Remarks as delivered
by Secretary
of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, Baghdad, Iraq,
Friday, December 5, 2003.
Television Address to the
Iraqi People
I
am delighted to be back in Iraq. This is my third visit to your country
since liberation. Each time I return, I see more signs of progress.
Schools
and universities are open. A new currency is in circulation. Baghdad is
bustling with commerce. Slowly, but surely, you - the Iraqi people -
are
taking back your country, building a free society from the remains of
Saddam
Hussein's tyranny.
Still the security situation
remains
difficult, as remnants of the defeated regime seek to derail this
progress
and stop Iraq's transition from tyranny to freedom and self-government.
They will not be permitted to do so. The Coalition is dealing
forcefully
with them. And at the forefront of the fight are many thousands of
brave
Iraqis, who have stepped forward to defend their country.
Today, in Kirkuk and
Baghdad, I had
a chance to meet with some of the courageous Iraqi fighters who have
volunteered
to serve in the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps. They are
impressive.
They are serving alongside many other brave Iraqis, who have joined the
new Iraqi Army, as well as the border guard, police and facilities
protection
service - and the equally courageous civilians, who are serving in
local
and national governing institutions, paving the way for the
establishment
of a transitional government next year, a new Iraqi constitution and
free
elections.
Since liberation, more than
145,000
Iraqis have stepped forward to take up arms against the terrorists. So
many of your countrymen have volunteered to serve that today Iraq has
now
become the single largest contributor of forces to the Coalition. That
is something all Iraqis can be proud of.
Increasingly, Iraqis are
taking the
lead in security operations, with U.S. and Coalition forces playing a
supporting
role. This is fitting and appropriate -- because this is your country,
and while Coalition forces can help, its future is in your hands.
The battle in Iraq today is
not a fight
between Iraqis and foreign forces -- it is a battle between free Iraqis
and the last remnants of a defeated regime, who still do not realize
that
their cause is lost.
One day, when the history of
Iraq's
liberation is written, young Iraqis will study that
history.
And they will learn that foreign troops were not the only ones who
fought
and died for the liberation of Iraq.
They will read about the
heroism of
so many brave Iraqis who struggled and sacrificed, and gave their
lives,
for their country's freedom.
They will look with pride on
their service
and sacrifice -- and honor their vital role in bringing the era of
Ba'athist
terror to an end.
But let me be clear: Our
Coalition of
34 nations will not abandon Iraq. We will leave only when the task is
finished
-- but not a moment sooner.
As President Bush said here
in Baghdad
last week, "we did not charge hundreds of miles into the heart of Iraq,
pay a bitter cost in casualties, defeat a brutal dictator and liberate
25 million people, only to retreat before a band of thugs and
assassins."
The Coalition intends to
stay in Iraq
as long as it takes to finish the job. We will not be intimidated. We
will
not cut and run. We will stay the course, and help you secure a future
of freedom for your children - so that for them, Ba'athist terror will
be not a daily reality, but rather a sad chapter in the history
books
they read in school.
Thank you for listening.
from: Department
of Defense Website
