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CNN LIVE EVENT/SPECIAL

President Bush Signs National Defense Authorization Act

Aired December 2, 2002 - 14:25   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.

MARTIN SAVIDGE, CNN ANCHOR: We're going to the president at the Pentagon. Let's go there now.
(JOINED IN PROGRESS)

DONALD RUMSFELD, DEFENSE SECRETARY: The president says thank you.

Mr. President, welcome back to the Pentagon. We are pleased you're here, and we're delighted to see so many friends from the House and Senate who have worked hard to help fashion this legislation: Senator John Warner up on the stage here, and Congressman Duncan Hunter. And I think somewhere down here I see some folks: Senator Dayton and Senator Bunning. Well, I can't see Senator Bunning somewhere.

There you are. Good to see you, sir.

And Senator Sessions should be here.

Jeff, nice to see you.

Congressman McHugh and Congressman Everett and Delegate Underwood. We welcome you all as well. It's good to see you.

I regret that Chairman Levin and Chairman Stump are out of town and not able to join us today.

The bill will be signed today appropriately honors Congressmen and Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee Bob Stump.

Mr. President, in your September 1999 remarks at the Citadel, you vowed that on taking office you would give your team at the Department of Defense a broad mandate to challenge the status quo and envision a new architecture for America's defense.

The goal, you said, would be to move beyond marginal improvements. This, you said, will require spending more, and it has, and spending more wisely, which is our assignment and our task.

For the past 22 months we have pursued the goals you set out. We fashioned a new defense strategy with a new way of sizing our forces and balancing risks.

We have established the new Northern Command to better defend the homeland, a Joint Forces Command that focuses on transformation and a new Strategic Command responsible for early warning and defense against missile attack and long-range conventional attacks.

We reorganized and revitalized missile defense program, freed from the constraints of the ABM Treaty. And we completed the Nuclear Posture Review that will permit historic and deep reductions in offensive nuclear weapons.

This legislation is a key step in putting your strategic vision into action. It focuses on programs that will be needed in our new 21st-century security environment. It accelerates funding for unmanned aerial vehicles. It makes critical investments to improve U.S. intelligence capabilities. It funds the conversion of Cold War- developed Trident nuclear submarines into platforms that can deliver special forces and Tomahawk missiles into denied areas. And it provides the quality-of-life improvements for the men and women in uniform that you have worked for.

This legislation addresses three priority missions at once: to win the global war on terrorism; to restore capabilities by making investments in procurement, people and modernization; and to prepare for the future by funding transforming initiatives for the 21st century.

The bill you sign today will have an immediate impact on our national security and at the same time will help to assure the security of future generations of Americans.

Ladies and gentlemen, it is my pleasure to introduce the leader in the global war on terrorism, our commander in chief, President George W. Bush.

Mr. President?

(APPLAUSE)

GEORGE W. BUSH, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Thank you all. Thank you all. Please be seated. Please be seated.

Thank you, Mr. Secretary. Thank you for your leadership. Thank you for your candor. Thank you for doing a fabulous job on behalf of the American people.

It's an honor for me to be here today with leaders of our military, the good folks who are serving our country, to sign the 2003 Defense authorization bill.

We're a nation at war. America must understand we're at war. But those who wear the uniform must understand how proud all of America is for your service to our great country. On behalf of a grateful nation, I'm here to thank you.

Our military is making good progress in this war. We've liberated an oppressed and friendless people. We're hunting down the terrorists all across the globe. We're performing our missions with speed and skill.

You have the strong, united support of this great land. And this bill should reflect the strong and united support of the United States Congress.

And I want to thank the members of the Congress who are here on stage: Senator Warner and Congressman Duncan Hunter, the members of the Senate and the Congress who are with us. I want to thank you for your good work on this important legislation.

I appreciate so very much all those who work in the secretary's office, who worked hard on this bill.

I want to thank the chairman of the Joint Chiefs who are here and the vice chairman with us, and those who represent the enlisted personnel of our military.

Most of all, I want to say a word about Bob Stump, Chairman Stump, who couldn't be with us today, distinguished chairman of the Armed Services Committee who served our nation well. He's a dedicated public servant who has decided to retire. And as the secretary said, this bill is appropriately named for this fine American. We will miss him. And we wish Bob and his family all the very best.

I want to thank the service secretaries who are here with us. And I want to thank you all for coming.

The legislation I sign this afternoon was passed by Congress in a remarkable spirit of unity. It sets priorities of our Defense Department in a critical -- critical -- period for our country.

Our country has unprecedented challenges, and we're facing them with unmatched technology, carefully planning and the finest traditions of valor.

We're rewarding the service and sacrifice of our military families with higher pay, improved facilities and better housing.

We're procuring the best weapons we possibly can and the best equipment while adding funds for operations and maintenance, as well.

We're investing in missile defenses and all the new technologies we need to gain every advantage -- every advantage -- in the battlefields of the future.

And since intelligence is playing a critical role in our ability to achieve military victory this new law creates a new high-level position within the Department of Defense called the undersecretary for intelligence.

This generation of armed forces has been given two difficult tasks: fighting and winning a war, and at the same time transforming our military to win the new kind of war.

In the first stages of our fight against terror we've already seen the future face of warfare: forces that are more agile and mobile and lethal, along with weapons that are smarter and tactics that are more inventive.

These priorities are reflected in this year's budget. You'll see them reflected in every military budget I submit and sign as your president.

America's military is strong, and that's the way it should be. Our nation and the world are safer that way.

Now and in the future, we will maintain a military that is second to none.

And the greatest strength of America's military is the cause we all serve. That cause is freedom and a world at peace. Today that cause is being challenged by determined enemies, and we will not rest and we will not relent until our freedom is secure.

Our troops in Afghanistan remain engaged in a difficult and dangerous mission. We're hunting down trained killers. And that's all they are: nothing but a bunch of cold-blooded killers.

We're destroying their weapons. The secretary reports to me in the White House that day after day we're finding giant caches of weapons, which we're destroying.

And while we hunt them down -- hunt the killers down, we'll continue to help the Afghan people as they work to build lives of dignity and lives of security. Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for hijackers and bomb-makers and assassins.

Thanks to the United States military, the terrorist training camps are closed. Many terrorists have met their fate in the caves and mountains of Afghanistan. Others are now in custody.

Yet we know that many terrorists are still at large.

They hide and they plot in over 60 different countries. We face an enemy that's attacked cities in America, embassies and airplanes in Africa, ships in the Gulf, tourists in Bali. This enemy lives like a parasite. They plot in shadows. They prey on failed states. And they align themselves with outlawed regimes.

Defeating this enemy requires fighting a different kind of war; what we call the first war of the 21st century.

We're pursing the terrorists wherever they dwell. It doesn't matter where they hide, we're after them one by one.

We follow them wherever they run. They think they can run. They can't run far enough from the long arm of justice of the United States.

We're freezing their finances. We're disrupting their plots. We're killing them or capturing them one person at a time. That's how you win the first war of the 21st century; a war we are going to win.

(APPLAUSE)

Some of the successes in this war will make headlines and sometimes you won't even know about it. But all the terrorists can be certain of this: Their hour of justice will come. And that hour has already arrived for an increasing number of field generals of the terrorist army. Recently, we took a guy named al-Nashiri into custody. Until last month, he was the top Al Qaida operative -- the top Al Qaida leader in the Gulf region. He was plotting and planning.

But today this much is certain: He won't be executing any more attacks against the United States and her friends, like the attack he masterminded against the USS Cole.

Success in the war on terror will only come by taking every measure to protect innocent people from sudden and catastrophic violence.

And we must oppose the threat of such violence from any source. We oppose the terror network and all who harbor and support the terrorists. And we oppose a uniquely dangerous regime that possesses the weapons of mass murder, has used those weapons and could supply those weapons to terrorist networks.

Saddam Hussein's regime has a long history of aggression against his neighbors and hostilities towards America. It has a long history of ties to terrorists. The dictator has a long history of seeking biological and chemical and nuclear weapons, even while U.N. inspectors were present in his country.

Now the world has told him the game is over.

The U.N. Security Council, the NATO alliance and the United States are united. Saddam Hussein will fully disarm himself of weapons of mass destruction. And if he does not, the United States will lead a coalition to disarm him.

As the U.N. inspections -- U.N. weapons inspections process gets under way we must remember that inspections will not -- will only work -- will only work if Iraq fully complies.

You see, the inspectors are not in Iraq to play hide-and-seek with Mr. Saddam Hussein. Inspectors do not have the duty or the ability to uncover terrible weapons hidden in a vast country.

The responsibility of inspectors is simply to confirm the evidence of voluntary and total disarmament.

It is Saddam Hussein who has the responsibility to provide that evidence as directed and in full. Any act of delay, deception or defiance will prove that Saddam Hussein has not adopted the path of compliance and has rejected the path of peace.

In the inspections process the United States will be making one judgment: Has Saddam Hussein changed his behavior of the last 11 years? Has he decided to cooperate willingly and comply completely or has he not?

So far, the signs are not encouraging. A regime that fires upon American and British pilots is not taking the path of compliance. A regime that sends letters filled with protests and falsehoods is not taking the path of compliance.

On or before the 8th of December Iraq must provide a full and accurate declaration of its weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs. That declaration must be credible and complete or the Iraqi dictator will have demonstrated to the world once again that he has chosen not to change his behavior.

Americans seek peace in this world. We're a peaceful nation. War is the last option for confronting threats. Yet the temporary peace of denial and looking away from danger would only be a prelude to broader war and greater horror.

America will confront gathering dangers early before our options become limited and desperate. By showing our resolve today, we are building a future of peace. In the decisions and missions to come, our military will carry the values of America and the hopes of the world.

People of Iraq, like all human beings, deserve their freedom. And the people of Afghanistan, with the help of the United States armed forces, have gained their freedom.

One guardsman from Florida tells of meeting a member of the new Afghan national army. This Afghan soldier said he enlisted to honor the memory of his brother who was killed by the Taliban and to ensure that his own son would live in freedom.

The Florida guardsman wrote home that, "Being here makes me realize that people are giving up their lives to have a fraction of the freedoms we take for granted."

He said, "Talking to one soldier, made me realize how lucky I am to have been born in the United States of America. I'm honored to have meet an Afghan patriot," he wrote.

Every time I visit this building or any American base around the world, I'm honored to meet American patriots. The men and women of our military bring credit to our flag and security to our country. On behalf of the American people, I thank you for all you've done, for all you will do in the cause of freedom and the cause of peace.

And now I'm pleased to sign the Bob Stump National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003.

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