Opening Remarks by Ambassador Timken
As prepared for delivery
Notes for Remarks By President George Bush
Re-Opening of the American Embassy
Berlin , Germany
July 4, 2008
Thank you for your warm welcome, and my thanks to my dear friend Ambassador Tim Timken for that kind introduction.
Madam Chancellor,
Current and former dignitaries of the Federal Government,
To the Governing Mayor of
Honored Guests from
Excellencies,
Airlift Veterans,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
As someone who is very proud to be an honorary Berliner, I am not only honored, but indeed moved, to be here for this very special occasion.
Today, we fit one of the last pieces of a historic puzzle back into place, and the reality it lays bear – a new American Embassy, in the capital of a unified
Nearly seven decades have passed since American diplomats have occupied this special plot of soil, and now you have returned to work side-by-side with our German friends to advance the common cause of humanity.
To my fellow Americans, let me simply say, “Welcome home.” Much has changed since the stars and stripes last flew here.
First came the onset of the second World War, and the horrors it cast throughout the continent – and beyond. The Cold War followed, setting the German people onto two painfully separate paths.
A time of testing ensued – a test of wills between two different ideologies, trying but ultimately affirming our commitment to freedom and the alliance of free peoples that would sustain it.
Then came the Fall of 89, and a hopeful revolution. Germans, Poles, Czechs, Hungarians – each seized fate in their own hands, and together they changed the mighty course of history.
Throughout the long, bitter night of the Cold War, while others wavered, you, the German people, kept alive the embers of faith – faith in your country, faith in each other. You never betrayed the eternal, immutable truth that you are one people – in language, in heritage, and in destiny.
The sense of possibility that the improbable events of 1989 and 1990 ignited put the thaw to the Cold War, and to the places, progress, and attitudes that that necessary struggle had, in essence, frozen in time.
As the popular song at the time suggested, we were indeed “watching the world wake up from history.” And as the first light of a new era broke, let history record that
Of the many dramatic developments to unfold during my presidency, let me state here and now that the unification of
Of course, I was but one of a continuum of American presidents, and other key allies, who stood vigilant watch over this cause, your cause. On the other side of the
On this side of the
Since unification,
So, too, has
Most importantly, perhaps, as the world struggles to keep pace with the relentless pace and scope of global change,
Forty-five years ago, almost to the day, President Kennedy stood not far from here and defied the world to “come to
Last November, at a ceremony marking the 60th anniversary of the Marshall Plan, Chancellor Merkel rightly observed that “the friendly ties between Europe and the
Madame Chancellor, I cannot think of a more meaningful way to celebrate the birth in freedom in
Maybe the pilots who flew in the Berlin Airlift had a similar phrase, but standing here today reminds me of a saying we had back when I was a Navy pilot called: Ceiling and Visibility Unlimited. That’s what you wanted to hear when you got to the flight deck, and prepared to set out on your mission.
Ceiling and visibility unlimited.
Ladies and gentlemen, my fellow Americans, to our German hosts, when I think of the strong and enduring friendship that binds our two great nations, as I look to our shared future and the boundless promise it holds, I am happy to report that conditions are, in fact, Ceiling and Visibility Unlimited.
May Almighty God bless free and united


