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'Was it worth it? You bet', US Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld on Iraq, March 19
'Rumsfeld Says Freedom in Iraq Is Worth the Cost', op-ed
article by secretary of defense, March 19, 2004.
This op-ed article by Donald H. Rumsfeld, secretary of defense,
first appeared in the New York Times March 19, 2004, and is in the
public domain. No republication restrictions.
(begin byliner)
The Price of Freedom in Iraq
By Donald H. Rumsfeld
Washington -- This week, as we mark the one-year anniversary of
the beginning of Operation Iraqi Freedom, it is useful to recount
why we have fought. Not long ago I visited South Korea, just as the
Korean government was debating whether to send troops to Iraq. In
Seoul, I was interviewed by a Korean journalist who was almost
certainly too young to have firsthand recollection of the Korean
War. She asked me, "Why should Koreans send their young people
halfway around the globe to be killed or wounded in Iraq?"
As it happened, I had that day visited a Korean War memorial,
which bears the names of every American soldier killed in the war.
On it was the name of a close friend of mine from high school, a
wrestling teammate, who was killed on the last day of the war. I
said to the reporter: "It's a fair question. And it would have been
fair for an American to ask, 50 years ago, `Why should young
Americans go halfway around the world to be killed or wounded in
Korea?' "
We were speaking on an upper floor of a large hotel in Seoul. I
asked the woman to look out the window -- at the lights, the cars,
the energy of the vibrant economy of South Korea. I told her about
a satellite photo of the Korean peninsula, taken at night, that I
keep on a table in my Pentagon office. North of the demilitarized
zone there is nothing but darkness -- except a pinprick of light
around Pyongyang -- while the entire country of South Korea is
ablaze in light, the light of freedom.
Korean freedom was won at a terrible cost -- tens of thousands
of lives, including more than 33,000 Americans killed in action.
Was it worth it? You bet. Just as it was worth it in Germany and
France and Italy and in the Pacific in World War II. And just as it
is worth it in Afghanistan and Iraq today.
Today, in a world of terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and
states that sponsor the former and pursue the latter, defending
freedom means we must confront dangers before it is too late. In
Iraq, for 12 years, through 17 United Nations Security Council
resolutions, the world gave Saddam Hussein every opportunity to
avoid war. He was being held to a simple standard: live up to your
agreement at the end of the 1991 Persian Gulf war; disarm and prove
you have done so. Instead of disarming -- as Kazakhstan, South
Africa and Ukraine did, and as Libya is doing today -- Saddam
Hussein chose deception and defiance.
Repeatedly, he rejected those resolutions and he systematically
deceived United Nations inspectors about his weapons and his
intent. The world knew his record: he used chemical weapons against
Iran and his own citizens; he invaded Iran and Kuwait; he launched
ballistic missiles at Iran, Israel, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain; and
his troops repeatedly fired on American and British aircraft
patrolling the no-flight zones.
Recognizing the threat, in September 2002 President Bush went to
the United Nations, which gave Iraq still another "final
opportunity" to disarm and to prove it had done so. The next month
the president went to Congress, which voted to support the use of
force if Iraq did not.
And, when Saddam Hussein passed up that final opportunity, he
was given a last chance to avoid war: 48 hours to leave the
country. Only then, after every peaceful option had been exhausted,
did the president and our coalition partners order the liberation
of Iraq.
Americans do not come easily to war, but neither do Americans
take freedom lightly. But when freedom and self-government have
taken root in Iraq, and that country becomes a force for good in
the Middle East, the rightness of those efforts will be just as
clear as it is today in Korea, Germany, Japan and Italy.
As the continuing terrorist violence in Iraq reminds us, the
road to self-governance will be challenging. But the progress is
impressive. Last week the Iraqi Governing Council unanimously
signed an interim Constitution. It guarantees freedom of religion
and expression; the right to assemble and to organize political
parties; the right to vote; and the right to a fair, speedy and
open trial. It prohibits discrimination based on gender,
nationality and religion, as well as arbitrary arrest and
detention. A year ago today, none of those protections could have
been even imagined by the Iraqi people.
Today, as we think about the tens of thousands of United States
soldiers in Iraq -- and in Afghanistan and elsewhere around the
world fighting the global war on terrorism -- we should say to all
of them: "You join a long line of generations of Americans who have
fought freedom's fight. Thank you."
(Donald H. Rumsfeld is U.S. secretary of defense.)
Source: US State Department, Washington File, http://usinfo.state.gov.
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