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12 June 2002
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE
HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS TO THE JOINT MEETING OF THE US CONGRESS
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WASHINGTON DC
E&OE
Mr Speaker, Mr President, distinguished
members of the Senate and House, Ladies and Gentlemen, I thank you for the
great honour you have given me, and more importantly my country Australia, in
asking me to speak to you today.
The bonds between Americans and
Australians are strong and genuine. They are based on many shared values.
A belief that the individual is greater
than the State.
A belief that strong families are a
nation's greatest resource.
A belief that competitive capitalism is
the key to national wealth.
Mr Speaker, Mr President, and ladies and
gentlemen of the Congress, America has no better friend in the world than
Australia.
Australians and Americans enjoy each
other's company.
We share a love of sport and are fierce
competitors in some.
And from time to time we even share the
Academy Awards.
When I last came to this great chamber of
democracy on 12 September last year, smoke still hung in the air over
Washington and New York.
Heroic fireman and policemen, gallantly
disregarding the danger to themselves, scrambled desperately amid the rubble,
looking for the slightest sign of life.
The scale of loss and senseless
destruction was yet to be fully calculated.
In seeking justice and not revenge, in
choosing calm consideration over blind fury, by turning to friends before
turning on enemies, the United States has led a great re-affirmation of those
values upon which it and nations such as my own, are founded.
America fought back magnificently - and
won the admiration of the world.
You demonstrated to the world that, where
fundamental freedoms flourish, evil men can do their worst, cause death and
devastation but in the end they will never win.
In his inaugural address, George
Washington spoke of the destiny of the American people to preserve 'the sacred
fire of liberty'. That promise has been kept for more than two centuries but
never more so than since the appalling events of September 11.
Through these times Australians have
shared your shock and anger and been partners in your resolve.
We have taken our place beside you in the
war against terrorism, knowing beyond all doubt that it was an attack upon
ourselves and our way of life as surely as it was upon your own.
As we meet, Australian troops are fighting
side by side with Americans in Afghanistan.
In these past months President Bush has
displayed the tenacity, the strength and the depth of character of a great
leader.
And he is now applying those qualities to
the dangerous tensions between India and Pakistan and the intractable
differences in the Middle East.
It is a special privilege to return to
this historic place to address the representatives of a people with whom we
share so much and express the fond regard and high esteem in which we hold your
great nation.
Like you, Australia enters this new
century strong and prosperous.
Over the past decade, the productivity and
growth of our economy has exceeded that of most other developed
nations.
Our pioneer past, so similar to your own,
has produced a spirit that can overcome adversity and pursue great
dreams.
We've built a society of opportunity,
fairness and hope, leaving - as you did - the divisions and prejudices of the
Old World far behind.
Like your own, our culture has been
immeasurably enriched by migration from the four corners of the
earth.
We believe that nations are strengthened
not weakened, broadened not diminished, by open debate and diversity of
view.
Most of all, we value loyalty given and
loyalty gained - the concept of mateship runs deep within the Australian
character.
We cherish and where necessary will fight
to preserve the liberties we both hold so dear.
Australian and American forces fought
together for the first time in the Battle of Hamel, in France, in World War I.
The date of the attack - the 4th of July 1918 - was deliberately chosen by the
Australian Commander, General John Monash, to honour your
countrymen.
From that moment to this, we've been able
to count on each other when it has mattered most.
Australians will never forget the crucial
help Americans gave us during World War II.
Successive generations of Australians and
Americans have fought side by side in every major conflict of the twentieth
century - in the jungles of New Guinea, in Korea, in Vietnam, in the Gulf, in
skies and oceans around the globe and now, in another century, among the
rock-strewn mountains of Afghanistan.
The ANZUS Treaty of 1951 pledged each
country to come to the aid of the other if it were under attack.
And so it was that in a US Airforce plane
made available for my return to Australia on 12 September and high above the
Pacific that I informed the US Ambassador Tom Schieffer travelling with me our
intention was that, for the first time in its fifty year history, Australia
would invoke the ANZUS Treaty.
America was under attack. Australia was
immediately there to help.
Both of our societies are built on a deep
respect for the worth of each individual.
"The worth of a state, in the long run"
wrote John Stuart Mill in 1859 " is the worth of the individuals composing it
... a state which dwarfs its men in order that they may be more docile
instruments in its hands even for beneficial purposes - will find with small
men no great thing can really be accomplished".
America and Australia are societies which
extol the precious worth of each individual man and woman.
Like you I see family life at the heart of
a nation's existence.
Not only does the family nurture and
educate our children but it provides emotional anchorage throughout life for us
all.
The strength of the family goes beyond the
spiritual and the emotional.
United, caring families are the best
social welfare system mankind has ever devised.
Both of our societies draw great strength
from the spirit of volunteerism.
The huge success of the Sydney Olympic
Games owed much to the warmth, excitement and dedication of tens of thousands
of volunteers who infected everyone with the joy and exhilaration of the
occasion.
Edmund Burke called voluntary groups
society's "small platoons". They are the living tissue between the government
and the people.
Political life in both our nations is
changing.
Politics is less tribal. Life long
allegiances are looser and less frequent. Modern society has given young people
infinitely more options.
Governments must be decisive but also
modest. Grand gestures without practical results help no-one.
People want outcomes not political
fireworks and constant battles.
They want space from governments to get on
with their own lives.
I've spoken much of our common values,
shared history and our deep respect for each other as peoples.
We also share a common interest in
spreading and better understanding the benefits of globalisation.
The balance sheet of globalisation is
overwhelmingly favourable to mankind.
We must, however, better explain the
advantages of globalisation to all our citizens.
Trade reform and liberalisation have
delivered benefits to people in many countries and can deliver much more.
I understand that the demands of local
constituencies and international responsibilities must be finely balanced.
As a true friend let me say candidly that
Australia was disappointed with the passage of the recent Farm Bill.
It will damage Australia's farmers. They
are efficient producers with very little government support.
I know that the farm and export subsidies
of, for example, the European Union are much greater than those of the United
States.
Indeed, OECD agricultural subsidies are
two-thirds of Africa's total GDP. The cost of these subsidies is three times
all the ODA to developing countries.
This only serves to illustrate the urgent
need for global reform of agriculture within the World Trade Organisation
framework.
The challenge is to achieve a
comprehensive Doha trade round. That will require Australia and America to work
together within the WTO.
American leadership will be crucial. Let
me express the hope that Congress gives the President full authority to
negotiate new trade agreements.
At the same time, we in America and
Australia have an historic opportunity to give even greater momentum to our
bilateral economic relationship.
That is why Australia has proposed the
negotiation of a free trade agreement between our two countries. A
comprehensive free trade agreement, by boosting trade and investment between
us, would add a stronger economic dimension to the security and other links we
share.
Turning to the strategic challenges of our
own region, Australia welcomes full and active engagement by the United States
in the Asia Pacific. It is immensely important not only to the nations of the
region, but also to the continuing interests of the United States itself.
There is no other region more dynamic or
fast-changing.
Australia is proud of its leadership role
in East Timor in gaining for a people so long oppressed the freedom and
democracy available to our own citizens.
We stand ready to work in partnership with
America to advance the cause of freedom, particularly in our shared Pacific
region.
Mr Speaker, Mr President, ladies and
gentlemen: Australia enters this new century, confident in the talent and
the energy and the skills of its people.
We shall move forward, secure in the
knowledge that our journey through this century - often along paths requiring
sacrifice, courage and grit - will be in the constant company of a true and
great friend.
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