Remarks at the Community of Democracies Opening Plenary
Secretary Condoleezza Rice
Hyatt Regency Hotel
Santiago, Chile
April 28, 2005
SECRETARY RICE: Thank you very much to the Chilean government, particularly to President Lagos and to Foreign Minister
Walker for hosting this year's meeting of the Community of Democracies. I think we have been all warmly welcomed here in
Chile. I know that I speak for all my distinguished colleagues when I say that we are honored to gather here together in
the name of democracy.
Every democracy in the world has shared the triumph of Chile's citizens as they have renewed their commitment to
democracy. Indeed, we have all experienced the profound hope of people here throughout Latin America who have
transformed their continent through their desire to live in liberty. Today, all the members of the Community of
Democracies declare our deep conviction that freedom is the universal longing of every soul and democracy is the ideal
path for every nation.
The past year has brought forth a dramatic shift in the world's political landscape. Since our last meeting in Seoul,
we have seen free elections in Afghanistan and in Iraq and in the Palestinian territories. We have witnessed tremendous
developments in places like Georgia and Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan and Lebanon.
There comes a time when the spark of freedom flashes in the minds of all oppressed people, and they raise their voices
against tyranny. The Community of Democracies must match the bravery of these men and women with the courage of our own
convictions. We on the right side of freedom's divide have an obligation to help those on the wrong side of that divide.
To support democratic aspirations, all free nations must clarify the moral choice between liberty and oppression. We
must let all governments know that successful relations with our democratic community depend on the dignified treatment
of their people.
To strengthen democratic principles, all free nations must demand that leaders who are elected democratically have a
responsibility to govern democratically. Abandoning the rule of law for the whim of rulers only leads to the oppression
of innocent people.
To advance our democratic consensus, all free nations must insist that upholding democratic principles is the surest
path to greater international status. The Community of Democracies is one of a growing number of international
organizations that make democracy an actual condition for membership. In the Western Hemisphere, the Organization of
American States has adopted the Inter-American Democratic Charter. And here in the Southern Cone, Mercosur is helping to
bolster democracy. In Europe, only democracies can belong to the European Community. And democratic principles have
always been the cornerstone of NATO.
The democratic character of states must become the cornerstone of a new, principled multilateralism. The real division
in our world is between those states that are committed to freedom and those who are not. International organizations
like the Community of Democracies can help to create a balance of power that favors freedom.
One positive action that we can take together is to work through the United Nations Democracy Caucus to support reform
of the United Nations. In particular, we should encourage the creation of a legitimate human rights body within the
United Nations. Serious action on human rights can only come from countries that respect and protect human rights.
Our democratic community can cooperate in other ways at the United Nations. The U.N. Democracy Fund, which President
Bush proposed last fall at the General Assembly, is an ideal way to provide tangible support to emerging democracies.
Financial assistance is essential for all nations working to build firm foundations for freedom.
The world's democracies must also help countries with their democratic transitions. Every nation in this room has
experienced a democratic transition of its own, some quite recently. Hungarian Foreign Minister Somogyi has proposed the
creation of a Democratic Transition Center. This is a terrific way, Minister, for our community to share with young
democracies and democratic movements the important lessons that we have learned from our own traditions and transitions.
Democratization is, after all, not an event; it is a process. It takes many years, even decades, to realize the full
promise of democratic reform. For nearly a century after the founding of the United States, millions of black Americans
like me were still condemned to the status below that of full citizenship. When the founding fathers of America said,
"we the people," they did not mean me. Many of my ancestors were thought to be only three-fifths of a man. And it is
only within my lifetime that the United States has begun to guarantee the right to vote for all of our citizens. And so
we know in the United States that this is a long and difficult process. And every nation in this room has experienced
moments of tyranny in its history -- some not too long ago.
Today, our citizens share the common bond of having overcome tyranny through all our commitment to freedom and
democracy. Now, it is our historic duty to tell the world that tyranny is a crime of man, not a fact of nature. Our goal
must always be the elimination of tyranny in our world.
We at the Community of Democracies must use the power of our shared ideals to accelerate democracy's movement to ever
more places around the globe. We must usher in an era of democracy that thinks of tyranny as we thought of slavery
today: a moral abomination that could not withstand the natural desire of every human being for a life of liberty and of
dignity.
This is our great purpose. Together we will succeed. Thank you.
(Applause.)
2005/T6-14
Released on April 28, 2005
ENDS