For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
July 13, 2006
President Bush Welcomed by Chancellor Merkel in Germany
Stralsund Market Square
Stralsund, Germany
President's Trip to Germany and Russia
9:55 A.M. (Local)
CHANCELLOR MERKEL: Mr. President, Mrs. Bush, Minister President,
Lord Mayor, ladies and gentlemen, citizens of Stralsund, let me say that
I am delighted to be able to welcome you on behalf of the
representatives of the land, and also of the city. I'm delighted to
welcome most warmly the President of the United States of America. Mr.
President, a very, very warm welcome to you. (Applause.)
Mr. President, I'm delighted to be able to welcome you here in this
part of our country that I can truly call my political home, the
Hanseatic City of Stralsund. Stralsund was part of the League of
Hanseatic Cities -- that is to say it is imbued with a spirit of
openness to the rest of the world. And in 1989, it was also one of the
many cities where on Monday demonstrations took place, where people went
out into the streets to demand freedom, to demonstrate for freedom. And
we're happy to say in these days it is part of the land of
Mecklenburg-Vor Pommern and also part of the Federal Republic of
Germany.
And I think that this is a very good opportunity, indeed, to say a
word of thanks -- thank you for the contribution, for the support that
we have enjoyed throughout from the people of the United States of
America, from the American government, to help us along the way towards
German unification. I think we owe you a big debt of gratitude for
being able to finally live within one country in peace and freedom; one
country -- Germany. (Applause.)
I think one can safely say that ever since we were able to achieve
German unity a lot has happened, and, indeed, Stralsund is a case in
point. If you look at the fact that when the GDR finally collapsed you
had about 600 monuments here of historic importance in the city, itself,
that were slowly decaying, that were slowly in ruins, and part of them
have been restored over time. But there are still quite a lot of
problems that remain to be solved. One of them, obviously, is the
fairly high unemployment in this particular part of the country, the
need for economic progress and economic upturn. And this is why I am
also delighted to have you here, to show you here in my constituency
what it means when people try to take their own fate, their own future
into their own hands and try to turn it to something positive, they are
willing to work for the future of the city, for the future of this
region.
And I think it also clearly illustrates what we can do together in
order to confront the international dangers, the threats at an
international level that are common to us all, and that we can do in
order, together, work for peace and freedom for our two countries.
Yet again, a very, very warm welcome to you, Mr. President.
(Applause.)
PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you all. Thank you, Chancellor Merkel.
Thank you all for coming. Laura and I feel welcome here in Stralsund.
To the Mayor, and Minister President, and the people of this beautiful
town, we say, Guten Morgen. (Applause.)
For decades, the German people were separated by an ugly wall.
Here in the East, millions of you lived in darkness and tyranny. Today
your nation is whole again. The German people are at the center of
Europe that is united and free and peaceful.
You've given Germany a fine Chancellor in Angela Merkel, who I'm
proud to call friend. (Applause.) The American people and the German
people see the same qualities of character in your nation's leader. We
see a bold vision and a humble heart. We see that she's willing to make
hard decisions and eager to build strong partnerships. And like many
others in the international community, I respect her judgment and I
value her opinion. (Applause.)
It's such an honor to be in her constituency. When I met with her
in the Oval Office, she said, when you come to Germany, you need to come
to one of the best parts of Germany. (Applause.) She didn't predict
the weather. (Laughter.) But I want to thank the Mayor for delivering
such a beautiful day. (Applause.) And she forgot to tell me I was
going to get some herring, and I thank you for that gift.
I bring a message from the American people: We're honored to call
the German people friends and allies. (Applause.) We share common
values and common interests. We want to work together to keep the
peace. We want to work together to promote freedom. There's so much
that we can do, working together, and that's -- part of my visit today
is to pledge to you and the Chancellor, America and Germany stand
side-by-side. (Applause.)
Thank you for your warm welcome. May God bless you all. Thank you
very much. (Applause.)
END 10:14 A.M. (Local)
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