Press Release, Remarks of President Harry S. Truman at the Commissioned Officers' Mess, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii
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REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT
At The Commissioned Officers Mess
Pearl Harbor, I. H.
Your
October 13, 1950
TRUMAN
1.18 P.M., Local Time
"NATIONAL
ARCHIVES AND
RECORDS
SERVICE*
ROVERING
Governor Stainback, Admiral Radford, gentlemen of
this great Territory of Hawaii:
It is certainly a pleasure to have this short visit
in Honolulu. I sincerely wish I could stay longer. In fact,
I made a suggestion to my advisers this morning that we might
take a vote on whether we should just let the situation drift
and stay here. But, of course we can't do that, you know we
can't do that.
I am very much interested in this part of the
world. I was highly appreciative of the fact that these
young ladies appeared in their native costumes, That was an
accommodation to us. They looked very beautiful, and I know
that all of you enjoyed the luncheon much better on that
account.
I know also that this Territory has furnished some
very able assistance in Korea, and that your casualties have
been very great. I am sincerely sorry about the casualties,
but somebody has to meet these situations, they can't be met
with sticks and stones -- somebody is bound to get hurt.
Last night, before I left San Francisco, I visited
the hospital at Fairfield Base, and called on those wounded
who had just come in from Korea. Those young men have mag-
nificent morale. Secretary Pace, General Bradley, and sev-
eral others of the party went with me to that hospital ward.
There was not a single complaint. There was not a single
man there who did not feel that he was making the proper
sacrifice for his country. If all of us in the whole country
had that same brand of morale, we would never get into
trouble. I think we are slowly and gradually attaining
that situation.
It is difficult for us -- for this Republic of
ours -- to realize the responsibilities of the Government of
the United States. In one generation we have come from an
isolated Republic, which considered itself entirely safe
with an ocean on each side of it, to the position of leader-
ship of the world -- the most powerful nation in the world.
And as the most powerful nation in the world, we
have to assume world responsibilities, One of the principal
reasons why I am anxious to see the Territory of Hawaii,
and the Territory of Alaska, become States is because of
their vital importance to the defense and to the welfare
of the United States of America. They are both key positions
in the national défense of the United States on its western
borders. It is necessary that they have representation in
the legislative bodies of the United States, in order to
bring that lesson home to the Congress. There are men
in
the Congress who do not yet realize that we are an
international nation now, and not just a Republic bounded
on the east by the Atlantic and on the west by the Pacific.
I hope that lesson can go home to the whole country in such
a way that we can maintain the peace of the world.
I am not one of those who thinks that another world
war is inevitable. I am just as sure as I stand here that
the people behind the iron curtain are just as anxious for
peace as I am. I am just as sure as I stand here that if
the truth could be gotten to these people, there would be
peace in the world. And we are going to get the truth to
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