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Obama Cairo Speech (VIDEO): Calls For New Beginning, Gets Standing Ovation

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 7/5/09 Updated: 5/25/11

Read the full transcript of the speech here, full video below...

CAIRO - Quoting from the Quran for emphasis, President Barack Obama called for a "new beginning between the United States and Muslims" Thursday and said together, they could confront violent extremism across the globe and advance the timeless search for peace in the Middle East.

"This cycle of suspicion and discord must end," Obama said in a widely anticipated speech in one of the world's largest Muslim countries, an address designed to reframe relations after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

The White House said Obama's speech contained no new policy proposals on the Middle East. He said American ties with Israel are unbreakable, yet issued a firm, evenhanded call to the Jewish state and Palestinians alike to live up to their international obligations.

In a gesture to the Islamic world, Obama conceded at the beginning of his remarks that tension "has been fed by colonialism that denied rights and opportunities to many Muslims, and a Cold War in which Muslim-majority countries were often treated as proxies without regard to their own aspirations."

"And I consider it part of my responsibility as president of the United States to fight against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear," said the president, who recalled hearing prayer calls of "azaan" at dawn and dusk while living in Indonesia as a boy.

At the same time, he said the same principle must apply in reverse. "Just as Muslims do not fit a crude stereotype, America is not the crude stereotype of a self-interested empire."

Notably, Obama made an emotional plea for the right of Palestinians to live in dignity in an independent state of their own. He even used the term "Palestine," in a break from standard references to a future Palestinian state.

Obama also became the first U.S. president to admit the U.S. role in the 1953 CIA-led coup of Iran's elected prime minister Mohammed Mossadegh, the Washington Times reports. "In the middle of the Cold War, the United States played a role in the overthrow of a democratically-elected Iranian government," he said, alluding to the coup.

The speech was the longest of his presidency thus far, clocking in at 55 minutes. His speech was interrupted by applause over a dozen times.

Obama's remarks were televised on all radio and television stations in Israel, and with Arabic voice-over translations by Arab satellite stations Al-Arabiya and Al-Jazeera, Egyptian TV and Al-Manar, an outlet for the militant group Hezbollah. The speech was not broadcast in Iran, where the goverment jammed signals to block satellite owners from watching.

The president drew a somewhat positive response from corners of the world not given to complimenting the United States.

"There is a change between the speech of President Obama and previous speeches made by George Bush," said Fawzi Barhoum, a Hamas spokesman in Gaza. But he complained that Obama did not specifically note the suffering in Gaza following the three-week Israeli incursion earlier this year and did not apologize for U.S. military attacks in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In Iran, Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a cleric who was vice president under reformist President Mohammad Khatami, called the speech "compensation to hostile environment which was created during President Bush."

"This can be an initial step for removing misconceptions between world of Islam and the West," he said.

Obama spoke at Cairo University after meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak on the second stop of a four-nation trip to the Middle East and Europe.

The speech was the centerpiece of his journey, and while its tone was striking, the president also covered the Middle East peace process, Iran, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the violent struggle waged by al-Qaida.

Obama arrived in the Middle East on Wednesday, greeted by a new and threatening message from al-Qaida's leader, Osama bin Laden. In an audio recording, the terrorist leader said the president inflamed the Muslim world by ordering Pakistan to crack down on militants in the Swat Valley and block Islamic law there.

But Obama said the actions of violent extremist Muslims are "irreconcilable with the rights of human beings," and quoted the Quran to make his point: "be conscious of God and always speak the truth ..."

"Islam is not part of the problem in combatting violent extremism -- it is an important part of promoting peace," he said.

"Hamas must put an end to violence, recognize past agreements, and recognize Israel's right to exist," he said of the organization the United States deems as terrorist.

"The Palestinian Authority must develop its capacity to govern, with institutions that serve the needs of its people," Obama said.

"At the same time, Israelis must acknowledge that just as Israel's right to exist cannot be denied, neither can Palestine. The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements" on the West Bank and outskirts of Jerusalem, he said. "It is time for these settlements to stop."

As for Jerusalem itself, he said it should be a "secure and lasting home for Jews and Christians and Muslims ..."

Obama also said the Arab nations should no longer use the conflict with Israel to distract their own people from other problems.

He treaded lightly on one issue that President George W. Bush had made a centerpiece of his second term -- the spread of democracy.

Obama said he has a commitment to governments "that reflect the will of the people." And yet, he said, "No system of government can or should be imposed upon one nation by any other."

At times, there was an echo of Obama's campaign mantra of change in his remarks, and he said many are afraid it cannot occur.

"There is so much fear, so much mistrust. But if we choose to be bound by the past, we will never move forward," he said.

The president's brief stay in Cairo included a visit to the Sultan Hassan mosque, a 600-year-old center of Islamic worship and study. He also toured the Great Pyramids of Giza, and joked with reporters that if they were not present, "I'd get on a camel." Some of his aides did just that.

The build-up to the speech was enormous, stoked by the White House although Obama seemed at pains to minimize hopes for immediate consequences.

"One speech is not going to solve all the problems in the Middle East," he told a French interviewer. "Expectations should be somewhat modest."

Eager to spread the president's message as widely as possible, the tech-savvy White House orchestrated a live Webcast of the speech on the White House site; remarks translated into 13 languages; a special State Department site where users could sign up for speech highlights; and distribution of excerpts to social networking giants MySpace, Twitter and Facebook.

Though the speech was co-sponsored by al-Azhar University, which has taught science and Quranic scripture here for nearly a millennium, the actual venue was the more modern and secular Cairo University.

Red draperies formed a backdrop for the speech, blocking view of a portrait of Mubarak, an aging autocrat who's ruled Egypt since 1981.

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Read the full transcript of the speech here, full video below... CAIRO - Quoting from the Quran for emphasis, President Barack Obama called for a "new beginning between the United States and Muslim...
Read the full transcript of the speech here, full video below... CAIRO - Quoting from the Quran for emphasis, President Barack Obama called for a "new beginning between the United States and Muslim...
 
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09:01 PM on 06/16/2009
Obama was wrong. It is well known that Jewish influence -in the developmen­t of navigation­al tools and cartograph­ers that mapped out the globe were Jews, not muslim.
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RButler
"Who wouldn't love a person who had a pony?"
07:58 AM on 06/08/2009
What did Lincoln's Gettysburg Address, FDR's first inaugural speech on the 'only thing we have to fear....", JFK's 'put a man on the moon by the end of the decade....­...", Reagan's 'Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall" all have in common?

Answer. They are ultimately resulted in the desired outcome.

Now, Obama has been credited with one wonderful speech after another, on race, abortion rights and this one In Cairo. But, if there is no eventual result produced consistent with the speeches, well, they were just talk. Nice talk but they won't be remembered­.

Obama really should study the Gettysburg address to see how to say, in 2 minutes, something concise and powerful. A 55 minute speech in Cairo is more like a college lecture which covers every conceivabl­e point in case you're taking notes and will be tested afterward. I just read FDR's 1933 inaugural speech and it was truly inspiring for it's bold bluntness about the state of the country at the time as well as its optimism. Some of the language was a little dated, 'money changers', for example but it could have been spoken this last January 20th. Obama's speeches, while saying all the right things, seem tame by comparison­. I wonder if the media and all our technology has watered down our language to a 6th grade level. Commentato­rs and politician­s speak in clichés and analogies as though they can't really find the words to say something that will make a difference­.
12:30 AM on 06/08/2009
I confess I was not bowled over by this speech. Yet again we saw style and rhetoric over substance.

As I noted here http://ada­msmith.wor­dpress.com­/2009/06/0­6/the-emer­gence-of-t­ony-obama/

Many have said it was subtle, so subtle that many in the audience will have heard what they wanted to hear and not what the subtlety was meant to convey.

Alternativ­ely, it may be that the subtlety was to make a speech which enabled Westerners and Muslims to hear what they wanted to hear. In other words another contributi­on to long term misunderst­anding.

That is really clever.
04:58 PM on 06/06/2009
Obama's speech is like using a maggot to clean out a festering wound that fails to heal. I am gratified. His remarkable speech is indicative of his form of diplomacy (the art of keeping peace) and like maggot therapy is a highly efficient but near forgotten and undervalue­d method.
03:32 PM on 06/06/2009
"President Obama received in France like a rock star...." "Standing ovation in Cairo...." .... ' "A man in the audience shouted "I love you!"" .... Wow... How I miss G.W. Bush! It was so entertaini­ng when he went abroad! People threw shoes at him and burned the American flag...... :-))
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karen1p
02:58 PM on 06/06/2009
He is an amazing orator. This speech makes me proud, again, that I voted, marched through neighborho­ods and made sure he was elected.

Now, if we can just work on him getting rid of Geithner.
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CaliTLC
Pres. Obama's GOT THIS
03:42 AM on 06/06/2009
I listened to this speech a couple times now. I am in awe of President Obama's brilliance­. He had such a command of the issues that he discussed that it was almost frightenin­g. I have never heard anyone display such a clear and deep understand­ing of all sides of the issues. Others often sound like they are reciting only talking points without any historical perspectiv­e. Others always just return to their talking points when asked questions. And the President'­s ability to articulate his thoughts with the clarity and sensitivit­y that even an 8th grader can understand is simply unsurpasse­d. I loved that he said that we must start saying publicly what has been said privately for years. So true. LOVED THE SPEECH!!
07:56 AM on 06/06/2009
I agree!
03:30 AM on 06/06/2009
Just brilliant!
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LemonMeringue
01:13 AM on 06/06/2009
His speech gave me goose bumps.

The Republican­s do not understand peace and civility. They only know violence and hatred.
02:30 AM on 06/06/2009
Actually, in no other period has a US gov-offici­al dared take such a strong stand regarding the Middle East, particular­ly the Israel/Pal­setine situation.

Before our US (Shadow) Gov and Media censored news about Apartieid in Palestine going back to early 1900's (see Zionist map given 1919 Paris Peace Commission claoming all of Palestine and portions of Arab nations). Some US gov-offici­als that tried were run out of gov by Zionist agencies in America having strong control over our gov/media.

Today with Ex Pres-Carte­r's "Peace not Apartheid"­, the truth about Palestine is bypassing US-Gov/Med­ia censorship­, and if Obama did not take a stand (words only so far), perhaps US citizens would run Obama out of gov.
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Knowledgeseeker
08:23 PM on 06/05/2009
maybe Republican­s, can learn one or two things from President Obama
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Knowledgeseeker
08:21 PM on 06/05/2009
Republican­s are bunch of haters...
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Knowledgeseeker
08:17 PM on 06/05/2009
If Republican­s knew how to fix the problem in the Middle East, they had 8 years do so and they couldn't. the only thing they have to offer is the same old failed ideas. Obama is trying something no one have ever done.
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regellner
Writer of politics etc.
05:27 PM on 06/05/2009
This speech was an excellent first step towards the peace process. There is so much more to do, however.

Following is an article concerning Obama's speech in Egypt:

http://www­.examiner.­com/x-1132­6-Charlott­e-Liberal-­Examiner~y2009m6d5­-President­-Obamas-sp­eech-bring­s-hope-of-­peace-thro­ugh-unders­tanding


Raymond Gellner – Charlotte Liberal Examiner at Examiner.c­om
http://www­.examiner.­com/x-1132­6-Charlott­e-Liberal-­Examiner
__________­__________­__________­__________­__________­____
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsIrisMG
Why not me?
03:23 PM on 06/06/2009
With any large project, whether your housework or world peace, that first step is not to be diminished­! If all you concentrat­e on the enormity of the problem, you would be paralyzed into inaction. The President is intelligen­t and knows his small gesture is not a be-all and end-all, and intelligen­t people realize this.

Picking up that napkin and putting it in the trash may not get the entire house clean, but it's an important first step, as well.

First steps toward a journey of any distance - nothing gets done without them.
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Shinjijon
04:19 PM on 06/05/2009
Random nerdy comment: Any one else notice how the place he spoke at looks a bit like the opera house in Battlestar Galactica?
12:43 AM on 06/07/2009
I was looking for the little kid running.
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avicenna
03:13 PM on 06/05/2009
The change in attitude around the world towards America is beyond expectatio­n - truly. I can't imagine a more steady hand towards righting all those wrongs. This luck - or blessing if you will - could not have materializ­ed at a more opportune time as we were all hanging on a single thread leading to catastroph­y. Let's hope those who aren't in favour of progress or peace aren't given the chance to ruin it for the rest of us.
08:47 PM on 06/06/2009
You are so right! Now, because of this speech, Osama bin Laden loves you and wants to give you a great big hug!
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patrickgarret
03:50 AM on 06/07/2009
Typical unintellig­ent neo-con response.