[Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents Volume 37, Number 50 (Monday, December 17, 2001)]
[Pages 1775-1780]
[Online from the Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]
<R04>
Remarks at the Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina
December 11, 2001
Thank you all very much. Please be seated. Thank you for that warm
welcome. I'm glad to be back here at the Citadel.
I have come to talk about the future security of our country, in a
place where I took up this subject 2 years ago as candidate for
President. In September 1999 I said here at the Citadel that America was
entering a period of consequences that would be defined by the threat of
terror and that we faced a
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challenge of military transformation. That threat has now revealed
itself, and that challenge is now the military and moral necessity of
our time. So today I will set forth the commitments essential to victory
in our war against terror.
I want to thank Major General John Grinalds for his hospitality. I
want to thank the Citadel Board of Visitors, the staff, and the faculty.
I understand the Governor is here. And I know my friends the Lieutenant
Governor, the speaker, and the attorney general are here, and it was
great to have seen them at the airport. I thank my friend Adjutant
General Stan Spears for being here.
I'm grateful that Senator Hollings and members of the South Carolina
congressional delegation flew down on Air Force One. I only wish that
the senior Senator was on the airplane so I could have wished him a
happy 99th birthday.
But most of all--most of all--I want to say how much I appreciate
being in the presence of some of America's finest, the South Carolina
Corps of Cadets of Citadel.
Four days ago I joined the men and women of the U.S.S. Enterprise to
mark the 60th anniversary of Pearl Harbor. December 7th, 1941, was a
decisive day that changed our Nation forever. In a single moment,
America's ``splendid isolation'' was ended. And the 4 years that
followed transformed the American way of war.
The age of battleships gave way to the offensive capability of
aircraft carriers. The tank, once used only to protect infantry, now
served to cut through enemy lines. At Guadalcanal and Normandy and Iwo
Jima amphibious warfare proved its worth, and by war's end, no one would
ever again doubt the value of strategic air power.
Even more importantly, an American President and his successors
shaped a world beyond a war. They rebuilt Europe with the Marshall plan,
formed a great alliance for freedom in NATO, and expressed the hope of
collective security in the United Nations. America took the lead,
becoming freedom's defender and assuming responsibilities that only we
could bear.
September the 11th, 2001--3 months and a long time ago--set another
dividing line in our lives and in the life of our Nation. An illusion of
immunity was shattered. A faraway evil became a present danger. And a
great cause became clear: We will fight terror and those who sponsor it,
to save our children from a future of fear.
To win this war, we have to think differently. The enemy who
appeared on September the 11th seeks to evade our strength and
constantly searches for our weaknesses. So America is required once
again to change the way our military thinks and fights. And starting on
October 7th, the enemy in Afghanistan got the first glimpses of a new
American military that cannot and will not be evaded.
When I committed U.S. forces to this battle, I had every confidence
that they would be up to the task, and they have proven me right. The
Taliban and the terrorists set out to dominate a country and intimidate
the world. Today, from their caves, it's all looking a little different.
And no cave is deep enough to escape the patient justice of the United
States of America.
We are also beginning to see the possibilities of a world beyond the
war on terror. We have a chance, if we take it, to write a hopeful
chapter in human history. All at once, a new threat to civilization is
erasing old lines of rivalry and resentment between nations. Russia and
America are building a new cooperative relationship. India and the
United States are increasingly aligned across a range of issues, even as
we work closely with Pakistan. Germany and Japan are assuming new
military roles appropriate to their status as great democracies. The
vast majority of countries are now on the same side of a moral and
ideological divide. We're making common cause with every nation that
chooses lawful change over chaotic violence, every nation that values
peace and safety and innocent life.
Staring across this divide are bands of murderers supported by
outlaw regimes. They are a movement defined by their hatreds. They hate
progress and freedom and choice and culture and music and laughter and
women and Christians and Jews and all Muslims who reject their distorted
doctrines. They love only one thing; they love power. And when they have
it, they use it without mercy.
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The great threat to civilization is not that the terrorists will
inspire millions. Only the terrorists themselves would want to live in
their brutal and joyless world. The great threat to civilization is that
a few evil men will multiply their murders and gain the means to kill on
a scale equal to their hatred. We know they have this mad intent, and
we're determined to stop them. Our lives, our way of life, and our every
hope for the world depend on a single commitment: The authors of mass
murder must be defeated and never allowed to gain or use the weapons of
mass destruction.
America and our friends will meet this threat with every method at
our disposal. We will discover and destroy sleeper cells. We will track
terrorist movements, trace their communications, disrupt their funding,
and take their network apart piece by piece.
Above all, we're acting to end the state sponsorship of terror.
Rogue states are clearly the most likely sources of chemical and
biological and nuclear weapons for terrorists. Every nation now knows
that we cannot accept--and we will not accept--states that harbor,
finance, train, or equip the agents of terror. Those nations that
violate this principle will be regarded as hostile regimes. They have
been warned. They are being watched, and they will be held to account.
Preventing mass terror will be the responsibilities of Presidents
far into the future. And this obligation sets three urgent and enduring
priorities for America. The first priority is to speed the
transformation of our military.
When the cold war ended, some predicted that the era of direct
threats to our Nation was over. Some thought our military would be used
overseas--not to win wars but mainly to police and pacify, to control
crowds and contain ethnic conflict. They were wrong.
While the threats to America have changed, the need for victory has
not. We are fighting shadowy, entrenched enemies, enemies using the
tools of terror and guerrilla war. Yet we are finding new tactics and
new weapons to attack and defeat them. This revolution in our military
is only beginning, and it promises to change the face of battle.
Afghanistan has been a proving ground for this new approach. These
past 2 months have shown that an innovative doctrine and high-tech
weaponry can shape and then dominate an unconventional conflict. The
brave men and women of our military are rewriting the rules of war with
new technologies and old values like courage and honor, and they have
made this Nation proud.
Our commanders are gaining a real-time picture of the entire
battlefield and are able to get targeting information from sensor to
shooter almost instantly. Our intelligence professionals and special
forces have cooperated in battle-friendly--with battle-friendly Afghan
forces, fighters who know the terrain, who know the Taliban, and who
understand the local culture. And our special forces have the technology
to call in precision airstrikes, along with the flexibility to direct
those strikes from horseback, in the first cavalry charge of the 21st
century.
This combination--real-time intelligence, local allied forces,
special forces, and precision air power--has really never been used
before. The conflict in Afghanistan has taught us more about the future
of our military than a decade of blue ribbon panels and think-tank
symposiums.
The Predator is a good example. This unmanned aerial vehicle is able
to circle over enemy forces, gather intelligence, transmit information
instantly back to commanders, then fire on targets with extreme
accuracy. Before the war, the Predator had skeptics because it did not
fit the old ways. Now it is clear the military does not have enough
unmanned vehicles. We're entering an era in which unmanned vehicles of
all kinds will take on greater importance in space, on land, in the air,
and at sea.
Precision-guided munitions also offer great promise. In the Gulf
war, these weapons were the exception, while in Afghanistan, they have
been the majority of the munitions we have used. We're striking with
greater effectiveness, at greater range, with fewer civilian casualties.
More and more, our weapons can hit moving targets. When all of our
military can continuously locate and track moving targets with
surveillance from air and space, warfare will be truly revolutionized.
The need for military transformation was clear before the conflict
in Afghanistan and
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before September the 11th. Here at the Citadel in 1999, I spoke of
keeping the peace by redefining war on our terms. The same
recommendation was made in the strategic review that Secretary Rumsfeld
briefed me on last August, a review that I fully endorse. What's
different today is our sense of urgency, the need to build this future
force while fighting a present war. It's like overhauling an engine
while you're going at 80 miles an hour. Yet we have no other choice.
Our military has a new and essential mission. For states that
support terror, it's not enough that the consequences be costly; they
must be devastating. The more credible this reality, the more likely
that regimes will change their behavior, making it less likely that
America and our friends will need to use overwhelming force against
them.
To build our future force, the Armed Services must continue to
attract America's best people with good pay and good living conditions.
Our military culture must reward new thinking, innovation, and
experimentation. Congress must give defense leaders the freedom to
innovate, instead of micromanaging the Defense Department. And every
service and every constituency of our military must be willing to
sacrifice some of their own pet projects. Our war on terror cannot be
used to justify obsolete bases, obsolete programs, or obsolete weapon
systems. Every dollar of defense spending must meet a single test: It
must help us build the decisive power we will need to win the wars of
the future.
Our country is united in supporting a great cause and in supporting
those who fight for it. We will give our men and women in uniform every
resource, every weapon, every tool they need to win the long battle that
lies ahead.
America's next priority to prevent mass terror is to protect against
the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and the means to
deliver them. I wish I could report to the American people that this
threat does not exist, that our enemy is content with car bombs and box
cutters, but I cannot.
One former Al Qaida member has testified in court that he was
involved in an effort 10 years ago to obtain nuclear materials. And the
leader of Al Qaida calls that effort a religious duty. Abandoned Al
Qaida houses in Kabul contained diagrams for crude weapons of mass
destruction. And as we all know, terrorists have put anthrax into the
U.S. mail and used sarin gas in a Tokyo subway.
And almost every state that actively sponsors terror is known to be
seeking weapons of mass destruction and the missiles to deliver them at
longer and longer ranges. Their hope is to blackmail the United States
into abandoning our war on terror and forsaking our friends and allies
and security commitments around the world. Our enemies are bound for
disappointment. America will never be blackmailed, and we will never
forsake our commitment to liberty.
To meet our new threats, I have directed my National Security
Adviser and my Homeland Security Director to develop a comprehensive
strategy on proliferation. Working with other countries, we will
strengthen nonproliferation treaties and toughen export controls.
Together, we must keep the world's most dangerous technologies out of
the hands of the world's most dangerous people.
A crucial partner in this effort is Russia, a nation we are helping
to dismantle strategic weapons, reduce nuclear material, and increase
security at nuclear sites. Our two countries will expand efforts to
provide peaceful employment for scientists who formerly worked in Soviet
weapons facilities. The United States will also work with Russia to
build a facility to destroy tons of nerve agent. I'll request an overall
increase in funding to support this vital mission.
Even as we fight to prevent proliferation, we must prepare for every
possibility. At home, we must be better prepared to detect, protect
against, and respond to the potential use of weapons of mass
destruction. Abroad, our military forces must have the ability to fight
and win against enemies who would use such weapons against us.
Biodefense has become a major initiative of ours. This year we've
already requested nearly $3 billion additional dollars for biodefense,
more than doubling the level of funding prior to September the 11th.
The attacks on our Nation made it even more clear that we need to
build limited and effective defenses against a missile attack. Our
enemies seek every chance and every
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means to do harm to our country, our forces, and our friends, and we
will not permit it.
Suppose the Taliban and the terrorists had been able to strike
America or important allies with a ballistic missile. Our coalition
would have become fragile, the stakes in our war much, much higher. We
must protect Americans and our friends against all forms of terror,
including the terror that could arrive on a missile.
Last week we conducted another promising test of our missile defense
technology. For the good of peace, we're moving forward with an active
program to determine what works and what does not work. In order to do
so, we must move beyond the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, a treaty
that was written in a different era for a different enemy. America and
our allies must not be bound to the past. We must be able to build the
defenses we need against the enemies of the 21st century.
Our third and final priority in the fight against mass terror is to
strengthen the advantage that good intelligence gives our country. Every
day I make decisions influenced by the intelligence briefing of that
morning. To reach decisions, a President needs more than data and
information; a President needs real and current knowledge and analysis
of the plans, intentions, and capabilities of our enemies.
The last several months have shown that there is no substitute for
good intelligence officers, people on the ground. These are the people
who find the targets, follow our enemies, and help us disrupt their evil
plans.
The United States must rebuild our network of human intelligence.
And we will apply the best new technology to gather intelligence on the
new threats. Sophisticated systems like Global Hawk, an unmanned
surveillance plane, are transforming our intelligence capabilities. Our
technological strengths produce great advantages, and we will build on
them.
Our intelligence services and Federal law enforcement agencies must
work more closely together and share timely information with our State
and local authorities. The more we know, the more terrorist plans we can
prevent and disrupt, and the better we'll be able to protect the
American people.
And in all they do, our intelligence agencies must attract the best
people, the best collectors, the best analysts, the best linguists. We
will give them the training they need and the compensation they deserve.
There have been times here in America when our intelligence services
were held in suspicion and even contempt. Now, when we face this new
war, we know how much we need them. And for their dedication and for
their service, America is grateful.
We're also grateful to you, the students of the Citadel. Your
uniforms symbolize a tradition of honor and sacrifice, renewed in your
own lives. Many of you will enter our military, taking your place in the
war against terror. That struggle may continue for many years, and it
may bring great costs. But you will have chosen a great calling at a
crucial hour for our Nation.
The course we follow is a matter of profound consequence to many
nations. If America wavers, the world will lose heart. If America leads,
the world will show its courage. America will never waver. America will
lead the world to peace. Our cause is necessary. Our cause is just. And
no matter how long it takes, we will defeat the enemies of freedom.
In all that is to come, I know the graduates of the Citadel will
bring credit to America, to the military, and to this great institution.
In the words of your school song, you will go where you've always gone:
``in the paths our fathers showed us . . . . Peace and Honor, God and
Country, we will fight for thee.''
God bless.
Note: The President spoke at 1:54 p.m. in McAlister Field House. In his
remarks, he referred to Maj. Gen. John S. Grinalds, USMC (Ret.),
president, the Citadel; and Gov. Jim H. Hodges, Lt. Gov. Bob Peeler,
Attorney General Charlie Condon, Adj. Gen. Stanhope S. Spears, and
Speaker of the House of Representatives David H. Wilkins of South
Carolina. On September 23, 1999, candidate George W. Bush spoke at the
Citadel, delivering a speech entitled, ``A Period of Consequences.''
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