Allawi Thanks America, Details Plan for
Iraq's Future
By Jim Garamone
AFPS
"Thank
you, America," Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi told a joint
session of Congress during his visit to the U.S.
Allawi thanked
the United States for its role in the liberation of Iraq. He said
that despite what people may read in the news or see on television,
"Iraq is succeeding."
The prime
minister did not sugarcoat the challenges lying ahead for his
country. But, he said, Iraq, the region and the world are "better
off without Saddam Hussein."
Allawi, who
had been driven into exile by Saddam and almost murdered by Saddam's
secret police, said Iraqis know America has made great sacrifices.
"I have come here to thank you and to promise you that your
sacrifices are not in vain," he said.
He expressed
his country's sorrow to the families of Americans killed in Iraq.
"The costs now have been high," he said. "As we
have lost our loved ones in this struggle, so have you. As we
have mourned, so have you.
"This
is a bitter price of combating tyranny and terror," he continued.
"Now we are determined to honor your confidence and sacrifice
by putting into practice in Iraq the values of liberty and democracy
which are so dear to you and which have triumphed over tyranny
across our world."
Allawi also
told the joint session that elections scheduled for January 2005
will happen on time despite all that terrorists and insurgents
will try to do. He said elections could happen in 15 of the 18
provinces of the country tomorrow. "I know that some have
speculated, even doubted, whether this date can be met,"
he said. "So let me be absolutely clear. Elections will occur
in Iraq on time in January, because Iraqis want elections on time."
The prime
minister did not downplay the threat of terrorists and insurgents.
He said there is a "tiny minority who despise the very ideas
of liberty, of peace, of tolerance, and who will kill anyone,
destroy anything to prevent Iraq and its people from achieving
this goal."
Some of these
individuals want a return of the Hussein regime, others are enamored
of a toxic extremist philosophy, and still others are foreign
terrorists, he explained.
"For
the struggle in Iraq today is not about the future of Iraq only,
it's about the worldwide war between those who want to live in
peace and freedom, and terrorists, … who strike indiscriminately
at soldiers, at civilians, as they did so tragically on 9/11 in
America and as they did in Spain and Indonesia, Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, Russia and my country and many others," he said.
Allawi said
this tiny minority threatens to derail progress in Iraq through
intimidation and fear. "I can tell you today they will not
succeed," he noted.
He said his
government has three parts to a plan to build a free and independent
Iraq: building democracy, defeating the insurgency, and improving
the quality of life for ordinary Iraqis.
This political
strategy is aimed at isolating the terrorists from the communities
they operate in. "We are working hard to involve as many
people as we can in the political process to cut the grounds from
under the terrorists' feet," Allawi said.
Political
moves and talk cannot defeat terrorism, he said, "but we
can weaken it." Ending local support will allow the coalition
and Iraqi security forces to tackle the enemy head-on "to
identify, isolate and eradicate this cancer."
The Iraqi
military strategy calls for the country to build and maintain
security forces that can handle the security environment in the
Iraq. "Ordinary Iraqis are anxious to take over entirely
this role and to shoulder all the security burdens of our country
as quickly as possible," Allawi said.
He said for
now, American forces are necessary but that training of Iraqi
forces has sped up and the Iraqi government now commands almost
50,000 armed and combat-ready Iraqis. By January 2005, Allawi
said, the number will be about 145,000 troops. And by the end
of 2005 he expects it to rise to 250,000 Iraqis.
"Our
intelligence is getting better every day," the president
said. "These new Iraqi forces are rising to a challenge.
They are fighting on behalf of sovereign Iraqi government, and
their performance is improving every day."
The economic
side of the plan is also moving apace. He said work on the oil
infrastructure is proceeding, and basic services are being repaired
or put in place.
"The
homes are being rebuilt; schools and hospitals are being rebuilt;
the clinics are open and reopened," he said. "There
are now over 6 million children at school, many of them attending
one of the 2,500 schools that have been renovated since liberation."
Allawi said
that for the first time in Iraq's history, the people can look
forward to controlling their destiny. "This would not have
been possible without the help and sacrifices of this country
and its coalition partners," he said. "I thank you again
from the bottom of my heart."
Click
Here
for the Full Remarks of President Bush and President Allawi of
Iraq