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U.S.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office
of the Spokesman
________________________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release
September 21, 2001
2001/727
Remarks
By
Secretary Of State Colin
L. Powell
To
The Special
Session Of The
Organization
Of American States Washington,
D.C. September
11, 2001
SECRETARY
POWELL: Mr.
Secretary General, Ministers and Permanent Representatives,
ladies and gentlemen, thank you for the privilege of
speaking in an early spot at this very important meeting.
I also thank my colleagues for their expressions of
support this morning delivered to me one on one, personally,
and also for the many supportive words and complimentary
words I have heard so far this morning concerning President
Bush's important speech last night, where he laid out a
campaign for the world, a campaign for the world to pursue
against terrorism.
And
I thank you all for that support.
I thank you also for the declaration of
solidarity that I have just had a chance to read.
This is very reassuring to me, it's reassuring to
President Bush, and it is reassuring to all Americans to
have this kind of support from our friends in the
hemisphere.
On September 11, a grievous blow was
visited upon our hemisphere and upon humanity.
Yet it is not tragedy but unity, which brings us this
day to the Organization of American States, unity of values,
unity of interest, unity of purpose.
Twenty-nine out of the 34 nations represented here
today have citizens who were lost in the World Trade Center
bombing last week.
Families
mourn from one end of this hemisphere to the other.
On behalf of President Bush and the
American people, I want to extend our heartfelt thanks to
you, our neighbors, for your outpouring of condolence and
support, even as we extend to you our deepest sympathy for
all those whom you yourselves have lost.
Much has been made that it was an
attack against an American interest, the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon. But, in fact, it was an attack against civilization.
Some 80 nations lost citizens in the World Trade
Center. They
struck home, my home, your home, my nation's capital, and
democracy's oldest home in our hemisphere and New York City,
the trading house of the world. Truly, this attack against one of us was an attack against
all of us.
This is not the first time that nations
of our hemisphere have suffered at terrorists' hands.
The United States has stood with you and now you
stand with us, partners in resolve as well as in grief.
Free peoples committed to the collective defense of
our security and of the democratic ideals that we hold so
dear.
Just 10 days ago, and another world
ago, we were all assembled in Lima for a special session of
the OAS. It was to be a happy and historic occasion for our
hemisphere. We
were adopting our democratic charter in an unprecedented
demonstration of shared political will.
A few months earlier in Quebec, at the Summit of the
Americas, our leaders had set the goal of establishing a
free trade area embracing all of our democracies. Never had our hemisphere been closer in values and in common
vision at that time of the future that lay before us as we
looked forward from Quebec and as we looked forward from
Lima.
And then came the terrible news. And with sudden clarity, we all understood that the house of
democracy and prosperity that we have all worked so hard to
build for our hemisphere was under attack and must be
defended. We realized that the great strength that comes from
solidarity, the kind of solidarity that we have achieved in
the past, will be absolutely critical as we move forward
through this crisis, critical to our democracies, critical
to our prosperity, critical to our very security.
We have now invoked the Rio Treaty in
recognition of the common peril we confront and in defense
of the great promise for our hemisphere that we must
protect. And I
want to especially convey my country's gratitude to Brazil,
for its leadership in initiating the resolution to invoke
the treaty.
In taking action under the Rio Treaty,
our hemispheric community is not alone.
We act in concert with the rest of the civilized
world. The
United Nations has risen in condemnation of the attacks.
The Arab League and the Organization of the Islamic
Conference and the Organization of African Unity have
denounced them. The
collective defense provisions of the NATO and ANZUS
alliances have been invoked. The European Council meets in extraordinary session today and
is expected to approve major counter-terrorism initiatives.
President Bush and I have met with and
talked to our counterparts all around the globe.
And the overwhelming message we are hearing is this: we are with you; terrorism is our common foe; we must act
together against this international scourge, and against all
who aid and abet it.
We, the united democracies of the
Western Hemisphere, join the world in the global campaign
against terrorism. We have pledged to deny terrorists and their networks the
ability to operate within our territories.
We have resolved to hold to account all those
responsible for aiding, financing, and otherwise supporting
and harboring terrorists.
The path-breaking resolutions already
passed by the OAS Permanent Council and those being
considered today call on the members to use all necessary
and available means to pursue, capture, and punish those
responsible for the recent acts and to prevent further acts
from occurring.
Now, the long hard work must be done.
Now, our governments, our law enforcement authorities
and our civic institutions must find ways to work together
at all levels and more cooperatively than ever before,
exchanging life-saving information, coordinating our
activities. Now,
individually and collectively, we must take concrete steps
to tighten border controls, enhance air- and seaport
security, improve financial controls and increase the
effectiveness of our counter-terrorism forces.
Now, we must charge all relevant bodies
at the national and hemispheric level, our law enforcement
agencies, our financial organizations, those concerned with
transportation, tourism, aviation, disaster assistance,
migration and so many other functions -- all of them to
integrate counter-terrorism measures into the daily
performance of their individual missions.
There is one hemispheric body in
particular we need to galvanize and strengthen:
The OAS Inter-American Committee Against Terrorism.
The committee was established two years ago with a
mandate to "prevent, combat and eliminate
terrorism." We have this tool, we need it, we must use it.
Let there be no question, let there be
no doubt, we are in this worldwide campaign together for the
long haul. We have endured an enormous tragedy but we will overcome.
We will defend the rule of law against the lawless.
We will not allow murderers to destroy our
democracies and devastate our economies. We will never let our future be hijacked by terrorists.
And so today we commit ourselves to
concerted action in defense of freedom, our common home.
We will do it in accordance with the Rio Treaty, in
the spirit of the OAS charter and in the name of the men and
women of our hemisphere and throughout the world who believe
in the sanctity of life, in justice, and in the power of
good to prevail over evil.
I will never forget the morning of the
11th of September, as I sat at breakfast with President
Toledo and messages were handed to me telling me of the
tragedy that happened in my country, in New York City.
And as the messages came in and gave me a further
indication of the horror of what was happening in New York
and Washington, I immediately made plans to return home. But I also wanted to stop by our meeting that morning.
I wanted to stop by our meeting that
morning to participate in our acclamation of the power of
democracy. And
I will never forget the reception I received that morning as
all of you allowed me to step forward and to say a few words
about this tragedy and how it would make my country a
stronger country when we came through this tragedy, that you
could destroy our cities, you could kill our citizens but
you will never destroy our spirit, you will never destroy
what the United States is made from and what we are all
about: the
steel that resides in our spirit and in our bodies.
And I will never forget, never, the
response that you gave to me that morning when, by
acclamation, you passed the resolution.
And then you stood as a group and applauded.
I deeply appreciated that.
It meant a lot to President Bush when I told him
about it. You
were applauding in that instance for the United States and
for me. But, in
reality, we were applauding for all of us.
We were applauding for humankind.
We were applauding for the rule of democracy, the
rule of law. We
were applauding the simple proposition that if we are a
civilized people, we must work together in concert to defeat
evil, to defeat terrorism.
And that is what we are going to be doing in the
world and especially here in our hemisphere.
And so I thank each and every one of
you for the expressions of support that you have extended to
us. I thank you
for your collective efforts on our behalf and on behalf of
the hemisphere. And
I regret that I cannot stay for the whole meeting due to
pressing matters, but I did want you to know of the deep
appreciation that we have for what we have done here
together as an important organization, the Organization of
American States.
And so I thank you once again, and may
God bless all the Americas.
Thank you.
(Applause.)
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