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His Majesty King
Abdullah II of Jordan
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JORDAN'S
KING ABDULLAH II ADDRESSES JOINT SESSION OF U.S.
CONGRESS (MaximsNews.com, U.N.)
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"In
the Name of God, the Compassionate, the
Merciful.
Honorable
Senators and Members of Congress,
Thank
you for such a warm welcome. It is an
honor to stand, as my father did, before
this historic institution. Allow me to
thank you, on behalf of all Jordanians.
Jordan
and the
United States
have had a long friendship. It is a special
privilege to be here in the year that the
American Congress welcomes its first woman
Speaker, and its first Muslim-American
member of Congress. These milestones
send a message around the world about the
America
I know so well, a place where individuality
is nurtured, a place where hard work is
rewarded, a place where achievement is
celebrated. The
America
I know so well believes that opportunity and
justice belong to all.
In
my days in
Massachusetts
, I also learned something of
New England
virtues. There wasn’t actually a law
against talking too much, but there was
definitely an attitude that you didn’t
speak unless you could improve on silence.
Today,
I must speak; I cannot be silent.
I
must speak about a cause that is urgent for
your people and for mine. I must speak
about peace in the
Middle East
. I must speak about peace replacing the
division, war, and conflict that have
brought such disaster for the region and for
the world.
This
was the cause that brought my father King
Hussein here in 1994. With Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin beside him, he
spoke of a new vision for the
Middle East
. Their courageous work for peace
received bipartisan support from your
leaders. And there was tremendous hope
for a new era. There was tremendous hope
that people would be brought together. There
was tremendous hope that a final and
comprehensive settlement of all the issues
would be achieved.
Thirteen
years later, that work is still not
completed. And until it is, we are all
at risk. We are all at risk of being victims
of further violence resulting from
ideologies of terror and hatred. It is
our greatest and most urgent duty to prevent
such dangers to our region, to your country
and to the world. The choice is ours:
an open world full of promise, progress and
justice for all; or a closed world of
divided peoples, fear, and unfulfilled
dreams. Nothing impacts this choice
more than the future of peace in the
Middle East
.
I
come to you today at a rare, and indeed
historic, moment of opportunity, when there
is a new international will to end the
catastrophe. And I believe that
America
, with its enduring values, its moral
responsibility, and yes, its unprecedented
power, must play the central role.
Some
may say, ‘Peace is difficult, we can live
with the status quo.’ But, my
friends, violent killings are taking place
as part of this status quo.
Palestinians and Israelis are not the only
victims. We saw the violence ricochet
into destruction in
Lebanon
last summer. And people around the
world have been the victims of terrorists
and extremists, who use the grievances of
this conflict to legitimize and encourage
acts of violence. Americans and
Jordanians and others have suffered and
survived terrorist attacks. In this
room, there are representatives of American
families and Jordanian families who have
lost loved ones. Thousands of people have
paid the highest price, the loss of their
life. Thousands more continue to pay this
terrible price, for their loved ones will
never return. Are we going to let these
thousands of lives be taken in vain? Has it
become acceptable to lose that most basic of
human rights? The right to live?
The
status quo is also pulling the region and
the world towards greater danger. As public
confidence in the peace process has dropped,
the cycle of crises is spinning faster, and
with greater potential for destruction.
Changing military doctrine and weaponry pose
new dangers. Increasing numbers of
external actors are intervening with their
own strategic agendas, raising new dangers
of proliferation and crisis. These are
groups that seek even more division: faith
against faith, nation against nation,
community against community. Any
further erosion in the situation would be
serious for the future of moderation and
coexistence, in the region and beyond. Have
we all lost the will to live together in
peace celebrating one another’s strengths
and differences?
Some
may say, ‘But there are other, urgent
challenges.’ How can there be anything
more urgent than the restoration of a world
where all people, not only some people, all
people have the opportunity to live
peacefully? This is not only a moral
imperative, it is essential to the future of
our world, because long-term, violent crisis
is the enemy of all global prosperity
and progress.
Certainly,
our era faces critical issues. There
is great public concern here, just as in our
region, about the conflict in
Iraq
. The entire international community
has vital decisions to make about the path
forward, and how to ensure
Iraq
’s security, unity, and future. But
we cannot lose sight of a profound reality.
The wellspring of regional division, the
source of resentment and frustration far
beyond, is the denial of justice and peace
in
Palestine
.
There
are those who say, ‘It's not our
business.’ But this Congress knows:
there are no bystanders in the 21st Century,
there are no curious onlookers, there is no
one who is not affected by the division and
hatred that is present in our world.
Some
will say: ‘This is not the core issue in
the
Middle East.' I come here today as your
friend to tell you that this is the core
issue. And this core issue is not only
producing severe consequences for our
region, it is producing severe consequences
for our world.
The
security of all nations and the stability of
our global economy are directly affected by
the
Middle East
conflict. Across oceans, the conflict
has estranged societies that should be
friends. I meet Muslims thousands of
miles away who have a deep, personal
response to the suffering of the Palestinian
people. They want to know how it is,
that ordinary Palestinians are still without
rights and without a country. They ask
whether the West really means what it says
about equality and respect and universal
justice.
Yes,
my friends, today I must speak. I cannot be
silent.
Sixty
years of Palestinian dispossession, forty
years under occupation, a stop-and-go peace
process, all this has left a bitter legacy
of disappointment and despair, on all sides.
It is time to create a new and different
legacy, one that begins right now; one that
can set a positive tone for the American and
Middle East
relationship; one that can restore hope to
our region’s people, to your people, and
to the people of this precious world.
Nothing can achieve that more effectively,
nothing can assert America’s moral vision
more clearly, nothing can reach and teach
the world’s youth more directly, than your
leadership in a peace process that delivers
results not next year, not in five years,
but this year.
How
do we get there? Not by a solution
imposed by one side. A lasting peace
can only be built on understanding,
agreement and compromise.
It
begins with courage and vision. We,
all of us, must take risks for peace.
The Arab states recognized that reality in
2002, when we unanimously approved the Arab
Peace Initiative. It puts forward a
path for both sides, to achieve what people
want and need: a
collective peace treaty with Israel and
normal relations with every Arab state,
collective security guarantees for all the
countries of the region, including Israel,
an end to the conflict, a dream every
Israeli citizen has longed for since the
creation of Israel, and an agreed solution
to the refugee problem, a withdrawal
from Arab territories occupied since 1967,
and a sovereign, viable, and independent
Palestine.
The
commitment we made in the Arab Peace
Initiative is real. And our states are
involved in ongoing efforts to advance a
fair, just, and comprehensive peace.
His Majesty King Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz of
Saudi Arabia
initiated the 2002 proposal; today, he
continues to rally international support.
Momentum is also building among Muslim
countries outside the Arab world. Ten
days ago, in
Islamabad
, the foreign ministers of key Muslim states
met. They came together to assure
Palestinians and Israelis that they are not
alone, that we back their effort to make and
build peace.
The
goal must be a peace in which all sides
gain. It must be anchored in security and
opportunity for all.
It
must be a peace that will free young
Palestinians to focus on a future of
progress and prosperity.
It
must be a peace that makes
Israel
a part of the neighborhood, a neighborhood
that extends from the shores of the Atlantic
Ocean, across the breadth of the southern
Mediterranean, to the coast of the
Indian Ocean
.
It
must be a peace that enables the entire
region to look forward with excitement and
hope, putting its resources into productive
growth, partnering across borders to advance
development, finding opportunities, and
solving common challenges.
This
goal is visionary, but my friends, it is
attainable. History shows that
longtime adversaries can define new
relationships of peace and cooperation.
The groundwork for a comprehensive, final
settlement is already in place. At
Taba, as in the Geneva Accords, the parties
have outlined the parameters of the
solution.
But
we need all hands on deck. The
international community, especially the
United States
, must be engaged in moving the process
forward to achieve real results. Above
all, we must make our process serve our
purpose. We must achieve an agreed solution
to the conflict.
Madam
Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Honorable
Members,
Your
responsibility today is paramount. Your
potential to help Palestinians and Israelis
find peace is unrivalled. This is
because the people of the region still
regard the United States as the key to
peace, the one country most capable of
bringing the two sides closer together,
holding them accountable, and making a just
settlement reality.
Time
after time, there has been progress towards
peace when Americans have actively engaged.
Camp David
,
Madrid
,
Wye
River
: nearly every breakthrough was
accomplished when
America
was determined to help the parties succeed.
On
behalf of all those who seek and strive for
peace in my part of the world, I ask you now
to exert that leadership once again.
We ask you to join with us in an historic
effort of courage and vision. We ask
you to hear our call, to honor the spirit of
King Hussein and Yitzhak Rabin, and help
fulfill the aspirations of Palestinians and
Israelis to live in peace today.
Let
me reaffirm that
Jordan
is committed to playing a positive role in
the peace process. It is part of our
larger commitment to global co-existence and
progress. Ours is an Islamic country
with a proud record of diversity,
moderation, and shared respect.
Allow
me to say, we thank the Congress and the
Administration for supporting
Jordan
’s progress and development. I
deeply value the partnership between our
peoples, and the contributions of so many
Americans to the future of our country.
“A
decent respect for the rights and dignity of
all nations, large and small.”
That’s how President Roosevelt – the
great F.D.R. – described the basis of
American foreign policy. He pledged
American support for the four freedoms,
freedom from fear, freedom from want,
freedom of speech, and freedom of religion,
everywhere in the world.
The
Four Freedoms speech was given right here,
before Congress. And that’s entirely
fitting. Because it is here in the
People’s House, that the voices and values
of
America
have made hope real for so many people.
Today,
the people of the
Middle East
are searching for these four freedoms.
Today, the people of the
Middle East
are searching for new hope, hope for a
future of prosperity and peace. We
have seen the danger and destruction of
violence, hatred, and injustice. But we have
also seen what people can achieve when they
are empowered, when they break down walls,
when they commit to the future. And we
know that
Middle East
peace can be a global beginning, creating
new possibilities for our region and the
entire world.
We
look to you to play an historic role.
Eleven American presidents and thirty
American congresses have already faced this
ongoing crisis. For not the future
generation, but the generation alive today,
let us say together: No more! Let us
say together: Let’s solve this! Let
us say together: Yes, we will achieve this!
No
Palestinian father should be helpless to
feed his family and build a future for his
sons and daughters. No Israeli mother
should fear when her child boards a bus.
Not one more generation should grow up
thinking that violence and conflict are the
norm.
As
Roosevelt
also said, “the justice of morality must
and will win in the end.” But he
knew that it was up to responsible nations
to stand up for justice when injustice
threatens.
This
is our challenge as well. And we must
not leave it to another generation to meet
this challenge.
Thirteen
years ago, my father was here to talk about
his hopes for peace. Today, we are
talking about a promise that is within our
reach.
We
can wait no longer and that is why I am here
before you. We must work together to restore
Palestine
, a nation in despair and without hope. We
must work together to restore peace, hope
and opportunity to the Palestinian people.
And in so doing, we will begin a process of
building peace, not only throughout the
region, but throughout the world. How much
more bloodshed and how many more lives will
it cost for this grave situation to be
resolved?
I
say: No more bloodshed and no more lives
pointlessly taken!
The
young boy, traveling to school with his
brother in
Palestine
, let him have a life of peace.
The
mother, watching with fear as her children
board a bus in
Israel
, let her have a life of peace.
The
father in
Lebanon
, working hard to provide an education for
his children, let him have a life of peace.
The
little girl, born in
Iraq
, with her wide eyes full of wonder, let her
have a life of peace.
The
family, together eating their evening meal,
in Asia, Africa, North America, South
America, Europe,
Australia
, and the
Middle East
, let them all have a life of peace.
Today
my friends, we must speak; we cannot be
silent.
The
next time a Jordanian, a Palestinian, or an
Israeli comes before you, let it be to say:
Thank you for helping peace become a
reality.
Thank
you very much." ~~~~~
~~~~~
MaximsNews.com, An Independent Voice from the
U.N., provides commentary and analysis from
leading world figures: King Abdullah II
(Jordan), HRH Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein
(Jordan), Sir Brian Urquhart, Hans Blix, Amb.
Richard Holbrooke, Anwar Ibrahim, Bianca Jagger,
Dr. Nafis Sadik, Shashi Tharoor, Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Noeleen Heyzer, Kerry
Kennedy, Ian Williams, Stephen Schlesinger, Sen.
Timothy E. Wirth, Marc Morial, Amb. Jayantha
Dhanapala (Sri Lanka), Amb. Pierre Schori
(Sweden), Amb. William H. Luers, Susan Roosevelt
Weld, Rory Kennedy, Mehri
Madarshahi, J. Michael Adams, Gloria Feldt,
Jeffrey Laurenti, Rodney D. Smith, Rory
O'Connor, Genevieve Stamper, Max Stamper and
others.
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