III. Strengthen Alliances to Defeat
Global Terrorism and Work to Prevent
Attacks Against Us and Our Friends
Just three days removed from these events, Americans do not yet have
the distance of history. But our responsibility to history is already clear:
to answer these attacks and rid the world of evil.War has been
waged against us by stealth and deceit and murder. This nation is peaceful,
but fierce when stirred to anger. The conflict was begun on the timing and terms
of others. It will end in a way, and at an hour, of our choosing.
President Bush
Washington, D.C. (The National Cathedral)
September 14, 2001
The United States of America is fighting
a war against terrorists of global reach. The
enemy is not a single political regime or person
or religion or ideology. The enemy is terrorism
premeditated, politically motivated violence
perpetrated against innocents.
In many regions, legitimate grievances prevent
the emergence of a lasting peace. Such grievances
deserve to be, and must be, addressed within a
political process. But no cause justifies terror. The
United States will make no concessions to terrorist
demands and strike no deals with them.We make
no distinction between terrorists and those who
knowingly harbor or provide aid to them.
The struggle against global terrorism is different
from any other war in our history. It will be fought
on many fronts against a particularly elusive
enemy over an extended period of time. Progress
will come through the persistent accumulation of
successessome seen, some unseen.
Today our enemies have seen the results of
what civilized nations can, and will, do against
regimes that harbor, support, and use terrorism to
achieve their political goals. Afghanistan has been
liberated; coalition forces continue to hunt down
the Taliban and al-Qaida. But it is not only this
battlefield on which we will engage terrorists.
Thousands of trained terrorists remain at large
with cells in North America, South America,
Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and across Asia.
Our priority will be first to disrupt and destroy
terrorist organizations of global reach and attack
their leadership; command, control, and communications;
material support; and finances. This will
have a disabling effect upon the terrorists ability
to plan and operate.
We will continue to encourage our regional
partners to take up a coordinated effort that
isolates the terrorists. Once the regional campaign
localizes the threat to a particular state, we will
help ensure the state has the military, law enforcement,
political, and financial tools necessary to
finish the task.
The United States will continue to work with
our allies to disrupt the financing of terrorism.We
will identify and block the sources of funding for
terrorism, freeze the assets of terrorists and those
who support them, deny terrorists access to the
international financial system, protect legitimate
charities from being abused by terrorists, and
prevent the movement of terrorists assets through
alternative financial networks.
However, this campaign need not be sequential
to be effective, the cumulative effect across all
regions will help achieve the results we seek.
We will disrupt and destroy terrorist
organizations by:
- direct and continuous action using all the
elements of national and international
power. Our immediate focus will be those
terrorist organizations of global reach and
any terrorist or state sponsor of terrorism
which attempts to gain or use weapons of
mass destruction (WMD) or their precursors;
- defending the United States, the American
people, and our interests at home and
abroad by identifying and destroying the
threat before it reaches our borders.While
the United States will constantly strive to
enlist the support of the international
community, we will not hesitate to act alone,
if necessary, to exercise our right of selfdefense
by acting preemptively against such
terrorists, to prevent them from doing harm
against our people and our country; and
- denying further sponsorship, support,
and sanctuary to terrorists by convincing
or compelling states to accept their
sovereign responsibilities.
We will also wage a war of ideas to win the battle
against international terrorism. This includes:
- using the full influence of the United States,
and working closely with allies and friends,
to make clear that all acts of terrorism are
illegitimate so that terrorism will be viewed
in the same light as slavery, piracy, or
genocide: behavior that no respectable
government can condone or support and
all must oppose;
- supporting moderate and modern
government, especially in the Muslim
world, to ensure that the conditions and
ideologies that promote terrorism do not
find fertile ground in any nation;
- diminishing the underlying conditions
that spawn terrorism by enlisting the
international community to focus its efforts
and resources on areas most at risk; and
- using effective public diplomacy to promote
the free flow of information and ideas to
kindle the hopes and aspirations of freedom
of those in societies ruled by the sponsors of
global terrorism.
While we recognize that our best defense is a
good offense, we are also strengthening Americas
homeland security to protect against and deter attack.
This Administration has proposed the largest
government reorganization since the Truman
Administration created the National Security
Council and the Department of Defense. Centered
on a new Department of Homeland Security and
including a new unified military command and a
fundamental reordering of the FBI, our comprehensive
plan to secure the homeland encompasses
every level of government and the cooperation
of the public and the private sector.
This strategy will turn adversity into
opportunity. For example, emergency management
systems will be better able to cope not just with
terrorism but with all hazards. Our medical
system will be strengthened to manage not just
bioterror, but all infectious diseases and
mass-casualty dangers. Our border controls will
not just stop terrorists, but improve the efficient
movement of legitimate traffic.
While our focus is protecting America, we
know that to defeat terrorism in todays globalized
world we need support from our allies and
friends.Wherever possible, the United States will
rely on regional organizations and state powers to
meet their obligations to fight terrorism. Where
governments find the fight against terrorism
beyond their capacities, we will match their
willpower and their resources with whatever help
we and our allies can provide.
As we pursue the terrorists in Afghanistan,
we will continue to work with international
organizations such as the United Nations, as well
as non-governmental organizations, and other
countries to provide the humanitarian, political,
economic, and security assistance necessary to
rebuild Afghanistan so that it will never again
abuse its people, threaten its neighbors, and
provide a haven for terrorists.
In the war against global terrorism, we will
never forget that we are ultimately fighting for our
democratic values and way of life. Freedom and
fear are at war, and there will be no quick or easy
end to this conflict. In leading the campaign
against terrorism, we are forging new, productive
international relationships and redefining existing
ones in ways that meet the challenges of the
twenty-first century.
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