|
Bush defends cost of Iraq war
21/08/2005 09:59 - (SA)
Crawford - US President George W Bush, besieged at his ranch by relatives of US soldiers killed in Iraq, launched a five-day campaign on Saturday to defend the war to an increasingly sceptical US public.
In his weekly radio address from his Prairie Chapel property, Bush said that the war would help avert another attack like the September 11 terrorist strikes and that the best way to honour fallen US troops was to defeat global terrorism.
"We must finish the task that our troops have given their lives for and honour their sacrifice by completing their mission," said Bush, whose approval ratings have slipped to some of the lowest levels of his presidency.
More than 1 800 US soldiers have been killed in Iraq and thousands more wounded in a conflict with a price tag in the tens of billions of dollars.
A recent poll found that a majority of Americans - 57% - believe that the war has made the United States more vulnerable to terrorist attacks, despite Bush's frequent arguments that the conflict has made them safer.
US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan "know that if we do not confront these evil men abroad, we will have to face them one day in our own cities and streets, and they know that the safety and security of every American is at stake in this war, and they know we will prevail," he said.
Bush's five-week stay at the ranch has been marked by a high-profile protest against the war in Iraq, led by Cindy Sheehan, who says she wants a face-to-face meeting with the president.
Sheehan, who met with Bush shortly after her son Casey was killed in Iraq in 2004, left the makeshift camp outside the ranch late last week to tend to her sick mother, but promised to return soon.
Protecting freedom
Bush was to travel to Utah on Monday to address a major veterans group, and head to Idaho on Wednesday to speak with members of the Idaho National Guard, as well as praise forces who played a key role in the Afghanistan campaign.
The president said he would commemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of fighting in the Pacific theatre of World War Two - a conflict he frequently compares to the war on terrorism.
In his radio remarks, Bush noted that the four-year anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist strikes was coming up and said he would be marking that event and thanking US soldiers he said were "on the front lines."
He did not mention efforts by Iraqi political leaders to craft a constitution, or their failure to nail down a charter by last Monday's deadline.
"Like previous wars we have waged to protect our freedom, the war on terror requires great sacrifice from Americans," especially those serving in the armed forces, said Bush.
"In this war, many of these brave men and women have given their lives to defend their fellow citizens and to bring the hope of freedom to millions who have not known it. We owe these fallen heroes our gratitude, and we offer their families our heartfelt condolences and prayers."
Faced with increasing pressure to say when US troops will come home, Bush has rejected setting a precise timetable, saying that training fledgling Iraqi security forces is a prerequisite for leaving.
Bush argued for invading Iraq because dictator Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction - but none have been found, and US investigators have declared the pre-war intelligence "dead wrong."
|