|
WASHINGTON - President Bush signed a
$401.3 billion defense authorization bill Monday, saying members of the U.S. armed forces are facing
"a great and historic task" in confronting and defeating the
forces of terrorism.
"The stakes for
our country could not be higher," the president said at a Pentagon
ceremony. "We face enemies that measure their progress by the chaos
they inflict, the fear they spread and the innocent lives they
destroy."
"America's military is standing
between our country and grave danger," he proclaimed.
Bush spoke before
leaving town for a holiday week at his ranch.
On the way to
Texas, Bush stopped in
Colorado at
Fort Carson, which has lost 28 soldiers
in Iraq. Four of the victims were
among the 16 soldiers killed Nov. 2 when a helicopter was shot down in the
dangerous Sunni Triangle near Fallujah, Iraq.
Fort Carson has sent 12,000 troops to Iraq, its largest deployment since
World War II.
Nearly 2,000 soldiers
and family members crowded inside a hangar at this Army post to hear from
Bush, who landed at nearby Peterson Air Force Base just after noon.
The Army invited
family members around Colorado who have lost loved ones in Iraq to meet privately with Bush.
The president also planned to have lunch with some of the troops.
In signing the
defense bill before departing Washington, Bush said, "We're
standing for order and hope and democracy in Afghanistan and Iraq. We're standing up for the for security of all free nations and for the advance
of freedom. The American people and your commander in chief are
grateful," he said, "and we will support you in all your central
missions."
At
Fort Carson, Bush was to have lunch with
soldiers, meet privately with families of some who have died and speak
about the situation in Iraq, where on Sunday two U.S. troops were killed and then
pummeled with concrete blocks and a soldier traveling in a convoy was killed
by a roadside bomb. In Afghanistan, five soldiers were killed
Sunday in the crash of a transport helicopter near the main U.S. base.
U.S. policies in Iraq are a major political
vulnerability for Bush in the 2004 election season.
After months in which
more than half of Americans approved of the president's handling of Iraq, a recent CNN-USA
Today-Gallup poll showed disapproval at 54 percent and approval at 45
percent. Other polls find the public evenly divided on that question.
Public approval of
Bush's handling of the economy, meanwhile, has increased recently with
positive news on that front.
Families at
Fort Carson, near Colorado Springs, generally have supported the
war effort, but there have been voices of concern.
Harriet Johnson of
Cordova, S.C., the mother of Spc. Darius T. Jennings, one of the four
Fort Carson soldiers who died in the
crash of the CH-47 Chinook helicopter, said she was upset that Bush did not
stop to speak with her family when he was in South Carolina earlier this month.
"I understand he
may not be able to talk to each one of them direct," she said.
"He was in my hometown. Something should have been said."
On the other hand,
the stepfather of Marine Lance Cpl. Thomas Slocum, who was killed in Iraq on March 23, said he believes
Bush takes responsibility for the U.S. casualties, which have topped
400. "If President Bush were go to every family, it would take too
much of his time, and if he sees one, he has to see them all," said
Stan Cooper of Thornton, Colo.
Among other things,
the defense bill before him at the Pentagon:
-Raises salaries for
soldiers by an average of 4.15 percent, and extends increases in combat and
family separation pay.
-Calls for the Air
Force to lease 20 Boeing 767 planes as in-flight refueling tankers and buy
80 more.
-Partially overturns
rules preventing disabled veterans from receiving some retirement pay as
well as disability compensation.
-Grants Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld increased control
over 700,000 civilian employees. Pentagon officials said restrictions on
hiring, firing and promoting employees forced them to use military
personnel for jobs better suited for civilians. Democrats said the bill
goes too far in stripping overtime guarantees and job protection rules.
-Lifts a decade-old
ban on research into low-yield nuclear weapons and authorizes $15 million
for continued research into a powerful nuclear weapon capable of destroying
deep underground bunkers.
-Exempts the military
to provisions of the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal
Protection Act. The Pentagon claimed environmental laws restrict training
exercises; environmentalists said the laws have had little effect on
training and that the exemptions go too far.
The president ends
the day at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, where he will observe
Thanksgiving with family members.
On Tuesday, he makes
a day trip to Las Vegas for a campaign fund-raiser
and a speech on Medicare at Spring Valley Hospital, followed by similar
appearances in Phoenix.
Copyright 2003 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not
be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|