could,
strike us with the world's most terrible weapons. There are states that
support them, and which might help them acquire those weapons because they
share with terrorists the same animating hatred for the West, and will not
be placated by fresh appeals to the better angels of their nature. This is
the central threat of our time, and we must understand the implications of
our decisions on all manner of regional and global challenges could have for
our success in defeating it.
President
Harry Truman once said of America, "God has created us and
brought us to our present position of power and strength for some great
purpose." In his time, that purpose was to contain Communism and build the
structures of peace and prosperity that could provide safe passage through
the Cold War. Now it is our turn. We face a new set of opportunities, and
also new dangers. The developments of science and technology have brought
us untold prosperity, eradicated disease, and reduced the suffering of
millions. We have a chance in our lifetime to raise the world to a new
standard of human existence. Yet these same technologies have produced
grave new risks, arming a few zealots with the ability to murder millions of
innocents, and producing a global industrialization that can in time
threaten our planet.
To meet this
challenge requires understanding the world we live in, and the central role
the United States
must play in shaping it for the future. The
United States must lead in the 21st
century, just as in Truman's day. But leadership today means something
different than it did in the years after World War II, when Europe and the
other democracies were still recovering from the devastation of war and the
United States was the only democratic
superpower. Today we are not alone. There is the powerful collective voice
of the European Union, and there are the great nations of India and Japan,
Australia and Brazil, South Korea and South Africa, Turkey and Israel, to
name just a few of the leading democracies. There are also the increasingly
powerful nations of China and Russia that
wield great influence in the international system.
In such a
world, where power of all kinds is more widely and evenly distributed, the United States
cannot lead by virtue of its power alone. We must be strong politically,
economically, and militarily. But we must also lead by attracting others to
our cause, by demonstrating once again the virtues of freedom and democracy,
by defending the rules of international civilized society and by creating
the new international institutions necessary to advance the peace and
freedoms we cherish. Perhaps above all, leadership in today's world means
accepting and fulfilling our responsibilities as a great nation.
One of those
responsibilities is to be a good and reliable ally to our fellow
democracies. We cannot build an enduring peace based on freedom by
ourselves, and we do not want to. We have to strengthen our global
alliances as the core of a new global compact -- a League of Democracies --
that can harness the vast influence of the more than one hundred democratic
nations around the world to advance our values and defend our shared
interests.
At the heart
of this new compact must be mutual respect and trust. Recall the words of
our founders in the Declaration of Independence, that we pay "decent respect
to the opinions of mankind." Our great power does not mean we can do
whatever we want whenever we want, nor should we assume we have all the
wisdom and knowledge necessary to succeed. We need to listen to the views
and respect the collective will of our democratic allies. When we believe
international action is necessary, whether military, economic, or
diplomatic, we will try to persuade our friends that we are right. But we,
in return, must be willing to be persuaded by them.
America
must be a model citizen if we want others to look to us as a model. How we
behave at home affects how we are perceived abroad. We must fight the
terrorists and at the same time defend the rights that are the foundation of
our society. We can't torture or treat inhumanely suspected terrorists we
have captured. I believe we should close Guantanamo and work with
our allies to forge a new international understanding on the disposition of
dangerous detainees under our control.
There is
such a thing as international good citizenship. We need to be good stewards
of our planet and join with other nations to help preserve our common home.
The risks of global warming have no borders. We and the other nations of
the world must get serious about substantially reducing greenhouse gas
emissions in the coming years or we will hand off a much-diminished world to
our grandchildren. We need a successor to the Kyoto Treaty, a cap-and-trade
system that delivers the necessary environmental impact in an economically
responsible manner. We Americans must lead by example and encourage the
participation of the rest of the world, including most importantly, the
developing economic powerhouses of China and India.
Four and a
half decades ago, John Kennedy described the people of
Latin America
as our "firm and ancient friends, united by history and experience and by
our determination to advance the values of American civilization." With
globalization, our hemisphere has grown closer, more integrated, and more
interdependent. Latin America today is increasingly vital to the fortunes
of the United States.
Americans north and south share a common geography and a common destiny.
The countries of Latin America are the natural partners of the
United States, and our
northern neighbor Canada.
Relations
with our southern neighbors must be governed by mutual respect, not by an
imperial impulse or by anti-American demagoguery. The promise of North,
Central, and South American life is too great for that. I believe the Americas can and
must be the model for a new 21st century relationship between North and
South. Ours can be the first completely democratic hemisphere, where trade
is free across all borders, where the rule of law and the power of free
markets advance the security and prosperity of all.
Power in the
world today is moving east; the Asia-Pacific region is on the rise.
Together with our democratic partner of many decades, Japan, we can grasp the opportunities
present in the unfolding world and this century can become safe -- both
American and Asian, both prosperous and free. Asia
has made enormous strides in recent decades. Its economic achievements are
well known; less known is that more people live under democratic rule in
Asia than in any other region of the world.
Dealing with
a rising
China will be a central challenge for
the next American president. Recent prosperity in China has brought more people out of
poverty faster than during any other time in human history. China's newfound power implies
responsibilities. China could bolster its claim that it is "peacefully
rising" by being more transparent about its significant military buildup, by
working with the world to isolate pariah states such as Burma, Sudan and
Zimbabwe, and by ceasing its efforts to establish regional forums and
economic arrangements designed to exclude America from Asia.
China and
the United States
are not destined to be adversaries. We have numerous overlapping interests
and hope to see our relationship evolve in a manner that benefits both
countries and, in turn, the Asia-Pacific region and the world. But until China moves
toward political liberalization, our relationship will be based on
periodically shared interests rather than the bedrock of shared values.
The United States
did not single-handedly win the Cold War; the transatlantic alliance did, in
concert with partners around the world. The bonds we share with
Europe in terms of history, values, and interests are unique.
Americans should welcome the rise of a strong, confident European Union as
we continue to support a strong NATO. The future of the transatlantic
relationship lies in confronting the challenges of the twenty-first century
worldwide: developing a common energy policy, creating a transatlantic
common market tying our economies more closely together, addressing the
dangers posed by a revanchist Russia, and
institutionalizing our cooperation on issues such as climate change, foreign
assistance, and democracy promotion.
We should
start by ensuring that the G-8, the group of eight highly industrialized
states, becomes again a club of leading market democracies: it should
include Brazil and India but exclude Russia. Rather
than tolerate Russia's nuclear blackmail or cyber attacks,
Western nations should make clear that the solidarity of NATO, from the
Baltic to the Black Sea, is indivisible and
that the organization's doors remain open to all democracies committed to
the defense of freedom.
While Africa's problems -- poverty, corruption, disease, and
instability -- are well known, we must refocus on the bright promise offered
by many countries on that continent. We must strongly engage on a
political, economic, and security level with friendly governments across
Africa, but insist on improvements in transparency and the rule
of law. Many African nations will not reach their true potential without
external assistance to combat entrenched problems, such as HIV/AIDS, that
afflict Africans disproportionately. I will establish the goal of
eradicating malaria on the continent -- the number one killer of African
children under the age of five. In addition to saving millions of lives in
the world's poorest regions, such a campaign would do much to add luster to America's image in the world.
We also
share an obligation with the world's other great powers to halt and reverse
the proliferation of nuclear weapons. The United States and the international community
must work together and do all in our power to contain and reverse
North Korea's nuclear weapons
program and to prevent Iran
-- a nation whose President has repeatedly expressed a desire to wipe
Israel from the face of the earth --
from obtaining a nuclear weapon. We should work to reduce nuclear arsenals
all around the world, starting with our own. Forty years ago, the five
declared nuclear powers came together in support of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty and pledged to end the arms race and move toward
nuclear disarmament. The time has come to renew that commitment. We do not
need all the weapons currently in our arsenal. The
United States
should lead a global effort at nuclear disarmament consistent with our vital
interests and the cause of peace.
If we are
successful in pulling together a global coalition for peace and freedom --
if we lead by shouldering our international responsibilities and pointing
the way to a better and safer future for humanity, I believe we will gain
tangible benefits as a nation.
It will
strengthen us to confront the transcendent challenge of our time: the threat
of radical Islamic terrorism. This challenge is transcendent not because it
is the only one we face. There are many dangers in today's world, and our
foreign policy must be agile and effective at dealing with all of them. But
the threat posed by the terrorists is unique. They alone devote all their
energies and indeed their very lives to murdering innocent men, women, and
children. They alone seek nuclear weapons and other tools of mass
destruction not to defend themselves or to enhance their prestige or to give
them a stronger hand in world affairs but to use against us wherever and
whenever they can. Any president who does not regard this threat as
transcending all others does not deserve to sit in the White House, for he
or she does not take seriously enough the first and most basic duty a
president has -- to protect the lives of the American people.
We learned
through the tragic experience of September 11 that passive defense alone
cannot protect us. We must protect our borders. But we must also have an
aggressive strategy of confronting and rooting out the terrorists wherever
they seek to operate, and deny them bases in failed or failing states.
Today al Qaeda and other terrorist networks operate across the globe,
seeking out opportunities in Southeast Asia, Central Asia, Africa, and in
the
Middle East.
Prevailing
in this struggle will require far more than military force. It will require
the use of all elements of our national power: public diplomacy; development
assistance; law enforcement training; expansion of economic opportunity; and
robust intelligence capabilities. I have called for major changes in how
our government faces the challenge of radical Islamic extremism by much
greater resources for and integration of civilian efforts to prevent
conflict and to address post-conflict challenges. Our goal must be to win
the "hearts and minds" of the vast majority of moderate Muslims who do not
want their future controlled by a minority of violent extremists. In this
struggle, scholarships will be far more important than smart bombs.
We also need
to build the international structures for a durable peace in which the
radical extremists are gradually eclipsed by the more powerful forces of
freedom and tolerance. Our efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan are critical in this
respect and cannot be viewed in isolation from our broader strategy. In the
troubled and often dangerous region they occupy, these two nations can
either be sources of extremism and instability or they can in time become
pillars of stability, tolerance, and democracy.
For decades
in the greater
Middle East, we had a strategy of relying on
autocrats to provide order and stability. We relied on the Shah of Iran,
the autocratic rulers of
Egypt, the generals of
Pakistan, the Saudi royal family, and
even, for a time, on Saddam Hussein. In the late 1970s that strategy began
to unravel. The Shah was overthrown by the radical Islamic revolution that
now rules in Tehran.
The ensuing ferment in the Muslim world produced increasing instability.
The autocrats clamped down with ever greater repression, while also
surreptitiously aiding Islamic radicalism abroad in the hopes that they
would not become its victims. It was a toxic and explosive mixture. The
oppression of the autocrats blended with the radical Islamists' dogmatic
theology to produce a perfect storm of intolerance and hatred.
We can no
longer delude ourselves that relying on these out-dated autocracies is the
safest bet. They no longer provide lasting stability, only the illusion of
it. We must not act rashly or demand change overnight. But neither can we
pretend the status quo is sustainable, stable, or in our interests. Change
is occurring whether we want it or not. The only question for us is whether
we shape this change in ways that benefit humanity or let our enemies seize
it for their hateful purposes. We must help expand the power and reach of
freedom, using all our many strengths as a free people. This is not just
idealism. It is the truest kind of realism. It is the democracies of the
world that will provide the pillars upon which we can and must build an
enduring peace.
If you look
at the great arc that extends from the Middle East through Central Asia and
the Asian subcontinent all the way to Southeast Asia, you can see those
pillars of democracy stretching across the entire expanse, from Turkey and Israel to India and Indonesia. Iraq and Afghanistan lie at the heart of that
region. And whether they eventually become stable democracies themselves,
or are allowed to sink back into chaos and extremism, will determine not
only the fate of that critical part of the world, but our fate, as well.
That is the
broad strategic perspective through which to view our efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan. Many people ask, how
should we define success? Success in Iraq and Afghanistan is the establishment of
peaceful, stable, prosperous, democratic states that pose no threat to
neighbors and contribute to the defeat of terrorists. It is the triumph of
religious tolerance over violent radicalism.
Those who
argue that our goals in
Iraq are unachievable are
wrong, just as they were wrong a year ago when they declared the war in
Iraq already lost. Since June 2007
sectarian and ethnic violence in Iraq has been reduced by 90 percent.
Overall civilian deaths have been reduced by more than 70 percent. Deaths
of coalition forces have fallen by 70 percent. The dramatic reduction in
violence has opened the way for a return to something approaching normal
political and economic life for the average Iraqi. People are going back to
work. Markets are open. Oil revenues are climbing. Inflation is down. Iraq's economy is expected to grown
by roughly 7 percent in 2008. Political reconciliation is occurring across Iraq at the local and provincial
grassroots level. Sunni and Shi'a chased from their homes by terrorist and
sectarian violence are returning. Political progress at the national level
has been far too slow, but there is progress.
Critics say
that the "surge" of troops isn't a solution in itself, that we must make
progress toward Iraqi self-sufficiency. I agree. Iraqis themselves must
increasingly take responsibility for their own security, and they must
become responsible political actors. It does not follow from this, however,
that we should now recklessly retreat from
Iraq regardless of the consequences.
We must take the course of prudence and responsibility, and help Iraqis move
closer to the day when they no longer need our help.
That is the
route of responsible statesmanship. We have incurred a moral responsibility
in Iraq. It would be an unconscionable
act of betrayal, a stain on our character as a great nation, if we were to
walk away from the Iraqi people and consign them to the horrendous violence,
ethnic cleansing, and possibly genocide that would follow a reckless,
irresponsible, and premature withdrawal. Our critics say America needs to repair its image in
the world. How can they argue at the same time for the morally
reprehensible abandonment of our responsibilities in
Iraq?
Those who
claim we should withdraw from Iraq in order to fight Al Qaeda more
effectively elsewhere are making a dangerous mistake. Whether they were
there before is immaterial, al Qaeda is in
Iraq now, as it is in the borderlands between Pakistan and Afghanistan, in Somalia, and in Indonesia. If
we withdraw prematurely from
Iraq, al Qaeda in
Iraq will survive, proclaim victory
and continue to provoke sectarian tensions that, while they have been
subdued by the success of the surge, still exist, as various factions of
Sunni and Shi'a have yet to move beyond their ancient hatreds, and are ripe
for provocation by al Qaeda. Civil war in
Iraq could easily descend into
genocide, and destabilize the entire region as neighboring powers come to
the aid of their favored factions. I believe a reckless and premature
withdrawal would be a terrible defeat for our security interests and our
values. Iran will also
view our premature withdrawal as a victory, and the biggest state supporter
of terrorists, a country with nuclear ambitions and a stated desire to
destroy the State of Israel, will see its influence in the
Middle East grow significantly. These consequences of our
defeat would threaten us for years, and those who argue for it, as both
Democratic candidates do, are arguing for a course that would eventually
draw us into a wider and more difficult war that would entail far greater
dangers and sacrifices than we have suffered to date. I do not argue against
withdrawal, any more than I argued several years ago for the change in
tactics and additional forces that are now succeeding in
Iraq, because I am somehow
indifferent to war and the suffering it inflicts on too many American
families. I hold my position because I hate war, and I know very well and
very personally how grievous its wages are. But I know, too, that we must
sometimes pay those wages to avoid paying even higher ones later.
I run for
President because I want to keep the country I love and have served all my
life safe, and to rise to the challenges of our times, as generations before
us rose to theirs. I run for President because I know it is incumbent on
America, more than any other nation on earth, to lead in building the
foundations for a stable and enduring peace, a peace built on the strength
of our commitment to it, on the transformative ideals on which we were
founded, on our ability to see around the corner of history, and on our
courage and wisdom to make hard choices. I run because I believe, as
strongly as I ever have, that it is within our power to make in our time
another, better world than we inherited.
Thank you.