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The US President urged a 30, crowd in a town near the Irish border : "Redouble your efforts for peace". You can only use this image in editorial media and for personal use.
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In your newfound peace you have not forgotten what it is to be at war, so you continue to stand guard for peace around the world.
You might be interested to know - and you may not - that Ireland is so well thought of around that world that when the campaign was on for the Security Council members, you found help in surprising places. In the tiny island nation of Tuvalu, he was met by a local journalist by the name of O'Brien.
Turns out, there was an Irish sailor in the 19th century shipwrecked on Tuvalu, named O'Brien. He liked it there, stayed on, and now, a full quarter of the population are O'Briens. If the math is right, maybe there are more than 45 million Irish Americans.
We are delighted to have you as our partner on the Security Council. But as we look to Ireland and to America, we remember that for all our efforts to heal the world, sometimes the toughest healing problems are right at home. The story of the United States, I believe, is largely about three things: love of liberty, belief in progress, struggle for community.
The last has given us the most trouble, and troubles us still. Matters aren't so different for Ireland. For hundreds of years, and intensely for the last 30, you confronted the challenge of religious difference. You in Dundalk know what it's like to face fear and isolation - with unemployment rising, the economy stalling and hope failing. A young businessman once said, now, money isn't everything, but it's up there with oxygen.
We know violence suffocates opportunity. We know in the end, there can be no full justice without jobs. Fortunately, the Irish had the courage to grasp the chance for peace and the new beginning. Those who argued for peace promised a better life. But then, there was no proof. Today, you are the proof of the fruits and wisdom of peace. The border between Ireland and Northern Ireland is now more a bridge than a barrier.
Newry, just across that border, is your sister city and economic partner. Some fear the change won't last; but some of the smartest business people in the world are already betting that it will last. You have a cluster of information technology companies and broadband networks.
Here in this community, Xerox is making the second-largest American investment in all of Ireland, and your Institute of Technology is building classes to meet the growing needs of technology-based employers.
When he came back, he encouraged us to continue investing in Dundalk through the International Fund for Ireland.
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