Gen. Colin Powell, USA (Ret.),
the 63rd US Secretary of State, is former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff (1989-93) and White House national security advisor (1987-89).
On Dec. 16, then-President-elect George W. Bush announced Powell's
nomination to the nation's highest diplomatic post. Here are excerpts
of Powell's remarks on that occasion:
Sources of Strength
"[S]trength comes to us from the power of our
system, the democracy and free enterprise system. It
comes to us from our economic power, it comes to us
from our military power. And as we go into this new
century and as we begin this new Administration, we
have to make sure that all those elements of power
are protected and allowed to thrive even more, with
an economy that is strong, growing, part of the new
international economic system, global trade, with military
power. We are the best on the face of the Earth. We're
going to keep it that way."
US Military Power
"[W]e're going to take actions early on to ensure
that our young men and women who might be called to
go in harm's way have what they need to be successful.
We owe that to them. I spent a good part of my life
helping those GIs get ready for battle, and I spent
a good part of my life up on Congress, before Congress,
working hard to get those troops what they needed.
... I will certainly be there with the Secretary of
Defense, assisting the Secretary in getting what he
needs for the military."
The New World Map
"[T]he old world map as we knew it--of a red
side and a blue side that competed for something called
'the Third World'--is gone. And the new map is a mosaic,
a mosaic of many different pieces and many different
colors spreading around the world, a world that has
seen that Communism did not work, Fascism did not work,
Nazism did not work. If you want to be successful in
the 21st century, you must find your path to democracy,
market economics, and a system which frees the talents
of men and women to pursue their individual destiny."
Internationalism and Allies
"[W]e will continue to [pursue a] uniquely American
internationalism, ... not by using our strength and
our position of power to get back behind our walls,
but by being engaged with the world, by first and foremost
letting our allies know that we appreciate all we have
been through over the last 50 years, and our alliances
are as strong now as they ever have been, and they
are as needed now as they ever have been, and we will
work with our allies to expand and to make those alliances
the center of our foreign policy activity."
Handling Russia and China
"We will work with those nations in the world
that are transforming themselves, nations such as China
and Russia. We will work with them not as potential
enemies and not as adversaries, but not yet as strategic
partners, but as nations that are seeking their way.
We will have areas of agreement and areas of difference,
and we will discuss them in rational ways, letting
them know of our values, letting them know of the principles
that we hold dear."
Colin Powell, Superstar
According to a recent Gallup
poll, the US public has an extraordinarily
positive view of retired Gen. Colin Powell,
Secretary of State.
Fully 83 percent of Americans say they have a favorable opinion of him.
Powell appeals to 90 percent of Republicans, 80 percent of independents,
and 80 percent of Democrats.
The poll, conducted Dec. 15-17, showed Powell is better liked than other
recent Secretaries of State. The favorable rating of his immediate predecessor,
Madeleine Albright, was just 36 percent when she was named Secretary
of State in January 1997. Her predecessor, Warren Christopher, received
a 41 percent favorable rating from the public. |
"We Will Stand Strong"
"For those nations that are not yet on this path
of democracy and freedom, for those nations who are
poorly led, led by failed leaders pursuing failed policies
that will give them failed results, we will stand strong.
We will stand strong with our friends and allies against
those nations that pursue weapons of mass destruction,
that practice terrorism. We will not be afraid of them,
we will not be frightened by them. We will meet them,
we will match them, we will contend with them. We will
defend our interests from a position of strength."
Israeli-Palestinian Peace
"It is absolutely a given that, under a Bush
Administration, America will remain very much engaged
in the Middle East. I expect it to be a major priority
of mine and of the department. It will be based on
the principle that we must always ensure that Israel
lives in freedom and in security and peace. But, at
the same time, we have to do everything we can to deal
with the aspirations of the Palestinians and other
nations in the region who have an interest in this."
Persian Gulf Dangers
"We have a different situation now than we had
in 1991 and 1992. At the end of the Gulf War, the Iraqi
regime agreed to the conditions that brought an end
to the conflict, that they would fully account for
all the weapons of mass destruction and other evil
technologies that they were working on. They have not
yet fulfilled those agreements. And my judgment is
that the sanctions in some form must be kept in place
until they do so. We will work with our allies to re-energize
the sanctions regime. And I will make the case in every
opportunity I get that we're not doing this to hurt
the Iraqi people. We're doing this to protect the peoples
of the region, the children of the region, who would
be the targets of these weapons of mass destruction
if we didn't contain them and get rid of them."
End of Saddam?
"Saddam Hussein is sitting on a failed regime
that is not going to be around in a few years' time.
The world is going to leave him behind and that regime
behind as the world marches to new drummers, drummers
of democracy and the free enterprise system. And I
don't know what it will take to bring him to his senses.
But we are in the strong position. He is in the weak
position. And I think it is possible to re-energize
those sanctions and to continue to contain him and
then confront him, should that become necessary again."
Balkans Situation
"[O]ur plan is to undertake a review ... and
take a look ... at our deployments ... in Bosnia and
Kosovo and many other places around the world and make
sure those deployments are proper. Our armed forces
are stretched rather thin, and there is a limit to
how many of these deployments we can sustain. So we're
going to take a look at that. We're going to talk to
our allies. We're going to consult. We're going to
make on-the-ground assessments of what we're doing
now, what's needed now, but also what is really going
to be needed in the future and see if we can find ways
that it is less of a burden on our armed forces. ...
So we're not cutting and running. We're going to make
a careful assessment of it, in consultation with our
allies, and then make some judgments after that assessment
is concluded."
National Missile Defense
"The President-elect has made a commitment to
national missile defense. I have watched the debates
on national missile defense for many, many years, and
I think a national missile defense is an essential
part of our overall strategic force posture, which
consists of offensive weapons, command-and-control
systems, intelligence systems, and a national missile
defense. And I still hearken back to the original purpose
of such a defense, and that is to start diminishing
the value of offensive weapons. We have been pursuing
the technology. I'm quite confident that when a Secretary
of Defense is named, that person will go into the Pentagon
and make a full assessment of the state of technology--where
are we and what can we accomplish?--and structure a
plan that is consistent with the approach that then-Governor
Bush gave in Washington early this year. So we're going
to go forward."
Persuading Allies
"We have to spend time discussing [national missile
defense] with our allies, discussing it with other
nations in the world that possess strategic offensive
weapons and don't yet understand our thinking with
respect to national missile defense. These will be
tough negotiations. I don't expect them to be easy.
But they will have to come to the understanding that
we feel this is in the best interest of the American
people--and not only the American people, the people
of the world--to finally start to move in the direction
where we can take away the currency associated with
strategic offensive weapons and the blackmail that
is inherent in some regime having that kind of weapon
and thinking they can hold us hostage."
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