Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice-President, members of Congress, This is not
the first time that a Prime Minister of Israel has addressed a joint session of
Congress. My immediate predecessor, Shimon Peres, addressed this body and
before him, the late Yitzhak Rabin, who was tragically cut down by a
despicable, savage assassin. We are grateful that Israeli democracy has proved
resilient enough to overcome this barbaric act, but we shall always carry with
us the pain of this tragedy. I recognize, Mr. Speaker, that the great honor you
have bestowed on me is not personal. It is a tribute to the unshakable fact
that the unique relationship between Israel and the United States transcends
politics and parties, governments and diplomacy. It is a relationship between
two peoples who share a total commitment to the spirit of democracy, and
infinite dedication to freedom. We have a common vision of how societies should
be governed, of how civilization should be advanced. We both believe in eternal
values, we both believe in the Almighty. We both follow traditions hallowed by
time and experience. We admire America not only for its dynamism, and for its
power, and for its wealth. We admire America for its moral force. As Jews and
as Israelis, we are proud that this moral force is derived from the Bible and
the precepts of morality that the Jewish people have given the world. Of
course, Israel and the United States also have common interests. But our bonds
go well beyond such interests. In the 19th century, citizens of all free states
viewed France as the great guardian of liberty. In the 20th century, every free
person looks to America as the champion of freedom. Yesterday my wife and I
spent a very moving hour at Arlington Cemetery, and we saw there the evidence
of the price you paid for that freedom in the lives of your best and brightest
young men. And its a toll that is exacted from you from all of us, but from
you, these very days. I think it was the terrible misfortune of the Jewish
people that, in the first half of this century, the United States had not yet
assumed its pivotal role in the world. And it has been our great fortune that,
in the second half of this century, with the miraculous renewal of Jewish
nationhood, the United States became the preeminent power in the world. You,
the people of America, offered the fledgling Jewish state succor and support.
You stood by us time and time again, against the forces of tyranny and
totalitarianism. I know that I speak for every Israeli and every Jew throughout
the world when I say to you today: Thank you, people of America. Perhaps
our most demanding joint effort has been the endless quest to achieve peace and
stability for Israel and its Arab neighbors. American Presidents have joined
successive Israeli governments in an untiring effort to attain this peace. The first historic breakthrough was led by Prime Minister
Begin and Presidents Carter and Sadat at Camp David. The most recent
success was our pact with Jordan under the auspices of President Clinton. These
efforts, I believe, are clear proof of our intentions and our direction. We
want peace. We want peace with all our neighbors. We have no quarrel with them
which cannot be resolved by peaceful means. Nor, I must say, do we have a
quarrel with Islam. We reject the thesis of an inevitable clash of
civilizations. We do not subscribe to the idea that Islam has replaced
Communism as the new rival of the West, because our conflict is specific. It is
with those militant fanatics who pervert the central tenets of a great faith
towards violence and world domination. Our hand is stretched out in peace to
all who would grasp it. We dont care about their religion. We dont care about
their national identity. We dont care about their ideological beliefs. We care
about peace, and our hand is stretched out to peace. Every Israeli wants
peace. I dont think there is a people who has yearned, prayed and sacrificed
more for peace than we have. There is not a family in Israel that has not
suffered the unbearable agony of war and, directly or indirectly, the
excruciating, ever-lasting pain of grief. The mandate we have received from the
people of Israel is to continue the search for an end to wars and an end to
grief. I promise you: We are going to live up to this mandate. We will continue
the quest for peace, and, to this end, we are ready to resume negotiations with
the Palestinian Authority on the implementation of our Interim Agreement. I
want to say something about agreements. Some of you speak Latin, or at least
studied Latin. Pacta sunt servanta. We believe
agreements are made to be kept. This is our policy, and we expect the
Palestinian side to abide by its commitments. On this basis, we will be
prepared to begin final status negotiations as well. We are ready to engage
Syria and Lebanon in meaningful negotiations. We seek to broaden the circle of
peace to the whole Arab world and the rest of the countries of the Middle East.
But I want to make it clear that we want a peace that will last. We must have a
peace based on security for all. We cannot, and I might say we dare not, forget
that more men, women and children have lost their lives to terrorist attacks in
the last three years, than in the entire previous decade. I know that the
representatives of the United States sitting here, the people of the United
States, are now becoming tragically familiar with this experience. You’ve
experienced it in places as far afield as New Yorks World Trade Center, and
most recently in Dhahran. And I notice also the recent torching of
Afro-American churches in America, which, I must tell you, strike a familiar,
chilling note among Jews. But I want to try and put the Israeli experience
in perspective. One has to imagine, to do so, such attacks occurring time and
time again in every city and in every corner of this great country. So, what we
are saying here today is as simple as it is elementary. Peace means the absence
of violence. Peace means not fearing for your children every time they board a
bus. Peace means walking the streets of your town without the fearful shriek of
Katyusha rockets overhead. We just visited with the wife of a friend of
mine, the deputy-mayor of Kiryat Shemona, who was walking the streets of Kiryat
Shemona when the fearful shriek of a rocket over her head burned her car, nearly
burned her, and she was miraculously saved and she is alive and she is getting
better. But peace means that this doesnt happen, because peace without personal
safety is a contradiction in terms. It is a hoax. It will not stand. What
we are facing in the Middle East today is a broad front of terror throughout
the area. Its common goal is to remove any Western, and primarily any American,
presence in the Middle East. It seeks to break our will, to shatter our
resolve, to make us yield. I believe the terrorists must understand that we
will not yield, however grave and fearful the challenge. Neither Israel nor any
other democracy, and certainly not the United States, must ever bend to
terrorism. We must fight it resolutely, endlessly, tirelessly, we must fight it
together, until we remove this malignancy from the face of the earth. For too
long, the standards of peace used throughout the world have not been applied to
the Middle East. Violence and despotism have been excused and not challenged.
Respect for human freedoms has not been on the agenda. Its been on the agenda
everywhere else. Everywhere else: in Latin America, in the former Soviet Union,
in South Africa, and that effort has been led by successive American
administrations and by this house. I think its time to demand a peace based
on norms and standards. It is not enough to talk about peace in abstraction. We
must talk about the content of peace. It is time, I believe, for a code of
conduct for building a lasting Middle East peace. Such
a peace must be based on three pillars, the three pillars of peace. Security is
the first pillar. There is no substitute for it. To succeed, the quest
for peace must be accompanied by a quest for security. Demanding an end to
terrorist attacks as a prerequisite for peace does not give the terrorists veto
power over the peace process. Because nearly all of the terrorist acts directed
against us are perpetrated by known organizations whose activities can be
curbed, if not altogether stopped, by our negotiating partners. This means that
our negotiating partners, and indeed all the regimes of the region, must make a
strategic choice either follow the option of terror as an instrument of policy,
of diplomacy, or follow the option of peace. They cannot have it both ways. This
choice means that the Palestinian Authority must live up to the obligations it
has solemnly undertaken to prevent terrorist attacks against Israel. This
choice also means that Syria must cease its policy of enabling proxy attacks
against Israeli cities, and undertake to eliminate threats from Hizbullah and
other Syrian-based groups. This means that the fight against terror cannot be
episodic. It cannot be conditional. It cannot be whimsical. It cannot be
optional. It must become the mainstay of a relationship of trust between Israel
and its Arab partners. The second pillar of peace is
reciprocity. This means an unshakable commitment to the peaceful
resolution of disputes, including the border disputes between Israel and its
neighbors. The signing of a peace treaty should be the beginning of a
relationship of reciprocal respect, recognition and the fulfillment of mutual
obligations. It should not trigger round after round of hostile
diplomacy. Peace should not be the pursuit of war by other means. A peace
without pacification, a peace without normalization, a peace in which Israel is
repeatedly brought under attack, is not a true peace. Reciprocity means that
every line in every agreement turns into a sinew of reconciliation. Reciprocity
means that an agreement must be kept by both sides. Reciprocity is the glue of
mutual commitments, that upholds agreements. This is the second pillar of
peace. The third pillar of lasting peace is democracy and human rights. I am
not revealing a secret to the members of this chamber, when I say that modern
democracies do not initiate aggression. This has been the central lesson of the
twentieth century. States that respect the human rights of their citizens are
not likely to provoke hostile action against their neighbors. No one knows
better than the United States, the worlds greatest democracy, that the best
guarantor against military adventurism is accountable, democratic government. The
world has witnessed the bitter results of policies without standards in the case
of Saddam Hussein. Unless we want more Saddams to rise, we must apply the
standards of democracy and human rights in the Middle East. I believe that
every Muslim and every Christian and every Jew in the region is entitled to
nothing less. I dont think we should accept the idea that the Middle East is
the latest, or the last, isolated sanctuary that will be democracy-free for all
time except for the presence of Israel. I realize that this is a process.
It may be a long-term process. But I think we should begin it. It is time for
the states of the Middle East to put the issues of human rights and
democratization on their agenda. Democratization means accepting a free press
and the right of a legal opposition to organize and express itself. Its very
important for the opposition to be able to express itself, Mr. Speaker. Ive
just learned and will accord that same right, as you know. This is democracy.
To be able to disagree, to express our disagreements, and sometimes to agree
after disagreements. It means tolerance. And it means an inherent shift away
from aggression toward the recognition of the mutual right to differ. I’ll
admit, the Middle East as a whole has not yet effected this basic shift this
change from autocracy to democracy. But this does not mean that we cannot have
peace in this region, peace with non-democratic regimes. I believe we can. It’s
a fact that we’ve had such peace arrangements. But such peace arrangements,
as we can now arrive at, can only be characterized as a defensible peace, in
which we must retain assets essential to the defense of our country and
sufficient to deter aggression. Until this democratization becomes a mainstay
of the region, the proper course for the democratic world, led by the United
States, is to strengthen the only democracy in the Middle East, Israel, and to
encourage moves to pluralism and greater freedom in the Arab world. I want
to make something clear. We do not want peace merely in our time. We want peace
for all time. To the members of "Peace Now": we do not just want
peace now. We want peace now, and later, we want peace for generations. There
is no divide. That desire is heartfelt. It should be a point of unity, not of
disunity. This is why we must make the pursuit of human rights and democracy a
cornerstone of our quest. These, then, are the three pillars of peace peace,
reciprocity and the strengthening of democracy. I believe that a peace
based on these three pillars can be advanced. Yet I, ladies and gentlemen,
would be remiss if I did not refer to a major challenge facing all of us. I
have touched on the problem of the Middle East that is largely undemocratic,
and part of it is strongly anti-democratic. Specifically, it is being
radicalized and terrorized by a number of unreconstructed dictatorships whose
governmental creed is based on tyranny and intimidation. The most dangerous of these regimes is Iran, that has wed a
cruel despotism to a fanatic militancy. If this regime, or its despotic
neighbor Iraq, were to acquire nuclear weapons, this could presage catastrophic
consequences, not only for my country, and not only for the Middle East, but
for all mankind. I believe the international community must reinvigorate its
efforts to isolate these regimes, and prevent them from acquiring atomic power.
The United States and Israel have been at the forefront of this effort, but we
can and must do much more. Europe and the countries of Asia must be made to understand
that it is folly, nothing short of folly, to pursue short-time material gain
while creating a long-term existential danger for all of us. Only the United States can lead this vital international
effort to stop the nuclearization of terrorist states. But the deadline for
attaining this goal is getting extremely close. In our own generation,
we have witnessed how the United States averted, by its wisdom, tenacity, and
determination, the dangerous expansion of a totalitarian superpower equipped
with nuclear weapons. The policy it used for that
purpose was deterrence. Now, we see the rise of a similar threat
similar, and in many ways more dangerous against which deterrence by itself may
not be sufficient. Deterrence must now be reinforced with prevention, immediate
and effective prevention. We are confident that America, once again, will not
fail to take the lead in protecting our free civilization from this ultimate
horror. But, ladies and gentlemen, time is running out. We have to act
responsibly, in a united front, internationally. This is not a slogan. This is
not over-dramatization. This is the lives of our children and our
grandchildren. And I believe there is no greater, more noble, more responsible
force than the united front of democracy, led by the worlds greatest democracy,
the United States. We can overcome this challenge. We can beat it successfully.
Let me now say a word about a subject that has been on your mind and ours, and
that subject is the city of Jerusalem. Countless
words have been written about that city on the hill, which represents the
universal hope for justice and peace. I live in that city on the hill. And in
my boyhood, I knew that city, when it was divided into enemy camps, with coils
of barbed wire stretched through its heart. Since 1967, under Israeli
sovereignty, united Jerusalem has, for the first time in two thousand years,
become the city of peace. For the first time, the holy places have been open to
worshipers from all three great faiths. For the first time, no group in the
city or among its pilgrims has been persecuted or denied free expression. For
the first time, a single sovereign authority has afforded security and
protection to members of every nationality who sought to come to pray there. There
have been efforts to redivide this city by those who claim that peace can come
through division that it can be secured through multiple sovereignties,
multiple laws and multiple police forces. This is a groundless and dangerous
assumption, which impels me to declare today: There will never be such a
re-division of Jerusalem. Never. We shall not allow a Berlin Wall to be erected
inside Jerusalem. We will not drive out anyone, but neither shall we be driven
out of any quarter, any neighborhood, any street of our eternal capital. Finally,
permit me briefly to remark on our future economic relationship. The United States
has given Israel how can I tell it to this body? The United States has given
Israel, apart from political and military support, munificent and magnificent
assistance in the economic sphere. With Americas help, Israel has grown to be a
powerful, modern state. I believe that we can now say that Israel has reached
childhoods end, that it has matured enough to begin approaching a state of
self-reliance. We are committed to turning Israels economy into a free market
of goods and ideas, which is the only way to bring ourselves to true economic
independence. This means free enterprise, privatization, open capital markets,
an end to cartels, lower taxes, deregulation. You know, theres not a Hebrew
word for deregulation. By the time this term of office in Israel is over, there
will be a Hebrew word for deregulation. But may I say something that unites all
of us across the political divide: Im committed to reducing the size of
government, and Im quoting Speaker Gingrich, quoting President Clinton, saying
that the era of big government is over. Its over in Israel too. I believe that
a market economy is the only way to effectively absorb immigrants and realize
the dream of the ages the ingathering of the Jewish exiles. To succeed, we must
uphold the market economy as the imperative of the future. Its a crucial
prerequisite for the building of the promised land. We are deeply grateful for
all we have received from the United States, for all that we have received from
this chamber, from this body. But I believe there can be no greater tribute to
Americas long-standing economic aid to Israel than for us to be able to say: We
are going to achieve economic independence. We are going to do it. In the next four
years, we will begin the long-term process of gradually reducing the level of
your generous economic assistance to Israel. I am convinced that our
economic policies will lay the foundation for total self-reliance and great
economic strength. In our Hebrew Scriptures, which spread from Jerusalem to
all of mankind, there is a verse: "God will give strength to His people;
God will bless His people with peace." This is the original, inspired
source for the truth that peace derives from strength. In the coming years,
we intend to strengthen the Jewish people in its land. We intend to build an
Israel of reciprocal dialogue and peace with each and every one of our
neighbors. We will not uproot anyone, nor shall we be uprooted. We shall insist
on the right of Jews to live anywhere in the Land, just as we insist on this
right for Jews in any other place in the world. We will build an Israel of
self-reliance. We will build an Israel with an undivided and indivisible city
of hope at its heart. We will build a peace founded on justice and strength,
and amity for all men and women of good will. And I know the American people
will join us in making every effort to make our dream a reality, as I know the
American people will join us in prayer: "God will give strength to His
people; God will bless His people with peace." Thank you very much.
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