With Iraq's parliament facing tomorrow's deadline to approve a new constitution, President George W. Bush said yesterday that the document "is a critical step on the path to Iraqi self-reliance." Bush used his weekly radio address to highlight political progress in Iraq, even as daily violence continues to take the lives of citizens and the US forces occupying the country.
"Iraqis are taking control of their country, building a free nation that can govern itself, sustain itself and defend itself," the president said. "And we're helping Iraqis succeed. We're hunting down the terrorists and training the security forces of a free Iraq so Iraqis can defend their own country."
Bush taped the radio address from his Texas ranch, where he is spending five weeks on a summer break from the White House. On Thursday, his foreign and defense advisers met him there to discuss Iraq and other international issues.
Outside the ranch, Cindy Sheehan of Vacaville, California, waited defiantly for Bush to come out and explain why her son lost his life while fighting for the US Army in Iraq. Dozens of other protesters traveled from across the country to join her throughout the week.
More than 100 Bush supporters held a rally Friday night across the road from the makeshift campsite of the anti-war demonstrators. Authorities kept the two groups separated. Bush said Thursday that while he sympathized with the pain of those who lost loved ones and heard their cries to bring the troops home, he will keep US forces in Iraq until there is a stable democracy that can be protected by Iraqi security forces.
"When that mission of defeating the terrorists in Iraq is complete, our troops will come home to a proud and grateful nation," he said.
More that 1,800 US troops have died in Iraq since the beginning of the war. Bush said the nation grieves every death but can be confident that the military is bringing freedom to people who have lived under tyranny.
"Withdrawing our troops from Iraq prematurely would betray the Iraqi people, and would cause others to question America's commitment to spreading freedom and winning the war on terror," he said. "So we will honor the fallen by completing the mission for which they gave their lives, and by doing so we will ensure that freedom and peace prevail."
Bush said Thursday he saw no reason why the draft constitution should not be approved by tomorrow. However, he recognized there are still disputes over federalism and the role of religion in the government.
"Despite the acts of violence by the enemies of freedom, Iraq's elected leaders are now finishing work on a democratic constitution," Bush said in the radio address.
Although Bush kept busy during his first two weeks at the ranch with travel and meetings to highlight his legislative accomplishments, he has no events planned for next week.
He was scheduled to attend a Little League regional championship baseball game Saturday evening in nearby Waco, while anti-war activists planned a noontime rally in Crawford.
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