President George W. Bush again vowed to complete US military missions in Iraq
and around the world as the United States honoured its war dead with the
military toll in Iraq closing on 2,500.
US President George W.
Bush delivers Memorial Day remarks at the Arlington National Cemetary
Ampitheater in Arlington, Virginia. Bush again vowed to complete US
military missions around the world as the United States honoured its war
dead with the American toll in Iraq closing on 2,500.
[Reuters] |
Tears welled in the US president's eyes as he gave a speech at Arlington
National Cemetery on Memorial Day, just a few days after admitting that he had
some regrets about the Iraq conflict and that it had caused "consternation" in
America.
"I'm in awe of the men and women who sacrifice for the freedom of the United
States of America," Bush said to loud applause from an audience that included
Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and US military chiefs.
Family members of US troops killed in Iraq were also among the audience as
Bush spoke.
"Our nation mourns the loss of our men and women in uniform. We will honour
them by completing the mission for which they gave their lives, by defeating the
terrorists, by advancing the cause of liberty and by laying the foundation of
peace for a generation of young Americans," Bush said.
The US death toll in Iraq is now about 2,470 and has increased by more than
800 since the president's last Memorial Day wreath-laying at Arlington Cemetery,
in the Washington suburbs. Almost 300 US soldiers have died in Afghanistan.
And Iraq looked set to dominate the news bulletins here late Monday as the
CBS network said two members of a CBS news team had been killed in Baghdad and
that a well-known correspondent, Kimberly Dozier, was seriously injured.
The CBS team, who were with a US military patrol, were in a convoy struck by
an improvised explosive device.
Bush spoke at Arlington on Memorial Day which sees military veterans visit
the city to pay their respects to soldiers lost in conflict.
There are the remains of about 296,000 US soldiers, mainly from the two World
Wars and the Vietnam and Korean conflicts, at Arlington.
"In this place where valor sleeps, we are reminded why America has always
gone to war reluctantly, because we know the costs of war," said Bush.
"We have seen those costs in the war on terror we fight today. These grounds
are the final resting place for more than 270 men and women who have given their
lives in freedom's cause since the attacks of September 11, 2001."
The Iraq war is becoming increasingly unpopular and has become a major drag
on the president's approval ratings which now hover around 30 percent.
Polls indicate an overwhelming majority of Americans now believe the Iraq war
was a mistake.
On Saturday, Bush compared the "war against terror" to the Cold War struggle
against communism.
But last week, after a summit with war ally Prime Minister Tony Blair of
Britain, Bush spoke of "setbacks and missteps" in the Iraq campaign.
The US leader said that the Abu Ghraib prison scandal had been the biggest
mistake in Iraq and that he regretted some of his rhetoric in the war on terror,
such as his "Bring 'em on" taunt to Iraqi insurgents.
He called it the "kind of tough talk that sent the wrong signal to
people."