Bush in Europe: 'New era of hope': The Swamp
 
The Swamp
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Posted April 5, 2008 10:06 AM
The Swamp

by Mark Silva

President Bush, with a weekly radio address delivered from Europe, is hailing the broadened NATO alliance which this week approved a U.S.-built missile defense network in Europe -- with a battery of missiles in Poland and a radar base in the Czech Republic.

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Bush had assembled with other leaders in Romania, one of 10 "liberated nations'' that have joined NATO since the end of the Cold War. Bush, who is meeting with outgoing Russian President Vladimir Putin in a Black Sea resort city this weekend, insists that U.S. designs on missiles in Europe are not the start of another Cold War, but rather a guard against the threat of "rogue nations'' such as Iran. The missiles are not aimed at Russia, he is telling Putin.

Bush is hailing the expansion of NATO as a sign of peace in a long war-torn Europe.

"After a century when the great wars of Europe threatened destruction throughout the world, the continent has now entered into a promising new era,'' Bush said in his radio address today. "In many parts of the world, freedom is still a distant aspiration -- but in the ancient cities and villages of Europe, it is at the center of a new era of hope.''

(President Bush at NATO: White House photo by Eric Draper.)

This is the text of the president's radio address:

"Good morning. I'm speaking to you from Europe, where I attended the NATO summit and witnessed the hopeful progress of the continent’s youngest democracies.

"The summit was held in Romania, one of the 10 liberated nations that have joined the ranks of NATO since the end of the Cold War. After decades of tyranny and oppression, today Romania is an important member of an international alliance dedicated to liberty, and it is setting a bold example for other former communist nations that desire to live in peace and freedom.

"One of those nations is Croatia, which I'm also visiting on my trip. Croatia is a very different place than it was just a decade ago. Since they attained their independence, the Croatian people have shown the world the potential of human freedom. They’ve overcome war and hardship to build peaceful relations with their neighbors, and they have built a maturing democracy on the rubble of a dictatorship.

"This week NATO invited Croatia, as well as the nation of Albania, to join the NATO Alliance. These countries have made extraordinary progress on the road to freedom, prosperity, and peace. The invitation to join NATO represents the Alliance’s confidence that they will continue to make necessary reforms and that they will become strong contributors to NATO’s mission of collective defense.

" I regret that NATO was not able to extend an invitation to a third nation, Macedonia, at this week’s summit. Like Croatia and Albania, Macedonia has met all the criteria for NATO membership. Unfortunately, its invitation was delayed because of a dispute over its name. I made clear that the name issue should be resolved quickly, that NATO should intensify its engagement with Macedonia, and that we look forward to the day when this young democracy takes its place among the members of the NATO Alliance.

" After a century when the great wars of Europe threatened destruction throughout the world, the continent has now entered into a promising new era. Less than two decades ago, Albania, Croatia, and Macedonia suffered under the yolk of communist oppression. The people in these countries know what the gift of liberty means, because they know what it is like to have their liberty denied. They know the death and destruction that can be caused by the followers of radical ideologies who kill the innocent in pursuit of political power. And these lessons have led them to work alongside America in the war on terror.

"Today, soldiers from Croatia, Albania, and Macedonia are serving bravely in Afghanistan, helping the Afghan people defeat terrorists and secure a future of liberty. And forces from Albania and Macedonia are also serving in Iraq, where they’re helping the Iraqi people build a society that rejects terror and lives in freedom. These nations have displayed the ultimate devotion to the principle of liberty -- sacrificing to provide it for others.

"Albania, Croatia, and Macedonia are not alone in discarding the change to their past and embracing the promise of freedom. Another burgeoning democracy is Ukraine. Earlier this week I traveled to Kyiv to express America’s support for beginning the process of bringing both Ukraine and Georgia into NATO. In recent years, both of these nations have seen tens of thousands take to the streets to peacefully demand their God-given liberty. The people of Ukraine and Georgia are an inspiration to the world and I was pleased that this week NATO declared that Ukraine and Georgia will become members of NATO.

"Nearly seven years ago I came to Europe and spoke to the students and faculty at Warsaw University in Poland. On that day I declared that all of Europe’s new democracies -- from the Baltic to the Black Sea -- should have the same chance for security and freedom and the same chance to join the institutions of Europe. Seven years later we have made good progress toward fulfilling this vision, and more work remains.

"In many parts of the world, freedom is still a distant aspiration -- but in the ancient cities and villages of Europe, it is at the center of a new era of hope.

Thank you for listening.''

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Comments

Yes, indeed, Mr Bush. Hope because you'll soon be gone.


NATO is one of the most successful, if not THE most successful, military alliances in world history. By expanding the alliance to include other democracies, we guarantee the security of these new democracies. This is an expansion of free countries. This certainly makes President Bush one of the greatest spreaders of democracy in history. Do not forget that after Franklin Roosevelt's and Harry Truman's agreements with the Soviet Union, Europe wound up with LESS democracies after World War II, not more. The Democrats did not expand democracy in Europe, they lessened it. However, I am not in favor of a NATO membership for all countries, so limits must be drawn somewhere. This can only come about thru consensus within NATO. But if more democracies wish to join NATO and other NATO members agree, then the U.S. should welcome freedom-loving peoples from all of Europe.


Europe hopes we'll replace him with a better president.


Someone posted that the " Democrats did not expand democracy in Europe, they lessened it." I don't know what this person could be thinking, but if the Democrat, President Roosevelt did not bring America into the war against Hitler, no friend of democracy, there would have been no democracy across Europe, period. I wish that anyone that makes any statements of fact, please, don't let your political biases cloud your thinking. Just as your statement concerning President Bush, being, " one of the greatest spreaders of democracy in history.", it is so nonsensical, at the very least! In his attempt to force "democracy" on Iraq, he has damaged our constitutional democracy and has failed miserably in the Middle East. Democracy can't be " spread" like peanut butter, it must grow, evolve out of the soil in which it is desired.
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS, BRING THEM HOME, ALIVE. NOW.


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