Cheney Praises U.S. Marines in Fighting Terrorism
Vice President says they play critical role in securing democracy in Iraq
Vice President Dick Cheney has praised the efforts of the U.S. Marine Corps in the many fronts in the war against terror
– particularly in Iraq, where he said terrorists are trying to shake the U.S. commitment to democracy in that country.
“You've played a critical role in helping Iraqis to secure their new democracy, to set up a well trained military force,
and to prepare for the constitutional referendum next week and national elections in December,” Cheney said in a speech
to Marines at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina October 3.
Cheney’s speech is one of several events organized by the Bush administration to reaffirm U.S. commitment to Iraq in the
run up to the constitutional referendum October 15.
Noting that the war against terror began on September 11, 2001, Cheney said that difficult work lies ahead in the fight
against enemies “that recognize no rule of warfare and accept no standard of morality.”
“If the terrorists were to succeed, they would return Iraq to the rule of tyrants, make it a source of instability in
the Middle East, and use it as a staging area for ever greater attacks against America and other civilized nations,” he
said.
“With good allies at our side, we will prevail, we will destroy the enemy,” he added.
Following is the transcript of Cheney’s speech at Camp Lejeune:
(begin transcript)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Vice President
October 3, 2005
REMARKS BY THE VICE PRESIDENT
TO THE MARINES AT CAMP LEJEUNE
Camp Lejeune, North Carolina
11:05 A.M. EDT
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, General. And I want to thank you for the introduction and the warm welcome.
It's a real pleasure to be with the men and women from the Second Marine Expeditionary Force and the "Follow Me"
Division of United States Marine Corps. It sounds like you're glad to be home.
AUDIENCE: Ooh-rah!
THE VICE PRESIDENT: For more than a half-century, Camp Lejeune has had a very simple and very critical mission -- to
maintain combat-ready units for expeditionary deployment in service for the United States. And every generation to serve
has fulfilled that mission with uncompromising skill, readiness, and courage. In the four years since our nation was
attacked, units from Camp Lejeune have been deployed on many fronts in the war on terror, from the Horn of Africa to the
broader Middle East.
This morning we take special pride in recognizing the fine Marine Corps units that have returned from duty in Iraq. As
battle-tested Marines you represent a superb cross-section of ground, sea, and air combat power. We also have with us
some fine Navy hospital corpsmen, who have saved many lives -- and we thank you all.
In recent months your country has asked you to carry out some extremely difficult and perilous work. You've met every
challenge with focus, with great effectiveness and, above all, with honor. You brought credit to yourselves and to the
nation. I want to thank you for a job well done, and say "welcome home" for all of us.
Military service, whether active or reserve, often requires a family commitment, and I'm delighted to see all the family
members who've joined us today. Our military families make many sacrifices, here at Lejeune and in communities all
across the country. I want you to know that you have the respect of your fellow citizens, and the gratitude of our
Commander in Chief, President George W. Bush.
Let me thank Lieutenant General Amos, Major General Dickerson, Major General Moore, Brigadier General McMenamin, Colonel
Qualls, Sergeant Major Colon, Sergeant Major Tucker, Sergeant Major Mason for their leadership of Camp Lejeune and the
Marines of America's Second Marine Expeditionary Force.
As you know, I just came from Washington, where we have a brand-new Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He's a great
American who rose from rifle platoon leader to four-star general. And he is the first Marine ever to hold that job --
General Peter Pace. (Applause.)
I always love getting back to Marine installations. I've always come away with renewed confidence in the men and women
who wear the eagle, globe, and anchor of the United States Marine Corps. Each one of you has dedicated yourself to
serving our country and its ideals, and you are meeting that commitment during a very challenging hour in American
history. Some challenges have arisen close to home, as we saw last month after the devastating impact of Hurricane
Katrina. Highly skilled Marine units rushed into the Gulf Coast area to provide disaster relief and humanitarian
assistance. Both active Marines and reservists went in to hard-to-reach areas and saved many stranded citizens, and
brought food and water to people desperately in need. In the aftermath of a terrible storm, Marine patrols and rescue
and recovery efforts were skillful and swift, and a welcome sight to fellow citizens. And Americans can always count on
the Marines.
Our nation has counted on the Marine Corps now for 230 years, and in this young century you are repaying that confidence
every day that we fight the war on terror. When this war began on a terrible September morning four years ago, President
Bush said that the struggle would be lengthy and difficult, and would require our best effort and unfailing resolve. It
is tough and it is dangerous to fight enemies who dwell in the shadow, who target the innocent, who plot destruction on
a massive scale. And in this fight some of the hardest duties have come to the men and women of our armed forces.
Your performance in Iraq -- not just the progress you've made, but also the character you have shown -- has left a
lasting impression on people up and down the chain of command. You've been taking on rough assignments, adapting to
enemy tactics, pressing on and hanging tough in desert temperatures. Units of the Second Marine Division helped to free
Iraq in 2003, moving in swiftly to take down the regime of Saddam Hussein and liberating 25 million people from tyranny.
You've played a critical role in helping Iraqis to secure their new democracy, to set up a well trained military force,
and to prepare for the constitutional referendum next week and national elections in December.
We're grateful to members of the First Battalion, Eighth Marine Regiment, who fought the fierce battle of Fallujah and
liberated that city from terrorist control. We're grateful to members of the Third Battalion, Twenty-Fifth Marine, who
served from Hit to Haditha along the Euphrates River corridor. We're grateful to the Second Light Armor Reconnaissance
Battalion, which kept the main supply route open, found caches of weapons, and provided security for Army and civilian
convoys. We're grateful for the Second Marine Logistics Brigade, which provided superior combat logistics throughout
al-Anbar province.
From duty at sea we welcome the men and women of the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit. From air operations, we welcome the
"Gunrunners" of Marine Light/Attack Helicopter Squadron 269, and Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 264, the "Black
Knights."
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Ooh-rah!
THE VICE PRESIDENT: It's all right. (Laughter.)
Lieutenant General Amos said you're going to miss the Wadi-Watch, but he says you can still download it from home.
All of you are part of a team that continues to make history, removing threats to the United States and other free
nations, and bringing new hope to a troubled region of the world. As a Marine, each of you defends this country, and
represents the best that is in it. And by your achievements you've made one thing very clear: The day you decided to
become a Marine was a great day for the United States of America.
There's still difficult work ahead, because the terrorists regard Iraq as the central front in a war against the
civilized world. We are dealing with enemies that recognize no rule of warfare and accept no standard of morality. They
have declared their intention to bring great harm to any nation that opposes their aims. Their prime target is the
United States. And so we have a responsibility to lead in this fight.
Although we've been in the struggle against terrorism for four years now, the terrorists were actually at war with this
country even before 2001. But for a long time, they were the ones on offense. And they grew bolder in their belief that
if they killed Americans, they could change American policy. In Beirut in 1983, terrorists killed 241 Americans -- and
you're well aware of that attack because most of those men were Marines from Camp Lejeune, members of the First
Battalion, Eighth Marine Regiment.
Following that attack, the United States forces were withdrawn from Beirut. Time and time again, for the remainder of
the 20th century, the terrorists hit America and America did not hit back hard enough. In 1993 we had the killing of
American soldiers in Mogadishu, and the bombing of the World Trade Center in New York. We had the murders at the Saudi
National Guard Training Center in Riyadh in 1995, the killings at Khobar Towers in 1996, the destruction of two American
embassies in East Africa in 1998, and the attack on the USS Cole in 2000. The terrorists came to believe that they could
strike America without paying any price.
And so they continued to wage those attacks, making the world less safe and eventually striking the United State s on
9/11. Now they are making a stand in Iraq, testing our resolve, and trying to shake our commitment to democracy in that
country. If the terrorists were to succeed, they would return Iraq to the rule of tyrants, make it a source of
instability in the Middle East, and use it as a staging area for ever greater attacks against America and other
civilized nations. As President Bush has said, the only way the terrorists can win is if we lose our nerve and abandon
our mission. But this nation has made a decision: We will stand by our friends. We will help Iraqis build a nation that
is free and secure, able to defend itself. We will confront our enemies on this and every other front in the war on
terror. With good allies at our side, we will prevail, we will destroy the enemy.
The progress we've seen in Iraq has been superb, and we can be confident going forward because the Iraqi people value
their own liberty and are determined to choose their own destiny. And by staying in this fight, we honor both the ideals
and the security interests of the United States. The victory of freedom in Iraq will inspire democratic reformers in
other lands. In the broader Middle East and beyond, America will continue to encourage free markets, democracy, and
tolerance, because these are the ideas and the aspirations that overcome violence and turn societies to the pursuits of
peace. And as the peoples of that region experience new hope, progress, and control over their own destiny, we will see
the power of freedom change to our world, and a terrible threat will be removed from the lives of our children and our
grandchildren.
Each one of you has helped to write a proud chapter in the history of freedom. As Lieutenant Colonel Tim Mundy recently
put it, "I can never say enough about how great our young Marines and small unit leaders are when put to the test." He
went on to express a view that each one of you probably shares. He said, "I hope people look at our success out there
and realize that it was done on the backs of those Marines." Ladies and gentlemen, I want you to know that our nation
does realize it, and we are grateful.
This is not a country that takes its military for granted. We are a democracy, defended by volunteers who deserve all
the tools and all the support we can provide. Americans appreciate our fellow citizens who go out on long deployments,
endure the hardship of separation from home and family, go in harm's way for the nation. We care about those who have
returned with injuries, and we have a responsibility to help them on the hard road ahead. And our nation grieves for the
brave men and women whose lives have ended in freedom's cause. For so many of you, these losses have been deeply
personal, and tomorrow the Third Battalion, 25th Marine Regiment will hold a memorial service for the 48 Marines and
sailors who laid down their lives on this deployment. The loss to our country is irreplaceable, and no one can take away
the sorrow that has come to the families of the fallen. We can only say, with complete certainty, that these Americans
served in a noble and necessary cause, and their sacrifice has made our nation and the world more secure. We will honor
their memory forever, and we will honor their sacrifice by completing the mission.
None of us can know every turn that lies ahead for America in the fight against terror. Yet the direction of events is
plain to see, and this period of struggle and testing is also a time of promise. The United States of America is a good
country, a decent country, and we are making the world a better place by defending the innocent, confronting the
violent, and bringing freedom to the oppressed. We understand the continuing dangers to civilization, and we have the
resources, the strength, and the moral courage to overcome those dangers.
As our President has made clear, our terrorist enemies will fail, because the movement of history is toward justice and
human freedom. The terrorists will fail, because the resolve of America and our allies will not be shaken. And, Marines
and sailors of Camp Lejeune, the terrorists will fail, because men and women like you are standing in their way and
saying, "Not on our watch."
Once again, I thank each and every one of you for the great service you've rendered to America. It's an honor to be in
your company. All of you in the current generation of our military have shown yourselves worthy of the title you hold,
the uniform you wear, and the code you live by. Your Commander-in-Chief is proud of you. On his behalf, and on behalf of
the people of the United States of America, I thank you all. Semper Fi. (Applause.)