Rice - Helping Palestinians Build a Better Future
Helping Palestinians Build a Better Future
Secretary
Condoleezza Rice
Keynote Address at the American Task
Force on Palestine Inaugural Gala
Washington,
DC
October 11, 2006
Thank you very much. Thank you. I would first like to thank Dr. Ziad Asali for that wonderful introduction. But more importantly, I would like to thank you for your leadership and for your commitment to this very important cause, and for your friendship and counsel over my time as Secretary of State. Thank you very much for all that you do.
Now, before I go any further, let me wish you
all Ramadan Karim to those of you here tonight, and to the
millions of Muslims in America and across the world, who are
now celebrating the holy month of Ramadan.
I am
honored that Senators Carl Levin and John Sununu are here
joining us tonight, along with many members of the
diplomatic corps. In particular, I would like to thank and
welcome Saudi Ambassador Prince Turki al-Faisal for being
here. And I know that you will make remarks later. Thank you
very much.
Finally, let me congratulate the
distinguished Palestinian-Americans whom we are honoring
tonight: Governor John Sununu, a good and longtime friend;
Mr. Jesse Aweida, and Professor Mujid Kazini. These three
individuals remind us of the great contribution that
Palestinian-Americans are making to our nation – adding
not just to our country’s diversity, but to its character.
I applaud the American Task Force on Palestine for
highlighting the success of Palestinian-Americans, and for
your continued support of all who work for peace in the
Middle East.
Now, as I imagine most of you know, I
traveled last week to the region. I consulted widely with
our many friends and allies. And I am pleased to have this
opportunity to share with you my sense of where we stand in
the Middle East, particularly on the Palestinian-Israeli
issue.
These are, without a doubt, difficult and
challenging times. And I know that the past few months have
been especially trying. In many places across the region –
from Lebanon and Iraq, to the Palestinian territories and
Israel – the images of violence, the stories of suffering,
the deaths of innocent people are hard for all of us to
bear. They're hard for me and I know that they are for you.
But let me also say that it is in times of testing that courage and perseverance are needed most by the people of the Middle East who deserve our support. It is my belief, and that of President Bush, that when we look at the recent actions of radicals in Hamas and Hezbollah, or at the violence of terrorists and militias in Iraq, or at the policies of governments like Syria or Iran, we are witnessing a campaign of extremism – not always commonly planned, but sharing a common purpose: to roll back the promise of a hopeful Middle East, where security, and freedom, and opportunity can expand.
If peace and dignity are to prevail in the region, then it is absolutely essential for leaders to be able to show, for moderate leaders to show, that their ideas, and their principles, and their vision for the future can offer a better alternative than violence and terrorism. That is why President Bush asked me to travel last week to the Middle East – to confer with moderate voices, with moderate Arab governments and with moderate leaders, to build a support for those people who are trying and who need our help more than ever now, leaders like Prime Minister Siniora in Lebanon, Prime Minister Maliki in Iraq, and most especially, of course, President Abbas in the Palestinian territories, from whom we have just heard.
Last month, in his speech to the UN General Assembly, President Bush reiterated his deep conviction that the Palestinian people deserve a better life – a life that is rooted in liberty and democracy, uncompromised by violence and terrorism, unburdened by corruption and misrule, and forever free of the daily humiliation of occupation. It is this belief that led President Bush, in June of 2002, to become the first American president to make it a matter of policy that the creation of a Palestinian state, with territorial integrity, with viability, living side by side with Israel, in peace and security, would indeed strengthen peace and security, not just in the region but the peace and security of us all.
At that time, President Bush pledged that, as Palestinians stepped forward to build a peaceful, responsible state, they would find no greater partner in this endeavor than the United States. Today, we are endeavoring to keep our promise.
First, we want to help the Palestinians to lay the political foundations of a successful state. We supported the free and fair election in January 2005, in which millions of Palestinians elected Mahmoud Abbas as their president. In the days and months that have followed, we have worked to assist his government in the long and difficult process of building effective democratic institutions. When it was time for parliamentary elections earlier this year, we again supported the Palestinians’ right to choose their own leaders, and as you know, a plurality of voters cast their votes for Hamas.
At the time of the election, there were those who criticized our support for the election. And many still do. But I would ask everyone, "Is there a better way than to allow people to express their views, to have a role in choosing those who will govern them? And now look at how things are changing. For decades, Hamas dwelled in the shadows, able to hijack the future of all Palestinians at will, without ever having to answer for its actions. Today, however, the Palestinian people and the international community can hold Hamas accountable. And Hamas now faces a hard choice that it has always sought to avoid: Either you are a peaceful political party, or a violent terrorist group – but you cannot be both.
All the members of the Quartet – the United States, the United Nations, the European Union, and Russia – are holding firm in our conviction that a Palestinian partner for peace needs to accept three principles: the disavowal of terror and violence, the recognition of Israel's right to exist, and the acceptance of all previous agreements between the parties, including the Roadmap, which is the only internationally agreed-upon framework to create a Palestinian state. At the same time, we fully support President Abbas, and the growing number of his fellow citizens, who are urging Hamas to put the interests of the Palestinian people ahead of their own rejectionist agenda.
Now, we in the international community recognize that the past several months have been really hard for the Palestinian people. We know that living conditions have deteriorated, and that many are in need of assistance.
So we are working to ensure that the Palestinian
people receive the food, and the medicine, and the
humanitarian relief that they so desperately need. That is
why the United States recently increased our direct
assistance to the Palestinians to $468 million a year, with
much of that going to meet basic needs. We've also worked
with our foreign partners to create a temporary mechanism to
channel international donor assistance directly to the
Palestinian people. We and our European allies are now
expanding this mechanism into a new international assistance
program to alleviate the suffering of the most vulnerable
Palestinians.
Second, we want to help the Palestinian
people to lay the economic foundations of a successful
state. The Palestinians are some of the most talented, best
educated, and hardest working people in the Middle East.
What they need more than anything are opportunities to
prosper. And last November, I personally worked with parties
to create an opportunity – an Agreement on Movement and
Access, to help the Palestinians travel more freely and
transport their goods to market. It is important that we
continue to work so that Palestinians and Israelis can
implement this agreement.
Finally, we want to help
the Palestinians establish the environment of security and
the rule of law that a successful state requires. In his
speech at the United Nations last month, President Bush
specifically charged me with helping the Palestinians on
this front, and that was one of the key purposes of my
recent visit. Together with Lt. General Keith Dayton, who is
leading our efforts to help the Palestinians reform their
security services, I spoke with President Abbas about how we
can help him stem the violence in the West Bank and Gaza.
And we are working on a new initiative, along with our
allies such as Egypt, and Jordan, and the European Union.
I realize that the continuing problems of security
are also a great challenge for many Palestinian-Americans
living in Gaza and the West Bank – and for so many others,
including many of you, who travel there often, who work for
greater tolerance and understanding, and who invest your
time, and your knowledge, and indeed your capital in the
Palestinian territories. People like you have a vital role
to play in the Middle East, and I will continue to do
everything in my power to support your good work, and to
ensure that all American travelers receive fair and equal
treatment.
You see, ladies and gentlemen, our government cannot by itself meet the historic challenge that we now face in the Middle East. To empower moderate men and women in the Palestinian territories and across the region, to help them build lives of peace and dignity, we in government need the full support of private partners: our businesses, our universities, our non-governmental organizations, and our fellow citizens like you.
Recently, President
Bush formed a partnership with leaders of four major
American companies to support the government and people of
Lebanon. A presidential delegation traveled to Beirut last
month. And together, the State Department and America’s
business community are now raising millions of dollars in
new assistance and investment, which will help the Lebanese
people rebuild their country and revitalize their economy.
This partnership can, and should, become a model for
efforts to support the Palestinian people and the government
of President Abbas. So let us mobilize the full energy of
the Palestinian-American community. Let us find new and more
determined ways to realize our shared vision of two states,
Palestine and Israel, living side by side in peace and
security. And let us focus our efforts to strengthen and
support moderate men and women throughout the region, who
simply long for peace, and development, and dignity.
I know that sometimes a Palestinian state living side
by side in peace with Israel must seem like a very distant
dream. But I know too, as a student of international
history, that there are so many things that once seemed
impossible that, after they happened, simply seemed
inevitable. I've read over the last summer the biographies
of America's Founding Fathers. By all rights, America, the
United States of America, should never have come into being.
We should never have survived our civil war. I should never
have grown up in segregated Birmingham, Alabama to become
the Secretary of State of the United States of America.
And yet, time and time again, whether in Europe or in
Asia or even in parts of Africa, states that no one thought
would come into being, and certainly not peacefully and
democratically, did. And then looking back on them, we
wonder why did anyone ever doubt that it was possible.
I know the commitment of the Palestinian people to a
better future. I know firsthand the commitment of President
Abbas and moderate Palestinians to that future. And I know
the commitment of the people in this room and of the
American Task Force on Palestine that one day indeed there
will be a Palestinian state living side by side in peace
with Israel.
I can only tell you that I, too, have a
personal commitment to that goal because I believe that
there could be no greater legacy for America than to help to
bring into being a Palestinian state for a people who have
suffered too long, who have been humiliated too long, who
have not reached their potential for too long, and who have
so much to give to the international community and to all of
us. I promise you my personal commitment to that
goal.
Thank you very much.
2006/921
Released on
October 11,
2006