For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
September 11, 2003
Remarks by the President to the in Town Travel Pool
Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital
Washington, D.C.
4:30 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: This morning we had a chance to go to a church
service to remember the victims and pray for their families, the
victims of 9/11/2001. Today -- this afternoon, Laura and I are here to
thank the brave souls who got wounded in the war on terror, people who
were willing to sacrifice in order to make sure that attacks such as
September the 11th don't happen again.
I want to thank the staff of Walter Reed, the docs and the nurses
and the care-givers, the people who look after the families, for
enabling me to say to our fellow citizens that when somebody gets hurt,
somebody who wears our uniform gets injured, they get the absolute best
care as quickly as possible. I was able to pin the Purple Heart on a
number of people upstairs. I was able to hug their parents and thank
them. I'm just so grateful that our country has got people who are
willing to serve in a cause greater than themselves.
I'll answer a couple of questions, and then I've got to go.
Q Sir, does this new bin Laden tape concern you at all?
THE PRESIDENT: First of all, they're analyzing it. Secondly, his
tape reminds us that the war on terror goes on. As well, his rhetoric
is trying to intimidate and, you know, create fear. And he's not going
to intimidate America. We are at war because of what he and his fellow
killers decided to do two years ago today. And we will stay at war
until we have achieved our objective: the dismantlement of terrorist
organizations.
And it just reminds us of the duty we have got to do. And I say
"we," my administration and all who serve our country, our duty is to
protect our fellow citizens from people like bin Laden.
Q Mr. President, people are reminded of what happened two years
ago -- think about what's happened in the past two years -- what can
you say to them to make them feel like this won't happen again, that
there won't be another --
THE PRESIDENT: Yes. Well, I can just tell them -- people that,
first of all, we have -- we're slowly but surely dismantling al Qaeda.
We are not only destroying terrorist training camps, cutting off their
money, we're either killing or capturing a lot of their leadership.
And as I told the American people right after September the 11th,
2001, this would be a different kind of war and this would be a long
war. And we're fighting this war on a lot of fronts, the major front
of which is now in Iraq. And we're making steady progress toward
achieving our objective, and we will continue to make progress. You
can't negotiate with these people, you can't try to talk sense to these
people. The only way to deal with them is to find them and bring them
to justice, and that's what the United States -- and a lot of other
countries working with the United States -- will continue to do.
Q Sir, are we any closer to getting a U.N. resolution?
THE PRESIDENT: Colin is going to be overseas starting tomorrow and
over the weekend, and we'll see when he comes back. But the key thing
for the United Nations resolution is that it will hopefully encourage
other nations to participate. And I think other nations have an
obligation to participate. A free Iraq will be in their nation's
benefit. It will make the world more peaceful and more secure. And a
free Iraq in the heart of the Middle East will make it more easy for us
to not only secure America and other free nations, but will make it
easier for there to be peace in the long run.
And, therefore, I would hope that nations would participate, and
to the extent that some nations need an additional United Nations
resolution, this could be helpful in encouraging international
participation. But Colin is sitting down with other foreign ministers
from the Perm 5, as well as Kofi Annan, starting tomorrow.
Okay, well, thank you all.
END 4:35 P.M. EDT
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