SECRETARY RICE: Thank you, Pat, for that kind introduction.
I’d also like to recognize Ambassador Antoine Chedid,
the Charge d’Affaires in -- to the Lebanese Embassy,
as well as Ambassador Robert Dillon. Ambassador Dillon, you
served bravely in 1983 and we honor your service and we are
truly honored by your presence here today. I'm very honored
to be here with all of you who remember those that we lost
in Beirut on this day 25 years ago. I want to welcome to the
State Department both the family members who lost loved ones
and the survivors of that tragic day.
I'm pleased, too, that we have here with us a representative
of our Beirut Embassy staff, Ms. Marina Chamma. It is only
fitting that in Lebanon , friends and family of the victims
are also gathered at our Embassy in Beirut in solidarity
with all who remember that terrible day. So today, we recall
the memory of those we lost, and we reaffirm our partnership
with the Lebanese people.
It was April 18, 1983, when a suicide bomber detonated
2,000 pounds of explosives in front of Embassy Beirut. At
the time, it was the deadliest attack ever on a U.S. diplomatic
mission. We lost 17 of our own sons and daughters and 35
of our Lebanese colleagues. Many others also perished as
they were visiting or just walking by the Embassy. Even
more were injured. These were all innocent people, stolen
from us in a moment of terror. American families sent their
sons and daughters proudly to represent the United States
abroad. They should not have had to die as they did. For
all of you, the families of the victims and the survivors,
you gave America your best and for that sacrifice, the United
States of America is eternally grateful.
In that day’s attacks, we're reminded that evil is
real, but so too is the courage and compassion of ordinary
people, when in the face of loss and suffering, summoned
what Lincoln called “the better angels of our nature.”
Our fellow citizens, many of whom are here today, stepped
in to do the work that should never be asked of anyone,
but they did it nonetheless, pulling colleagues from the
destruction, tending to the wounded, identifying the victims.
People made calls to the families of friends that no one
is ever prepared to make. And it was all done while remaining
vigilantly at post. On a day so filled with heartbreak,
all of you and your colleagues gave us cause for hope. You
made America proud.
Even when the tragedy of April 18 was followed by further
attacks on our Marine barracks later that year, on our Embassy
annex in 1984, and still others beyond that, the terrorists
never broke our will. It is said by some that America withdrew
from Lebanon in the 1980s. But all of us know better. You
know that though we may have moved, we never left. And you
know this because it was many of you, and your colleagues
in our diplomatic corps, who have remained on the frontlines
of our presence in Lebanon and who have anchored our friendship
with the Lebanese people.
Lebanon has seen too many wars, too many assassinations,
and too many innocent lives lost – tragedies that
remain all too real today. Indeed, as we speak, several
dozen Lebanese patriots, members of the democratic majority
bloc in the parliament, have had to take refuge in a Beirut
hotel, afraid for their very lives. After watching as one
another in recent years, fellow members of parliament, journalists
and, of course, Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, were gunned
down in the streets or claimed by terrorist bombs, who can
blame them?
This should be an unacceptable situation to all nations
and it is certainly unacceptable to the United States .
We remain fully committed to the people of Lebanon . We
fully support their desire for sovereign, democratic, and
prosperity -- a prosperous nation. The Lebanese people deserve
to live in peace. And the United States is dedicated to
this task and will continue to champion the peaceful aspirations
of the Lebanese people. In fact, it is in continuing to
champion the cause of a democratic Lebanon that we pay greatest
honor to those who died and those who suffered on that day.
Shortly after the 1983 Embassy attack, President Reagan
said, “This criminal attack on a diplomatic establishment
will not deter us from our goals of peace in the region.
We will do what we know to be right.” Twenty-five
years later, those words ring true for the thousands of
men and women who serve in our posts across the globe and
especially in the Middle East .
The men and women who we lost in Lebanon 25 years ago were
united in life by a common goal: to make this world safer
and better for all Americans and for all freedom-loving
people. Working every day for that goal is now the urgent
calling that leads us forward, and achieving it is an honor
to those who made the ultimate sacrifice and whose memory
we will all hold dearly and forever in our hearts.
Thank you. (Applause.)