QUESTION: As you remember yesterday, I asked a specific question
concerning a six-month jail sentence passed by a Greek court for the
religious leader of a Turkish minority in Greece. Do they have any comment
on that?
MR. BURNS: We're not aware that a Turkish cleric is in jail in Greece. We
do know that Ibrahim Sherif, a Greek Muslim who claimed to represent the
Greek Muslim minority, was recently sentenced to six months in jail. I
believe the charge was usurpation of official titles and authority. That's
the way the charge was given. That's not our interpretation of it.
We understand that Mr. Sherif paid a fine in lieu of serving a jail
sentence.
The Muslim minority in Greece, as you know, remains divided over the issue
of which religious leader, which mufti would represent them. Some accept
the authority of the Greek Government-appointed leaders and others have
elected muftis. This is not an issue in which the United States takes a
position. It's not appropriate for us to take a position on this. This is a
matter that the religious authorities, religious communities, and the Greek
Government need to resolve on their own.
QUESTION: In your human rights report -- the last report -- there is a
mention about Greece's pressure on the Muslim community in Greece.
For the first time I'm hearing in the State Department briefing that you
are saying that the Muslim community is divided. Can you explain? Is that
the new policy direction of this subject?
MR. BURNS: No, we're not breaking new ground here. We're not trying to
lead you off into new avenues for discussion. We're simply saying, it's a
matter that's appropriately discussed by the governing authorities and by
the religious communities. It is simply a fact that the Greek minority
population -- excuse me, that the Muslim minority population in Greece is
divided into several camps. We do not support any of them. We don't take
sides. It's not an issue that I can say a lot about, frankly. It's
a Greek issue with the religious minorities in Greece.
Charlie, you had a question?
QUESTION: Dennis Ross -- any update? Anything new?
MR. BURNS: Ambassador Ross has talked to the Secretary several times this
morning. He's kept the Secretary closely informed about his discussions in
Israel between Israel and the Palestinians.
As you know, we said yesterday that significant progress had been made on
civil issues. They had long discussions overnight, in fact, I think almost
all through the night, between the Israelis and Palestinians in which
Dennis Ross was present. They've been meeting all day.
Ambassador Ross thinks they'll be meeting again all through the night in an
attempt to gain an agreement. We're taking this on a day-to-day basis. I
can't predict when success will be assured. But we are confident that
sooner or later the Israelis and Palestinians are going to agree to
complete these discussions successfully.
QUESTION: (Inaudible).
MR. BURNS: He's taking it on a day-to-day basis. He makes no decisions.
He's made no long-term or short-term plans on when he's going to get on the
plane and fly back to Washington. He's been away I think for 18 days now.
He'll take it a day at a time and see if it's worth his staying.
QUESTION: Nick, the series of around-the-clock negotiations suggest a
timetable caused by somebody. Would that be an erroneous --
MR. BURNS: I believe so. I'm not aware that any fixed date has been set
by which these negotiations need to be completed. I think that the
intensity reflects the fact that there are high-level people involved here
on the Palestinian and Israeli side, which is a little bit new to the
negotiations. They've made some progress. But when you get down to the
really tough issues, in any negotiation, sometimes you find that it does
take time. That very well may be the case here.
QUESTION: High-level but not the highest level yet?
MR. BURNS: No, I don't believe so. I don't believe that either Chairman
Arafat or Prime Minister Netanyahu are actually sitting down all night. I
know they haven't met to discuss this. But some very high-level people on
the Palestinian and Israeli sides have participated over the last two
days.
QUESTION: Do you have (inaudible) about the influence that the French
President and Foreign Minister are having on this whole complex?
MR. BURNS: As you know, Jim -- and I've been very consistent over the
last two days on this issue -- the United States appreciates and values the
positive role that France is exerting in the Middle East. We think it was a
good idea for President Chirac and Foreign Minister de Charette to travel
to the Middle East.
I understand that President Chirac is now in Amman. He'll be in Cairo after
Amman. He's had, of course, a very interesting trip in many respects, as
you've seen. But we believe that the Europeans have a role to play in the
Middle East, and we want to work with the Europeans on that in general.
That's been our position for a long, long time.
The Europeans were with us at Madrid five years ago -- five years ago this
month at Madrid. I'm sure they're going to be there for a long, long time
to come as part of the answer to the problems of the Middle East.
QUESTION: President Chirac, in his address, made some very pointed
remarks about the U.S. bias in the peace process and about France inserting
itself and perhaps removing the United States. Can you address that
thought?
MR. BURNS: I haven't done a textual analysis of every statement that
President Chirac has made, but I've seen nothing in his statements that are
pointed remarks about U.S. bias. I haven't seen them. Perhaps they're there
and you can show them to me.
I think some people have been reading that into his remarks and that's most
unfortunate. Because the United States is an even-handed, objective country
in the Middle East which is attempting to work with the Palestinians and
Israelis for peace.
I think the proof of that is -- and, here, I'm directing this against,
really, the press interpretation; not President Chirac -- the proof of that
is that the Palestinians and Israelis have invited us to be the sole
intermediary in their current discussions. They're finding Ambassador Ross
absolutely essential to their discussions.
As you know, the other night he said he would leave and he was on his way
to the airport and they called him back. So I think that, more than
anything else, reflects the importance that the United States has in these
particular negotiations.
QUESTION: So you're not interpreting -- the direct quotes from Chirac,
there's no question of what he said. You've seen them and I've seen them.
They are of a nature that the French should be part of this to balance the
United States. I don't understand your --
MR. BURNS: We have a friendship and an alliance with France and with
President Chirac -- a very strong friendship with President Chirac. We
think he plays a positive role in the Middle East.
There's no argument here. This argument is being created by the press corps,
with all due respect. I checked again because there was a lot of interest
yesterday in what kind of communication we had -- Secretary Christopher had
in writing with Foreign Minister de Charette.
I went today and I re-read the letter that Secretary Christopher sent over
the weekend. It is a positive, supportive, friendly letter that gave
Minister de Charette our appreciation of the various negotiating tracks as
they currently stand, because we're actively involved, and our full support
for the fact that President Chirac was making the trip.
QUESTION: Nick, the Iranians are bubbling over with enthusiasm for
Chirac's trip, even a little bit more than you are. (Laughter) Does that
give you pause?
MR. BURNS: That's not possible -- (laughter) -- because we're Francophiles
here at the State Department, and we're allies of France. The French have
been with us since 1781, even before that. I'm thinking of the fleet at
Yorktown, but Lafayette before that.
Iran is not going to drive a wedge between the United States and France
here, and I think the French know that the United States is a far more
important and more valuable partner in the Middle East than Iran. Iran is a
rejectionist country that has no role to play in resolving the problems
between the Arabs and the Israelis, because it's taken a completely
unreasonable position.
France is a strong, active country that does have a role to play, so I see
France and the United States on one side. I see Iran on the other. I did
note -- I think you're very accurate -- they were bubbling over, weren't
they? -- in their public statements about this. But it's odd, because they
have nothing to do with the modern Middle East peace process -- nothing at
all -- and they have no role to play.
In fact, one of the concerns we have about Iran is that they're actively
promoting the terrorist groups in the Middle East that are attempting to
subvert the peace process. So this is a tragically ironical statement. If
it weren't so tragic and if the implications weren't so serious, it would
be comical -- the kind of statement that Iran made this morning.
QUESTION: You wouldn't happen to have any comment on the suggestion in
some quarters that Mr. Clinton's timetable for NATO enlargement is way too
slow?
MR. BURNS: I don't know what quarters you could possibly be referring to.
So putting that aside, let me talk about the President's timetable. The
President's timetable is absolutely the right timetable to have, and I know
all of you agree with that. (Laughter)
To answer your question just for a moment --
QUESTION: (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: No, I think it's an important point. You've asked the
question. A lot of people read this on www.state.gov, and I want to be sure
that those people who are not here seeing the body language on both sides
understand the answer.
The President's speech yesterday was consistent with everything we've said
since January 1994. The United States believes that we need to enlarge NATO,
create a new relationship with Russia, so that Europe can be united and
peaceful and stable in the next century. The timetable has been worked out
with our NATO allies. It's a realistic timetable. It's a timetable that all
of us in NATO can support. It's a timetable that makes sense for NATO,
so that, as the President says, 50 years after the creation of NATO, NATO
can have the same positive role in Central Europe in 1999 that it had in
1949 and 1950 in Western Europe.
That was a very important speech that the President gave. I think you'll
find in reactions from European countries, NATO countries, absolute
agreement with the core of that speech.
QUESTION: Some important news about NATO was supposed to be announced by
NATO and not by Clinton in Detroit in the middle of elections?
MR. BURNS: I think we've seen the same kind of statements from Prime
Minister Major and Chancellor Kohl. All of them supported the January 1994
decision. They were all in Brussels. They made the decision together, and
almost all the major NATO countries, including our Secretary General -- our
NATO Secretary General, who's a Spaniard -- have spoken out and said the
same thing. We're all on the same sheet of music. We're all on the same
course here.
There are no divisions in NATO, and President Clinton was simply reflecting
a consensus in NATO. I would remind you at the end also that the United
States is the leading and most powerful country in NATO, and our security
commitment to NATO is genuine and long-standing. So it's perfectly
appropriate for the American President to stand up and talk about the
future of NATO.
QUESTION: NATO/Bosnia segue here. Yesterday when we were talking about
Frowick's decision to postpone the elections from next month to probably
next spring, he addressed the question of a follow-on force, but we never
really, I think, if memory serves me right, talked about what impact that
decision might have on the current IFOR force and the cover force that will
follow to help them withdraw.
MR. BURNS: We actually did. I said yesterday, and we believe today as
well, that yesterday's decision by the OSCE to postpone the municipal
elections is not going to affect the established timetable for the
withdrawal of American forces as part of IFOR in December of this
year.
It will be a factor in the current NATO review of whether or not there
should be a follow-on security force, post-IFOR withdrawal.
QUESTION: Ken Bacon yesterday said it could speed up the withdrawal of
troops. Are you at odds with the Pentagon on that?
MR. BURNS: Not at all. Ken Bacon and I are completely together on this
and everything else in life.
QUESTION: Then how come his words were different?
MR. BURNS: I'll bet he's rooting against the Yankees, too.
QUESTION: His quote was, I think, "probably" --
MR. BURNS: One of his assistants is a big Red Sox fan --
QUESTION: Nick--
MR. BURNS: Mr. Crowley -- P. K. Crowley -- huge Red Sox fan.
QUESTION: -- this has to do with something else, not quite so frivolous.
I said this has to do with something --
MR. BURNS: It's important, Carol.
QUESTION: Baseball?
MR. BURNS: Yes.
QUESTION: Well, not in this context.
MR. BURNS: Anyway, let's go on with this.
QUESTION: Why is there a difference of opinion between you, at least in
words?
MR. BURNS: Between whom?
QUESTION: Between yourself and Mr. Bacon.
MR. BURNS: There isn't. I would remind you that Mr. Bacon is the
Spokesman for the Pentagon. The Pentagon has direct operational control of
American forces. He spoke in a greater level of detail than I did
yesterday. There's no difference of opinion here.
QUESTION: But he said that probably forces could be withdrawn sooner. I
mean, we may be only talking about a matter of weeks here, but he did
indicate that they could be withdrawn sooner because these elections were
postponed.
MR. BURNS: He said "possibly."
QUESTION: Probably --
MR. BURNS: Anyway, the State Department stands by everything that Mr.
Bacon said yesterday, and nothing that I said today or yesterday was
inconsistent with what he said. I see no reason why you would arrive at
that conclusion. Because I failed to say something, I disagree with it?
That's the logic here? I don't get the logic.
QUESTION: Because the words are different.
QUESTION: The words are different.
QUESTION: The words are completely different.
MR. BURNS: The words are not completely different.
QUESTION: You said there would be no change. He's saying it could speed
up.
MR. BURNS: It is appropriate that the Pentagon spokesman answer in
another level of detail -- in fuller detail than the State Department
spokesman. The State Department does not move troops around the globe. The
Pentagon does.
QUESTION: So you're saying his answer is a subset of your answer.
MR. BURNS: I'm saying you should rely on Ken Bacon's answer as accurate
and fully representative of the possibilities that may be involved here.
But we haven't made any specific decisions. We'll have to see what
happens.
QUESTION: Nick, has NATO given you a timetable by which they expect to be
able to offer their opinion on whether there should be a follow-on force
and what size it should take?
MR. BURNS: I think it's sometime in November.
QUESTION: After November 5?
MR. BURNS: I don't know. Sometime in November is what I understand the
position to be.
QUESTION: Have you seen the statement by Russian Foreign Minister
Primakov in regard to NATO enlargement?
MR. BURNS: Yes.
QUESTION: Do you have any reaction to that?
MR. BURNS: No, it's not surprising. It reflects pretty much what the
Russian view has been for two-and-a-half years, and the United States hopes
that as part of our Russia-NATO dialogue on creating a new Russia-NATO
relationship, the Russians will come to agree at some point in the future
that NATO enlargement makes sense for Europe as a whole.
QUESTION: Could I have a follow-up?
MR. BURNS: Yes, absolutely.
QUESTION: This Turkish-Greek question, you very carefully referred to the
Greek Muslim minority, so just for the record as far as State Department is
concerned, there is no Turkish minority in Greece but a Muslim minority?
MR. BURNS: I used the words "Muslim minority." I'm quite comfortable with
that.
Yes, Yasmine.
QUESTION: Did you see the statement of the Iranian Foreign Minister in
which he made public the plans for a new grouping of Muslim nations, the so-
called --
MR. BURNS: Yes, we've seen the statement. I don't have any comment on
it.
QUESTION: Could I have a North Korea question. North Korean Foreign
Ministry spokesmen made a statement on their radio that -- in the statement
they basically said that they are free to do their missile tests whenever
they're ready. I don't have the exact wording, but I think that's the
message they tried to convey in the statement. Do you have any reaction on
this?
MR. BURNS: Just to repeat what we've said consistently for over a week
now, and that is it's very unwise for the North Koreans to undertake this
type of operation, if they do undertake it.
QUESTION: So, Nick, at this point do you care to detail what steps the
United States might take if North Korea decides to test this missile?
MR. BURNS: No.
QUESTION: Can you tell us the schedules of a meeting with visiting North
Korean officers in New York?
MR. BURNS: No, we don't do that. Our practice is to have these meetings
and acknowledge them afterwards but not to release publicly in advance when
these meetings will occur. We have a regular dialogue with North Korea in
that channel. I think that's the only channel that we have where we talk to
the North Koreans. It's the sole channel that we have when we talk to the
North Koreans.
QUESTION: So you cannot tell who -- identify -- you cannot identify who
is the counterpart from State Department?
MR. BURNS: No, that's up to the North Koreans to say who is representing
the North Koreans at these discussions.
Henry.
QUESTION: Return to Bosnia. On the weekend in the United States, Antonio
Cassese, one of the judges of the Tribunal, spoke at the Connecticut Law
School seminar there, and he said that within ten months if there wasn't
further activity on the apprehension of war criminals that the judges had
decided to resign the Tribunal, and that at that same time period they
would recommend to the Security Council that the Tribunal be dissolved in
and of itself.
This morning, (Assistant) Secretary Shattuck said in an interview that the
timetable was unfortunate, but it did give some understanding of the
frustration -- agreeing that 75 indictments and only seven apprehensions,
and those being seven low-level apprehensions -- understanding what the
judges were doing, but also talked about a timetable in which the
indication was that perhaps the apprehension of war criminals was falling
behind many other efforts that were being made in that region.
Given the warning from the Tribunal -- and State Department people are
aware of that -- is there any sense of a change on the part of the United
States in terms of apprehension of war criminals in Bosnia?
MR. BURNS: There's no change in our general position that we support the
Tribunal in every possible way. We have done so. We're the leading country
supporting it. We share the frustration of the Tribunal about the fact that
the Bosnian Serbs and the Serbian Government, the Croatian Government in
some respects, have not met their commitments that they made at Dayton.
They ought to meet those commitments.
One of the reasons why we are maintaining the outer wall of sanctions
against Serbia is because of Serbia's failure to arrest indicted war
criminals who are living on Serbian soil and to help transport them to The
Hague for prosecution. It's a very serious charge, and we share the
frustrations with the Tribunal.
We also believe, as Assistant Secretary Shattuck was inferring, that we
don't have an option of picking up and quitting and going home -- none of
us do -- whether it's economic reconstruction or whether it's war criminals
or whether it's trying to organize elections in 1997 -- municipal
elections. We have to stay involved, and the United States will stay very
vigorously involved on these issues.
John Kornblum just completed a day of discussions in Banja Luka in Sarajevo
today. He met with Mrs. Plavsic. Unfortunately, I have to report to you
that Mrs. Plavsic remains an impediment to the electoral process. She
refuses to agree that the OSCE should be the competent responsible body to
organize the municipal elections in 1997.
The United States in response to that is going to maintain a very heavy,
active diplomatic involvement and presence to make sure that in the end the
OSCE supervises and monitors those elections. That will be the result here,
and the Bosnian Serbs ought to understand that right now.
QUESTION: Just as a follow-on to the threat from the jurists, how does
this State Department feel about the fact that within ten months they
intend to call for the Tribunal to be dissolved?
MR. BURNS: The State Department --
QUESTION: That must be an escalation here of their frustration, and one
would presume creates an escalation of reaction to --
MR. BURNS: The State Department is going to do everything -- the U.S.
Government is going to do everything we can to make sure that over the next
ten months we use our influence to have these countries improve their
performance and to meet their commitments. We fully support the War Crimes
Tribunal.
QUESTION: Any change in the status of IFOR in terms of their command, in
terms of what they would do in the apprehension --
MR. BURNS: I'm not aware of any change in the rules of engagement for
IFOR forces.
QUESTION: Nick, on Nicaragua, does the U.S. now recognize the new
President in Nicaragua, and can you give us some analysis of the election?
MR. BURNS: I can tell you that I think only 74 percent of the vote is in,
but the ten percentage margin between Mr. Aleman and Ortega is holding, and
it appears that Mr. Arnoldo Aleman will most likely have garnered more than
45 percent of the vote when the final votes are counted.
There's been a lot of talk by the Sandinistas, by Minister Ortega, about
complications, irregularities, problems with the elections. It's certainly
his right to request under the electoral law to at least bring this to
public attention. But I would note that the official U.S. observer
delegation, former President Carter's delegation, and all the other
international organizations have said they think this is a free and fair
process. They don't detect any fraud.
So we'll have to wait until the final results are in, but it looks like Mr.
Aleman -- his healthy lead is holding at this point.
QUESTION: Thank you.
(The briefing concluded at 2:07 p.m.)
(###)