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PENCE COMMENDS TROOPS ON
ANNIVERSARY OF 9-11
Congressman tells soldiers "You do not go alone"
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Thank
you for that warm welcome. I am deeply honored and profoundly
humbled to be with you.
As
I thought about what I might say today, what words of inspiration
and hope I might share on this solemn anniversary, I couldn't
help but be struck by how incongruous it is that I should
be speaking to you. Our roles today are backwards. It is I
and all of Congress who should be sitting in your seats, and
you before the microphone.
It
is one thing to speak of courage; it is quite another to be
courageous.
Whatever
inspirational that exists in me is but faint reflection of
what already abounds in you.
The
fact is, it is YOU who inspire ME. It is you who bring
me courage.
It
is you who teach me-and the entire nation-about bravery, sacrifice,
commitment, and honor. What it means to be an American. And
like all great teachers, you teach not through words, but
by example.
But
I thank you for your kindness. I can think of no place I would
rather be on this fifth anniversary of 9-11. It is significant
on so many levels.
Camp
Atterbury has played a major role in our nation's response
to the vicious attacks on our soil-a key reason why, despite
the enemy's plans, there has been no repeat of those horrible
events. The men and women who train here see to that.
America
has more than 30,000 reasons to be grateful to Camp Atterbury.
That's
the number of service personnel from each branch of the armed services, as well as agents with Homeland Security
and the FBI, who have trained here for deployment in the War
on Terror.
By
taking the fight to the enemy's soil, and executing it with
precision, determination, and bravery, you have secured for
all Americans the ability to do what President Bush urged
nine days after the attacks: "Live your lives. Hug your children."
For
five years Americans have been living their lives and hugging
their children...not huddled in the shadow of fear, but openly,
exuberantly, in the light of liberty, the way our Founding
Fathers-and our Heavenly Father-intended. America's service
men and women preserve not only our lives, but also our spirit.
************************************
Each of us remembers where we were at 8:46 a.m. Eastern Time
on this day five years ago. Some of you were in class, maybe
even cutting class. Some of you were at work, others just
getting up, or hitting the sack after pulling third shift.
I
was at work when I learned we were under attack. I was in
the Capitol Building when the Trade Towers were hit. Then
I was told the Pentagon had been hit, and another plane was
headed straight for us. My first thought was for my family
and my staff. Where do we go? What do we do? My next
thought was, "Where do I report for duty?"
I
waited for instructions. Tense, anxious minutes passed.
Finally, the official word came down. And it was, in fact,
just one word:
"Disperse."
Disperse?
What's
that supposed to mean?!
It
dawned on me: that coolly detached directive meant....
"Run
for your lives!"
It
was a helpless feeling. I wanted to do something...anything....
But there was no duty roster. No one to report to, no plan
to follow. Congress, like most of America, was not prepared
for such an emergency.
Thankfully,
our military was. Our service men and women did not disperse.
They reported for duty. Ready, confident, determined. They
knew their jobs and did them.
The
airspace secured, I stood with my congressional colleagues
on the steps of the evacuated Capitol Building that evening.
The sky was eerily silent, save for the whine of F-16s.
We still didn't know exactly what we would do, should do.
But we knew with a certainty what we would NOT do. Neither
we, nor America, would simply...disperse.
In
that moment, there rose a swell of resolve and pride.
It swept through us like a wave, and someone began the first
notes of God Bless America. We instantly joined in. It was
a spontaneous moment.
Unorchestrated,
unstaged...and decidedly off-key. But it was the most purely
authentic moment I have ever experienced in Congress. No politics,
no agendas, no grandstanding. We simply stood shoulder to
shoulder and asked God to bless America.
Five
years later I can say with certainty...He has.
And
He still does. Some of the blessings are obvious, others come
in....camouflage....
You,
our Citizen Soldiers.
Our
nation's security and defense were founded on that concept
---everyday people setting aside a piece of their lives to
serve and defend their country. It is a concept that
is alive, well and flourishing yet today.
Our
nation does not today compel its citizens to service. Yet
our military has never been stronger, more effective, or more
professional. I believe that's true not in spite of the dissolution
of the draft, but because of it.
There
may have been a time when a slick brochure or smooth recruiting
officer could fill a quota, swaying the reluctant with promises
of tuition reimbursement or "glamorous" world travel a la
"Private Benjamin." That ended on 9-11.
Each
of you knew what enlistment could mean. Yet freely chose your
path; moved not by grudging obligation, but by honor and desire.
It is part of who you are, and why this nation is so great.
The
people boarding United Flight 93 in Newark on the morning
of September 11, 2001 began the day as ordinary citizens.
They ended their morning-and their lives-as Citizen Soldiers
in a Pennsylvania field.
It
was the first battle in our nation's War on Terror. The soldiers
were untrained and unarmed. The enemy had trained for two
years; the Citizen Soldiers had mere minutes to hatch
their plan. They had never even met.
It
was a conscription they neither sought nor planned. Yet these
citizen soldiers--armed only with a refreshment cart and their
bare hands--instinctively answered the call to duty.
One
of them, Todd Beamer, summed it up while on a cell phone with
a GTE Customer service rep. He told her that he and other
passengers were going to rush the cockpit.
"Are
you sure that's what you want to do?' she asked.
The
Citizen Soldier answered. "It's what we have to do."
You, more than most, have a depth of appreciation for those
words. I suspect they pretty much sum up why you're here,
why you each made the decision you did to serve your country.
It's what you have to do. ... not because someone requires
it, but because it's who you are. Like the passengers of United
Flight 93, it is not in you to just stand by.
The
words of another passenger aboard that flight seem to echo
throughout this camp. Knowing what the hijackers had planned,
Tom Burnett told his wife simply: "Some of us are going to
do something about it."
In
the five years since, one by one, tens of thousands of everyday
people made the same life-altering decision. To do something
about it. They streamed into recruiting offices or re-enlisted.
Soon, many of you will be in the theaters of Iraq, Afghanistan
and Kosovo. You go knowing what it means.
With
hearts aching to hug your own children, you bear your longing
so that others may hug their children.
In
bearing loneliness for a time, you spare untold millions from
permanent sorrow.
In
postponing your lives for a time, you give millions the freedom
to pursue theirs.
In
bearing temporary hardship and fatigue, you prevent countless
and unknowable horrors.
And
because you have seized your own fear by the throat and wrestled
it into submission, you have wrested the heel of oppression
off millions of innocent men, women, and children, and opened
their hearts and minds to democracy.
But
you do not go alone. You take with you the prayers and heartfelt
wishes of a grateful America.
For
each Citizen Soldier, there are scores of friends and family
who also bear the burden of sacrifice. Many are here today.
I know it isn't easy. The price you pay is dear. On behalf
of all America, I thank you. Our thoughts are with you.
****************
Before
I close, I want to share with you a certainty I hold in my
heart: We are winning this war.
Last
year, I sat in a meeting with President Bush in the Roosevelt
Room . At the end of the meeting, it came my time to speak.
He was sitting next to me, so I turned to him and said, "Mr.
President, thank you for being more determined than our enemy."
He
sort of reared back in his chair and looked at me. Then he
broke into a smile. "I like how you put that."
I
said it not to please him, but because it was true. I was
honored when I heard that he'd subsequently adopted the sentiment
for use in his own remarks-but not before improving upon it.
He
says something like, "Our enemy is determined but America
is more determined."
Mr.
President, I like how you put that.
He's
right. A president can only be as determined as the nation
he leads, and a Commander in Chief only as good as his troops.
Being here today confirms for me the truth of my belief that
yes, we will prevail.
For
as Ronald Reagan wisely said, "America is great because America
is good."
The
dark and evil hearts that spawned carnage and destruction
upon our people five years ago succeeded only to increase
our might, because they awakened what is good in us.
How
utterly maddening that must be to the enemy! Not only did
they NOT cripple us with fear or elicit cowering submission,
they actually managed to awaken in us a greater measure of
those things they so despise in us.
Instead
of crushing our spirit, they renewed it.
They
unleashed an army of Todd Beamers, Mark Binghams, Jeremy Glicks,
and Tom Burnetts. Only this time they have guns, tanks, and
planes. They're trained, armed, and ready.
The
enemy intended that the events of 9-11-2001 would never be
forgotten....and so it shall be. But not for the reasons
they intended.
It
is the enemy, not America, that has dispersed.
And
though we shall never forget the victims and the heroes of
9-11, 2001, neither shall we forget the heroes of each day
that followed, and the ones yet to come.
God
bless you, and God bless America.
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