Support
Our Troops
By Deputy Secretary of
Defense Paul
Wolfowitz,
as published in The Wall Street
Journal,
Tuesday, September 2, 2003.
When
terrorists exploded a bomb outside a shrine in Najaf last week, they
killed
scores of Muslims who had gathered for prayers -- including one of
Iraq's
foremost Shiite leaders, who had been playing a key role in stabilizing
post-Saddam Iraq. Similarly, when a bomb detonated in the U.N.
headquarters
in Baghdad recently, those killed and injured were innocent men and
women
-- including Iraqis -- who were engaged in the humanitarian mission of
rebuilding Iraq.
But those victims weren't
the only targets.
Terrorists were aiming a blow at something they hate even more -- the
prospect
of a country freed from their control and moving to become an Iraq of,
by, and for the Iraqi people. Terrorists recognize that Iraq is on a
course
towards self-government that is irreversible and, once achieved, will
be
an example to all in the Muslim world who desire freedom, pointing a
way
out of the hopelessness that the extremists feed on. And so, they test
our will, the will of the Iraqi people, and the will of the civilized
world.
While we can't yet fix blame
for this
most recent act of terrorism, we do know this: Despite their
differences,
the criminal remnants of Saddam's sadistic regime share a common goal
with
foreign terrorists -- to bring about the failure of Iraqi
reconstruction
and take the country back to the sort of tyrannical prison from which
it
has just been freed. The recent broadcast of a taped message by an
alleged
al Qaeda spokesman offered congratulations to "our brothers in Iraq for
their valiant struggle against the occupation, which we support and
urge
them to continue."

Anyone who thinks that the
battle in
Iraq is a distraction from the war on terror should tell it to the
Marines
of the 1st Marine Division who comprised the eastern flank of the force
that fought its way to Baghdad last April. When I met recently
with
their commander, Maj. General Jim Mattis in Hillah, he said that the
two
groups who fought most aggressively during the major combat operations
were the Fedayeen Saddam -- homegrown thugs with a cult-like attachment
to Saddam -- and foreign fighters, principally from other Arab
countries.
The exit card found in the passport of one of these foreigners even
stated
that the purpose of his "visit" to Iraq was to "volunteer for jihad."
We face that poisonous
mixture of former
regime loyalists and foreign fighters today.
Even before the bombing of
the U.N.
headquarters, if you'd asked Gen. Mattis and his Marines, there was no
question in their minds that the battle they wage -- the battle to
secure
the peace in Iraq -- is now the central battle in the war on terrorism.
It's the same with the commander of the Army's 1st Armored Division,
Brig.
Gen. Martin Dempsey, who recently described that second group as
"international
terrorists or extremists who see this as the Super Bowl." They're going
to Iraq, he said, "to take part in something they think will advance
their
cause." He added, "They're wrong, of course." Among the hundreds of
enemy
that we have captured in the last months are more than 200 foreign
terrorists
who came to Iraq to kill Americans and Iraqis and to do everything they
can to prevent a free and successful Iraq from emerging. They
must
be defeated -- and they will be.

Our regional commander, Gen.
John Abizaid,
head of Central Command, echoed Gen. Dempsey, placing in larger
perspective
the battle in Iraq. He said, "The whole difficulty in the global war on
terrorism is that this is a phenomenon without borders. And the heart
of
the problem is in this particular region, and the heart of the region
happens
to be Iraq. If we can't be successful here, we won't be successful in
the
global war on terrorism." Success in Iraq will not be easy. According
to
Gen. Abizaid, it will be long, hard and sometimes bloody; but "it is a
chance, when you combine it with initiatives in the Arab/Israeli
theater
and initiatives elsewhere, to make life better, to bring peace to an
area
where people are very, very talented and resources are abundant,
especially
here in Iraq."
Foreign terrorists who go to
Iraq to
kill Americans understand this: If killing Americans leads to our
defeat
and the restoration of the old regime, they would score an enormous
strategic
victory for terrorism -- and for the forces of oppression and
intolerance,
rage and despair, hatred and revenge. Iraqis understand this.
Alongside
us, they are working hard to fight the forces of anger and hopelessness
and to seize this historic opportunity to
move their country forward.
Just as in the Cold War,
holding the
line in Berlin and Korea was not just about those places alone. It was
about the resolve of the free world. Once that resolve was made clear
to
the Soviets, communism eventually collapsed. The same thing will happen
to terrorism -- and to all those who have attempted to hijack Islam and
threaten America and the rest of the free world, which now includes
Iraq.
They will see our resolve and the resolve of the free world. Then they,
too, will take their place on the ash heap of history.

America's troops and our
coalition partners
are determined to win -- and they will win, if we continue to give them
the moral and material support they need to do the job. As the
president
said recently, our forces are on the offensive. And as Army Vice Chief
of Staff Gen. John Keane said in congressional testimony, "They bring
the
values of the American people to this conflict. They understand
firmness,
they understand determination. But they also understand
compassion.
Those values are on display every day as they switch from dealing with
an enemy to taking care of a family."
I saw the troops in Iraq,
and Gen. Keane
is absolutely right. I can tell you that they, above all, understand
the
war they are fighting. They understand the stakes involved. And they
will
not be deterred from their mission by desperate acts of a dying regime
or ideology.
Not long ago, a woman named
Christy
Ferer traveled to Iraq along with the USO. She'd lost her husband Neil
Levin at the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, and she wanted to say
thank
you to the troops in Baghdad. She wrote a wonderful piece about her
trip,
and in it, she wondered why our soldiers would want to see her, when
they
could see the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders, movie stars and a model. When
the soldiers heard that a trio of Sept. 11 family members were there,
she
found out why.
Young men and women from
across America
rushed to the trio, eager to touch them and talk to them. One soldier,
a mother of two, told Christy she'd enlisted because of Sept. 11.
Another soldier displayed the metal bracelet he wore, engraved with the
name of a victim of 9/11. Others came forward with memorabilia from the
World Trade Center they carried with them into Baghdad. And when it was
Christy's turn to present Gen. Tommy Franks with a piece of steel
recovered
from the Trade Towers, she saw this great soldier's eyes well
up with tears. Then, she
watched as
they streamed down his face on center stage before 4,000 troops.
To those who think the
battle in Iraq
is a distraction from the global war against terrorism . . . tell that
to our troops.
