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October 18, 2005 RededicationBy John B. DwyerIn the latest of a series of historic actions, the Iraqi people have voted overwhelmingly for a new constitution. In so doing they have affirmed their preference for democracy and rejected resoundingly nihilistic terrorism. They have re—affirmed the Preamble to their interim constitution — the Transitional Administrative Law — which stated
These stirring words were written only a year after Operation Iraqi Freedom began, a year after President George Bush, on the night of March 19 2003, addressed America from the White House. He told us that the liberation of Iraq had begun, that
The President stressed the fact that
In September 2004, Iraq's interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, referred to by some as the George Washington of that country, addressed the United States Congress. In a stem winder of a speech too many have forgotten, he thanked America for its sacrifices and reminded us all that Iraq was
He spoke to the doubters who wondered aloud if Iraqis can achieve democracy. They
In closing, PM Allawi avowed that
Iraq is an ancient land, the birthplace of Abraham and Salah—ad—Din, home of Nebuchadenezzar, a country where Sumerians and Assyrians lived and fought, where Alexander the Great defeated Darius III of Persia for the second time. It is home to the fabled Hanging Gardens of Babylon and was once the capital of the Moslem world under Mohammed's son—in—law Ali. But Iraq is perhaps best known as the site of the 'Fertile Crescent,' the place called Mesopotamia, or 'the land between the rivers.' It was the birthplace of several civilizations. Between the Tigris of a strong, dedicated coalition and the Euphrates of a brave, determined Iraqi people, it is now the birthplace of a new democracy in the Middle East, flanked by waters consecrated with the blood of soldiers united in common cause, flowing towards the future with irreversible momentum. The sources of these rivers are as old as the natural human desire for liberty and freedom, as new as the aftermath of Operation Desert Storm. After his forces had been kicked out of Kuwait, Saddam Hussein agreed to abide by various UN Security Council resolutions. He proceeded to violate them all, and in 1991, threw out UN weapons inspectors. Eight years later, Congress concluded that Iraq's WMD program threatened US national security; that Iraq was 'in material and unacceptable breach of its international obligations' and urged the president to take appropriate action. There followed congressional authorization for the use of military force in Iraq and the 1998 Iraq Liberation Act. Congress passed House Joint Resolution 114 on October 2, 2002, which again authorized the president to use force against Iraq. Five months before that, with Operation Enduring Freedom just concluded in Afghanistan, President Bush, in a speech at the Virginia Military Institute, said
He cited military, diplomatic and financial facets of the battle, adding
In the three years since that VMI speech, as Iraq held its first free elections in decades and established an interim government on the path to full independence and sovereignty, President Bush has repeated these fundamental themes and reminded Americans and the world of the great progress achieved by that long oppressed citizenry. In a June 28, 2005 speech from Ft. Bragg he defined the nature of our terrorist enemy who come not only from Iraq, but from Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Yemen, Libya and elsewhere.
In the aftermath of tremendously successful elections for the new Iraqi constitution, we must re—dedicate ourselves and contemplate the sacrifices made by our Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines and their families. Armed with indefatigable perseverance and indomitable will, let us embody our president's words and be tough, determined and relentless until our goal of 'Victory — unconditional, unapologetic and unyielding' as Defense Secretary Rumseld recently defined it, is achieved. John B. Dwyer is a military historian. on "Rededication"
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