For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
May 16, 2006
President Bush Welcomes Prime Minister Howard of Australia in Arrival Ceremony at the White House
The South Lawn
Official Visit of the Prime Minister of Australia
In Focus: Global Diplomacy
9:16 A.M. EDT
PRESIDENT BUSH: Good morning. Laura and I are honored to welcome
Prime Minister John Howard, and his wife Janette, back to the White
House.
Australia and the United States share timeless values. On opposite
sides of the Pacific, our peoples created lands of opportunity and
offered millions the hope of new beginnings. As frontier peoples, we
cherish the spirit of discovery. We believe that men and women who
dream big and work hard can create a better world.
Australians and Americans also believe in the power of freedom.
Our two nations were once remote outposts of liberty, lands where those
escaping tyranny could find a better life. Today freedom is on the
move. Australians and Americans celebrate freedom's advance, because
nations that respect the rights and dignity of their own people are the
best partners for peace and the strongest anchors of stability in every
region of the world.
Freedom has enemies, and for more than a hundred years, Australians
and Americans have joined together to defend freedom. Together we
fought the Battle of Hamel in World War I. Together we fought in World
War II from the beaches of Normandy to the waters of the Coral Sea.
Together we fought in Korea and Vietnam. And together we're fighting,
and winning, the global war on terror.
Prime Minister Howard, you and I stood together here at the White
House the day before September the 11th, 2001. And our nations have
stood together on every day afterwards. The American people know that
Australia is a strong ally. We admire your courage, and we appreciate
your sacrifice.
We share your grief over the loss of your own countrymen who were
brutally attacked in Bali. We share your determination to defeat those
who murder the innocent to promote their ideology of hatred. To defeat
the terrorists, we must stay on the offensive, and Australia has been on
the front lines of every offensive in the war on terror.
In Afghanistan, the first casualty among American allies was an
Australian. In Iraq, Australian special operation forces were among the
first coalition units on the ground. The bravery and skill of the
Australian military have helped the people of these two nations claim
their freedom and deny the terrorists safe havens from which to launch
further attacks.
The war has reaffirmed the strength of our alliance, yet our
alliance is only one component of our broad partnership. Australia and
the United States signed a free trade agreement in 2004 because we
recognize that open markets create greater prosperity for both our
peoples. We're cooperating to expand trade worldwide. In the Doha
negotiations, Australia and America speak with one voice. We continue
to urge all parties to reduce global trade barriers that keep millions
in the developing world mired in poverty.
Our two nations accept other global responsibilities, as well. We
helped to build the Asia Pacific Partnership on Clean Development and
Climate so we can make the latest energy technologies available to all
to increase efficiency and reduce pollution.
We've pooled our resources to help the victims of natural
disasters, and we're working together to meet the threat of pandemic
disease. We share a common approach to security issues, including Iran
and North Korea. Our two nations are closer than ever, and Americans
admire Australia's strong leader. Prime Minister John Howard has
affirmed our common values. He's strengthened our alliance. He's built
on our long history of partnership. I value his counsel. I admire his
courage.
Mr. Prime Minister and Mrs. Howard, thank you for making the long
journey. We welcome you with the honor due to a valiant nation and with
the warmth of close friends. Welcome to America. (Applause.)
PRIME MINISTER HOWARD: Mr. President and Mrs. Bush, Mr. Vice
President and Mrs. Cheney, and ladies and gentlemen: Can I say to you,
Mr. President, for myself and my wife, and I know all of the Australians
present here today, how much we welcome and appreciate the warmth and
generosity of the hospitality and welcome that you have extended to us.
It is possible, Mr. President, to count on the fingers of our two
hands the number of nations that have remained continuously democratic
over the last 100 years. And two of those nations are, of course, the
United States of America and the Commonwealth of Australia. Our common
history, our common commitment to liberty and to democracy has been an
important bond that has united the people of America and the people of
Australia.
But it's also been our shared values that have been an important
constant in that relationship: a belief that the worth of a person is
defined not by his or her race, or religion, or nationality, but rather
the worth of that person's character, and his or her commitment to the
common future of the nation of which he is a part; a belief that the
greatest force for good within any society is stable families, because
it's families that bring out the best in people and provide them with
the greatest source of emotional support and sustenance; and also, a
belief that economic future and economic liberty is best defined by
competitive capitalism and the working out of market forces, provided
our societies provide an understanding of the need to protect those who,
through no fault of their own, may need assistance.
And they are many of the values that have defined both of our
societies, and they are some of the values that have brought our two
societies together.
You rightly recall, Mr. President, that the fighting men of our two
countries first joined together on the Fourth of July, 1918, at the
Battle of Hamel, in World War I. And in every significant conflict
since, Americans and Australians have fought together in pursuit of our
common goals and our common objectives. And I pay tribute, in
particular, to the way in which the United States of America came to the
assistance of Australia in the dark days of the Pacific War in World War
II. And successive generations of Australians will never forget the
vital assistance that the United States extended to our country in our
hour of need, in the darkest days of World War II.
And it is important, on an occasion like this, to recall not only
our history, but also to repeat our common resolve about the future. I
will recall our meeting here at the White House on the 10th of
September, 2001. It was the first time that we had met as President of
the United States and Prime Minister of Australia. And in our
discussions, contrary to what the critics of our two societies say, we
were not speaking evil of other people in the world, we were not
condemning other religions, we were not condemning other countries. We
were expressing hope about a more peaceful world, a world in which
Christian and Muslim would work together, a world in which the nations
of the world would unite in harmony and peace.
And the following day, of course, the world changed forever. And so
much of the common effort of our two societies since has been directed
to the fight on terrorism. It will be, as you've said, Mr. President, a
long and difficult fight. Progress is being made, but much lies ahead.
And Janette and I are very conscious of the great sacrifice in lives of
the men and women of your country. And we pay tribute to them, and we
share the mourning and the grief of their loved ones here in the United
States.
But our cause is a just cause. Terrorism respects no value system;
terrorism does not respect the tenets of the great religions of the
world; terrorism is based on evil, intolerance and bigotry. And no free
societies, such as Australia and the United States, can ever buckle
under to bigotry and intolerance.
Mr. President, I come here as the elected leader of a nation of 20
million people; a nation that shares so much in common with your
country; a nation that will shoulder her responsibilities in the Pacific
region; a nation which historically has interacted not only with the
people of our own region, but the people of your country and the people
of Europe.
I thank you again, Mr. President, for your personal friendship. I
admire the leadership and the courage and the commitment that you have
brought to your responsibilities and to your office. You have
reasserted with strength and clarity the great values of the United
States. You have presented a firm leadership to the free world against
terrorism. The world needs an involved, committed, concerned United
States years into the future. The world needs a President of the United
States who has a clear-eyed view of the dangers of terrorism, and the
courage and the determination, however difficult the path may be, to see
the task through to its conclusion. And in you, sir, the American
people and the world have found such a leader and such an individual.
I salute your courage and your commitment, your personal decency
and your personal leadership of this great democracy, of this great
country. And I thank you very warmly for all the Australians present
for the grace and dignity and genuineness of your welcome.
Thank you. (Applause.)
END 9:29 A.M. EDT
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