Delivers
Commencement Address at Coast Guard
Cadet Nitchman Field
New London, Connecticut
May 21, 2003
11:37 A.M. EDT
Thank you very much. Thanks for the warm welcome. Admiral Collins and Admiral
Olsen, Secretary Ridge, Lieutenant Governor Rell, Mr. President, I'm glad
you're here, thank you for coming, sir; Congressman Simmons, the fine professors
of the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, distinguished guests, proud family members
and the graduates. Thank you for your welcome, and thank you for the honor
of speaking to the newest officers of the United States Coast Guard.
You know, I was born in this state, just down the road. (Laughter and applause.)
I've still got relatives living here. (Laughter.) And it looks like some
of them were up late last night painting Pride Rock. (Laughter and applause.)
This is a proud day for the Class of 2003, I know you've worked hard to
get here. You've persevered through the rigors of Swab Summer, you've faced
difficult trials -- in the classroom, aboard Eagle. And now, with silver
dollars in your pockets, you're ready to become officers in our nation's
oldest, continuous sea-going service. You have shown each day that you "revere
honor" and that you "honor duty." You have made your families,
your professors and your country proud. On behalf of the American people,
thank you for choosing a life of service, and congratulations on a great
achievement. (Applause.)
I bring with me a small graduation present. Pursuant to the longstanding
tradition, I hereby grant amnesty to all cadets on restriction for minor
conduct offenses. (Laughter and applause.) I leave it up to Admiral Olsen
to determine the definition of "minor." (Laughter.)
Coast Guard Academy life is demanding, and it should be -- because you are
entrusted with solemn responsibilities, in peace and in war. America counts
on the Coast Guard to enforce maritime law, to secure our waterways and ports,
to rescue those in distress, and to intercept illegal drugs. In this new
century, we will count on you even more. The men and women of this class
are the first ever to graduate into the Department of Homeland Security,
which is charged with protecting the American people against terrorist attacks.
You are bringing a long tradition of duty to this new and urgent task. Terrorists
who seek to harm our country now face your "Shield of Freedom." Every
citizen can be grateful that the Coast Guard stands watch for America.
The Coast Guard is also playing a vital role in America's strategy to confront
terror before it comes to our shores. In the Iraqi theater, Coast Guard cutters
and patrol boats and buoy tenders, and over a thousand of your finest active
duty and reserve members protected key ports and oil platforms, detained
Iraqi prisoners of war, and helped speed the delivery of relief supplies
to the Iraqi people. Many have returned safely to port, and many remain on
duty in the Persian Gulf. All have helped to liberate a great people. And
all have brought great credit to the uniform of the United States Coast Guard.
(Applause.)
In Iraq, America's military and our allies carried out every mission, and
exceeded every expectation. Heavy units of armor and infantry moved with
a speed and agility that kept the enemy in a state of constant surprise and
deadly confusion. Air strikes and cruise missiles destroyed the power centers
and meeting places of the regime, while targets were carefully examined to
protect the innocent from harm. Our forces confronted an enemy that rejected
every rule of warfare and morality -- but our men and women in uniform showed
their decency and kept their honor. In a month of battle, American Armed
Services set an example of skill and daring that will stand for all time.
(Applause.)
America will not relent in the war against global terror. (Applause.) We
will hunt the terrorists in every dark corner of the earth. And we're making
good progress. Nearly one-half of al Qaeda's senior operatives have been
captured or killed. (Applause.) We will deny the terrorists the sanctuary
and bases they need to plan and strike -- as we have done in the battle of
Afghanistan. We will not permit terror networks or terror states to threaten
or blackmail the world with weapons of mass destruction -- as we have shown
in the battle of Iraq. (Applause.) Our country has been attacked by treachery
in our own cities -- and that treachery continues in places like Riyadh and
Casablanca. We have seen the ruthless intentions of our enemies. And they
are seeing our intentions: we will press on until this danger to our country
and to the world is ended. (Applause.)
Yet, the national interest of America involves more than eliminating aggressive
threats to our safety. We also stand for the values that defeat violence,
and the hope that overcomes hatred. We find our greatest security in the
advance of human freedom. Free societies look to the possibilities of the
future, instead of feeding old resentments and bitterness. Free countries
build wealth and prosperity for their people in an atmosphere of stability
and order, instead of seeking weapons of mass murder and attacking their
neighbors. Because America loves peace, America will always work and sacrifice
for the expansion of freedom. (Applause.)
The advance of freedom is more than an interest we pursue. It is a calling
we follow. Our country was created in the name and cause of freedom. And
if the self-evident truths of our founding are true for us, they are true
for all. As a people dedicated to civil rights, we are driven to defend the
human rights of others. We are the nation that liberated continents and concentration
camps. We are the nation of the Marshall Plan, the Berlin Airlift and the
Peace Corps. We are the nation that ended the oppression of Afghan women,
and we are the nation that closed the torture chambers of Iraq. (Applause.)
America's national ambition is the spread of free markets, free trade, and
free societies. These goals are not achieved at the expense of other nations,
they are achieved for the benefit of all nations. America seeks to expand,
not the borders of our country, but the realm of liberty.
Our vision is opposed by terrorists and tyrants who attack a world they
can never inspire. This vision is also threatened by the faceless enemies
of human dignity: plague and starvation and hopeless poverty. And America
is at war with these enemies, as well.
The advance of freedom and hope is challenged by the spread of AIDS. Today,
on the continent of Africa, nearly 30 million people are afflicted with HIV/AIDS,
including 3 million children under the age of 15. The African continent has
lost 7 million agricultural workers. In some countries, almost a third of
the teachers are HIV positive. A 15-year old boy living in Botswana has an
80 percent chance of dying of AIDS. It is a desperate struggle for any person,
or any nation, to build a better future in the shadow of death.
Yet, this shadow can be lifted. AIDS can be prevented, and AIDS can be treated.
Lives can be saved, and others extended by many years. In my State of the
Union Address in January, I put forward an Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief,
directing $15 billion over the next five years to fight AIDS abroad. And
we will especially focus our efforts on 14 African and Caribbean countries
where HIV/AIDS is heavily concentrated.
I'm pleased that both Houses of Congress have now passed a bill authorizing
these funds; I look forward to signing the bill next week. (Applause.) The
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief is the largest, single up front commitment
in history for an international public health initiative involving a specific
disease.
With this dramatic expansion of America's efforts, we will prevent 7 million
new HIV infections; treat at least 2 million people with life-extending drugs;
and provide humane care for 10 million HIV-infected individuals and AIDS
orphans.
When I travel to Europe next week, I will challenge our allies to make a
similar commitment which will save even more lives. I will remind them that
the clock is ticking -- that every single day 8,000 more people will die
from AIDS in Africa. There will be 14,000 more infections. I will urge our
European partners, and Japan, and Canada, to join a great mission of rescue,
and to match their good intentions with real resources. (Applause.)
The advance of freedom and hope in the world is also challenged by an ancient
enemy: famine. Our world produces more than enough food to feed its 6 billion
people. Yet tens of millions are at risk of starvation, and millions more
lack water fit for drinking. This crisis also is concentrated in Africa.
We have the ability to confront this suffering. And we accept the duty, a
old as the Scriptures, to comfort the afflicted and to feed the hungry.
America is already the largest provider in the world of food relief -- giving
more than $1.4 billion in global emergency food aid, and one-half of all
contributions to the World Food Program. And we are determined to do more.
I've committed to a nearly $1 billion initiative to provide clean drinking
water to 50 million people in the developing world. I've also asked Congress
to provide $200 million for a new Famine Fund, which will give us the flexibility
to act quickly when the first signs of famine appear. I call on other nations
to follow our lead by establishing their own emergency funds. By saving time
in responding to crisis, we will save lives.
We can also greatly reduce the long-term problem of hunger i Africa by applying
the latest developments of science. I have proposed an Initiative to End
Hunger in Africa. By widening the use of new high-yield bio-crops and unleashing
the power of markets, we can dramatically increase agricultural productivity
and feed more people across the continent.
Yet, our partners in Europe are impeding this effort. They have blocked
all new bio-crops because of unfounded, unscientific fears. This has caused
many African nations to avoid investing in biotechnologies, for fear their
products will be shut out of European markets. European governments should
join -- not hinder -- the great cause of ending hunger in Africa. (Applause.)
We must also give farmers in Africa, Latin America and Asia and elsewhere
a fair chance to compete in world markets. When wealthy nations subsidize
their agricultural exports, it prevents poor countries from developing their
own agricultural sectors. So I propose that all developed nations, including
our partners in Europe, immediately eliminate subsidies on agricultural exports
to developing countries so that they can produce more food to export and
more food to feed their own people. (Applause.)
The advance of freedom is also undermined by persistent poverty and despair.
Half the human population lives on less than $2 a day. Billions of men and
women can scarcely imagine the benefits of modern life because they have
never experienced them.
For decades, many governments around the world have made sincere and generous
efforts to support global development. Far too often, these funds have only
enriched corrupt rulers and made little or no difference in the lives of
the poor. It's time for governments of developed nations to stop asking the
simplistic question: How much money are we transferring from nations that
are rich? The only question that matters is: How much good are we doing to
help people that are poor? (Applause.) The only standard worth setting and
meeting is the standard of results.
The lesson of our time is clear: when nations embrace free markets, the
rule of law and open trade, they prosper, and millions of lives are lifted
out of poverty and despair. So I have proposed the creation of a new Millennium
Challenge Account -- an entirely new approach to development aid. This money
will go to developing nations whose governments are committed to three broad
standards: they must rule justly; they must invest in the health and education
of their people; and they must have policies that encourage economic freedom.
(Applause.)
To fund this account, I have proposed a 50 percent increase in America's
core development assistance over the next three years. Under this proposal,
our annual development assistance eventually will be $5 billion greater than
it is today. I urge the Congress to give its full support to the Millennium
Challenge Account. And when I'm in Europe, I will call on America's partners
to join us in moving beyond the broken development policies of the past,
and encourage the freedom and reform that lead to prosperity. (Applause.)
These goals -- advancing against disease, hunger and poverty -- will bring
greater security to our country. They are also the moral purpose of American
influence. They set an agenda for our government, and they give idealistic
citizens a great cause to serve. President Woodrow Wilson said, "America
has a spiritual energy in her which no other nation can contribute to the
liberation of mankind." In this new century, we must apply that energy
to the good of people everywhere.
For more than four decades, the volunteers of the Peace Corps have carried
the good will of America into many parts of the world. Interest in this program
is greater than ever before. I'm determined to double the size of the Peace
Corps over five years. (Applause.) Today, I would like to announce a new
USA Freedom Corps initiative called Volunteers for Prosperity, which will
give America's highly skilled professionals new opportunities to serve abroad.
The program will enlist American doctors and nurses and teachers and engineers
and economists and computer specialists, and others to work on specific development
initiatives, including those that I have discussed today. These volunteers
will serve in the countries of their choice, for however long their project
takes. Like generations before us, this generation of citizens will show
the world the energy and idealism of the United States of America. (Applause.)
I see that idealism in the faces of our soldiers and sailors and airmen
and Marines. I see that idealism in the faces of this academy class. The
men and women of the Coast Guard are "always ready" to defend the
security of this nation. You are "always ready" to rescue those
in trouble. These two commitments define your mission -- and they define
America's role in history. We understand that strength is necessary to confound
the designs of evil men. And we know that the compassion and generosity of
this land can aid the suffering, and inspire the world. We will use the great
power of America to serve the great ideals of America. And by these efforts
we will build a lasting, democratic peace -- for ourselves, and for all humanity.
(Applause.)
Congratulations. May God bless the Class of 2003. May God continue to bless
the United States of America. Semper Paratus. (Applause.)