U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #176, 96-10-30
From: The Department of State Foreign Affairs Network (DOSFAN) at <http://www.state.gov>
U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing
I N D E X
Wednesday, October 30, l996
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
ANNOUNCEMENTS
10/31 Briefing by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for
Passport Services Ken Hunter.............................. 1
Talks Between Kurdish Factions Commenced Today in Ankara
Chaired by Assistant Secretary Pelletreau................ 1-2
Update on Iraq: Saddam Hussein's Spending Practices/U.S.
Contribution to UN World Food Program Fund................ 2
Talks to Begin on Peru-Ecuador Border Dispute................ 3
IRAQ
U.S. Contribution to UN World Food Program................... 3-6
U.S. Policy on Iraq.......................................... 5-6
Political Talks With Kurdish Factions........................ 6-10
Threat to Kurdish NGO Employees in Northern Iraq............. 7-8
Evacuated Kurds in Guam Coming to U.S........................ 9-10
RUSSIA
Canceled Signing of Theater Missile Defense Agreement....... 10-12
Link Between TMD, START II and the ABM Treaty................ 12-15
Deputy Secretary Talbott's Speech on the Future of U.S.-
Russian Relations......................................... 15
CUBA
Investigation of Fernandez Pupo for Charges of Air Piracy.... 15-16
CHINA
Sentencing of Dissident Wang Dan............................. 16-17
Secretary Christopher's Trip to China........................ 17
U.S. Policy Towards China.................................... 17-20,21-22
Wang Dan an Example of Chinese Defiance of U.S. Policy....... 20-21
U.S. Policy Towards Pro-Democracy Dissidents................. 21
ISRAEL
Troop Movements in Golan Heights............................. 22-24
Link Between Current Talks and Oslo Agreement................ 23-24
Update on Dennis Ross' Travel Plans.......................... 24
ZAIRE
Appointment of Canadian Amb. Chretien as UN Special Envoy to
Great Lakes Region........................................ 24-25
U.S. Support of UN Political Efforts......................... 25-27
GREECE
Greek Foreign Ministry Official's Call for a Moratorium on
Greek and Turkish Military Excercises in the Aegean Sea... 27-29
TAIWAN
Alleged Meeting Between President Clinton and Taiwanese
Authorities............................................... 29-30
SYRIA
Suicide Bomb Attacks.in Turkey............................... 30
INDONESIA
Sale of Chinese Super Puma Helicopters to Indonesia.......... 30
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #176
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1996, 1:10 P. M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
MR. BURNS: Good afternoon. Welcome to the State Department briefing. A
couple of announcements.
Tomorrow, October 31, the press, all of you, are invited to attend a
briefing here in the briefing room at 9:45 a.m. The speaker will be Ken
Hunter, who is the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Passport
Services in the Consular Affairs Bureau, and he will be providing details
about a new 900 telephone number service available for American citizens on
passport assistance and passport information.
That's a big issue. It is one of the major ways that we interact with the
American public every year, passport services.
Second, I want to let you know that the talks in Ankara began today chaired
by Assistant Secretary of State for Near East Affairs Bob Pelletreau.
These talks, of course, are the talks that we, the Turks and the British
have tried to put together to convince the two major Kurdish factions, the
KDP and the PUK, that they ought to agree to continue their cease-fire,
number one, and, number two, that they ought to agree to sustain political
reconciliation talks in order to stabilize the situation in northern
Iraq.
The Turkish Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Onur Oymen, head of the
Turkish delegation, and Frank Baker of the Embassy of the United Kingdom in
Ankara, head of the U.K. delegation; Mr. Talabani and Mr. Barzani were not
at the table, but senior associates from both groups were at the table
facing each other. They went on all day, both talks, and they were also
joined by a representative of the Iraqi National Turkoman Front delegation.
Ambassador Pelletreau has been talking to the Turkoman population
throughout this process. We thought it was important that they be
represented at this meeting.
I understand the current plan is for the group to meet again tomorrow. No
date has been set for an adjournment of these talks, so they are going on
into the future, and we'll just have to see on a day-to-day basis how it
goes.
We commend the seriousness of the KDP and the PUK in agreeing to participate
in these talks. These are very difficult issues that they are grappling
with, and we are mindful of that as we begin this process.
I also wanted to get back to Barry Schweid on an issue. Barry, you asked
yesterday how much money is Saddam Hussein spending? This gets back to the
issue of the World Food Program and UNICEF who said two days ago there is
an increasing problem of malnourishment and, indeed, starvation in
Iraq.
We believe since 1992 that Saddam Hussein has spent roughly between one and
two billion dollars building 48 palaces and other luxury residences
throughout Iraq -- 48. In addition to that, we believe he has spent untold
millions of dollars, if not billions, rebuilding his army, maintaining his
presidential lot and other luxury expenditures, such as these lucrative off-
shore bank accounts that he and his family members have.
Now, this is an important point because we are faced with a serious
question here this week. We had two agencies of the United Nations say that
there is a deteriorating situation. Our point yesterday was, you need look
no further than Saddam Hussein himself and his family to answer the
question of why, why there isn't sufficient money in the Iraqi economy for
humanitarian projects. The Iraqi government is spending their money
elsewhere.
You also asked yesterday whether the United States would be contributing to
the $40 million fund established through UN channels for Iraq. This is a UN
World Food Program fund. It's new. We do intend to contribute $7.3 million
with the caveat that this money be used to assist the Kurds in northern
Iraq, in the northern zone of Iraq. And I do believe we'll be able to work
out that stipulation with the United Nations. But I would draw you back,
and I'd be glad to take any further questions on this to Saddam Hussein.
He's responsible. He's the leader of Iraq. If people are starving in his
country; if their kids are in orphanages that don't have money, and we're
very sensitive to that, he is responsible. And look where the money trail
is with Saddam Hussein. Look where he is spending his money.
I have an important announcement on Peru and Ecuador. The United States
congratulates Peru and Ecuador on their breakthrough agreement to begin
direct talks by the end of this year to resolve their 50-year old border
dispute which led to armed clashes as recently as January 1995, when more
than 200 people were killed in the fighting between those two countries.
This landmark agreement between Peru and Ecuador shows that the United
States and our fellow guarantor, Rio Pact guarantor partners -- Chile,
Brazil and Argentina -- can work successfully together to make progress in
this hemisphere on even the most entrenched disputes.
At a signing ceremony in Santiago in Chile on October 29th, presided over
by the Chilean President, President Frei, the parties agreed on procedures
for the forthcoming direct talks. They committed themselves to continue
their talks until a global and definitive solution to the problem is
reached.
Since the outbreak of hostilities in 1995, the United States has worked
very carefully, closely, with Argentina, Brazil and Chile to end the
fighting, to separate over 5,000 troops, to create a demilitarized zone
along the disputed border; and there are U.S. soldiers helping to police
that disputed border, and to launch these direct talks.
This is a very significant achievement, and we hope that this agreement
will lead to a successful conclusion of this 50-year old dispute, and we
hope it also will lead to a new era in that part of our hemisphere of peace
and cooperation among all these states.
I would like to pay particular attention to the role of the chief U.S.
diplomat in these talks, Ambassador Luigi Einaudi of the Department of
State, who has worked tirelessly on this effort.
QUESTION: On Iraq; the point of the UN report, everything else aside -- I
don't know if you want to put everything else aside momentarily even -- was
that donations are falling short.
Does the U.S. -- even with what you say about Saddam's spending on luxuries
-- does the U.S. feel that the countries should make contributions to
purchase food? I know you talked the other day about food could be bought
with this money he is spending otherwise. But would you encourage other
nations to make voluntary contributions?
MR. BURNS: We are sympathetic to the people of Iraq who are the victims
of Saddam Hussein; so, yes, the United States intends to contribute, and we
would urge other countries to contribute, so that innocent people in Iraq
can be helped.
I think it is important to add, again, the point that you made, Barry, just
now and the point that we made yesterday; and that is that ultimately
responsibility lies in the head of the country, in this case in Saddam
Hussein and his family land his government.
They have the ability to import food and medicine into Iraq. They can do
that from Turkey. They can do it from the United States. They can do it
from any country in the world. They are not doing it in sufficient size
because they prefer to spend their money on themselves. They prefer to
enrich themselves.
It is very important that that point be part of this public debate about
why there is a problem, why there is human misery in Iraq.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) when you said some 4,500 children a day were the
point Washington is trying to make by insisting that sanctions remain on
Iraq?
MR. BURNS: Sid, let's talk about -- let's not -- let's talk about
responsibility here. First of all, I think that they talked about the fear
that that many people could die per day. It's a very serious situation. We
take it seriously. That's why we are going to contribute the $7.3 million.
That's why we were the father of UN 986, the resolution that would provide
further humanitarian relief to the Iraqi people.
The United States is doing what it should do on a humanitarian basis. We
are responding to a humanitarian appeal here. We are not letting this go --
we are not ignoring this problem. But responsibility lies with the
Government of Iraq. Just as the United States Government is responsible for
what happens in our country domestically, Iraq is responsible for what
happens inside that country, the Iraqi Government.
That is a commonsensical point to make, and I think there ought to be
condemnation by the press corps as well as by the United Nations of the
fact that Saddam Hussein is acting irresponsibly. He is letting children
die because he prefers to build palaces to himself. He prefers to put
millions of dollars into bank accounts for his children, his own children.
He doesn't seem to care about other children, Shia's and Kurdish children.
That's the point here. It's a very relevant point.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) all the problems you have had with Iraq over the
last few months. Is it time to rethink our approach, the U.S. approach to
Saddam Hussein?
MR. BURNS: The approach by the United States is working. Saddam Hussein
is contained. He is locked in a box. He is a weakened figure, and he is a
caricature of himself in many ways, He's a shadow of what he once was. The
approach is working.
Therefore, we'll continue the no-flight zones in the south and the north.
We'll continue to agree with nearly every country in the world that Iraq
should be subject to UN sanctions. We haven't forgotten the more than 600
Kuwaitis who disappeared and have never been heard from again because of
the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990. We haven't forgotten about his
attacks on the Kurds and the Shia in the spring of 1991.
QUESTION: Nick, also on Iraq, could you talk a little bit about the
change of tone here in the last couple of days where you go from really
being quite cool to this whole appeal by relief organizations and
questioning their figures and saying you wanted more information, and now
today, you know, you are announcing money, although you are being
consistent in keeping the pressure on Saddam.
But what -- I mean, what information have you gotten in the last couple of
days that has made the United States take this decision?
MR. BURNS: We were not cool to the initial appeal 48 hours ago. We simply
-- they had a press conference and we simply didn't want to make policy by
press conference, this press conference. We wanted to make sure that we saw
the material that the UN agencies were putting on the table, had a chance
to talk to them about it, so that we could make a considered decision in
this government. That makes sense. We did that.
And we have been -- this isn't a late conversion by us. We have been
interested in this problem for a long time. We have talked about the
problem of malnutrition in Iraq, and we did sponsor UN Resolution 986. So
this just continues the U.S. interest in this.
I don't think there has been any kind of abrupt shift in our own policy
this week at all.
QUESTION: Well, you raised concerns the other day about some of this
information, some of the data they were using had come from Iraq, and I
wondered whether you had gotten your own data or some other more convincing
--?
MR. BURNS: We always have suspicions about Iraqi data because the Iraqis
by their own admission have lied so frequently to the United Nations about
this issue and also about the issue of weapons of mass destruction.
They admitted that several months ago they had lied consistently for four
or five years to the United Nations.
QUESTION: And how are you confident that you are making a decision to
give aid based on --
MR. BURNS: We do have faith in the World Food Program and in UNICEF. They
are credible organizations. No one, I think, nobody in either of those
organizations or in this government can tell you exactly how many children
are at risk in Iraq; but we know enough about Iraq to know that the
conditions there are appalling, the economic conditions, the conditions in
orphanages. And we have a humanitarian responsibility and we'll act on
it.
I will bring you back to my final point. The person who has more responsibility
than anybody outside Iraq is the person who runs Iraq, and he is doing a
very bad job of running the country -- it seems -- because of all these
reports.
QUESTION: You said that the Turkomans are going to participate in these
Kurdish talks in Ankara, who are -- (inaudible) not just a minority in Iraq
anyway. I'm wondering why the U.S. Government accepted finally this Turkish
demand? What is the reason? Could you explain?
MR. BURNS: Mr. Lambros, I think I said before that we've been talking to
the Turkoman community all along in northern Iraq. In September, when
Ambassador Pelletreau saw Mr. Barzani, he also saw the Turkoman delegation
there. We've had consistent talks.
They are people who are victims of Saddam Hussein as well. They live in
northern Iraq. Therefore, they ought to be at the table when we discuss the
situation in northern Iraq.
QUESTION: I'm wondering, Mr. Burns, who is represented in this Kurdish
talks in Ankara -- the Kurdish people of Turkey who are 10 million, almost
a quarter of the Turkish populations and constitute 82 percent of the
(inaudible) of the southeast of Turkey?
My question is, those millions of Kurds do not have a voice and the right
to be represented at these talks under the auspices of the U.S. Government
and Britain?
MR. BURNS: Mr. Lambros, these talks have nothing to do with the situation
inside Turkey but everything to do with the situation inside northern Iraq.
This is not about the political situation in Turkey, which I think is what
you're asking about. It's about what the various communities in northern
Iraq can do working together to end their fighting and to produce a
situation of relative calm and stability.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) in Turkey, too, as we had in northern Iraq. We had
millions of (inaudible) on the other side, too.
MR. BURNS: These talks are very specifically focused, and the Turkish
Government has played a very positive role in them.
QUESTION: Are you in favor of an autonomous Kurdish entity in northern
Iraq?
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
QUESTION: Are you in favor of an autonomous entity -- of a Kurdish entity
in northern Iraq?
MR. BURNS: For five years now we've been working to help the Kurdish
people live in relative peace and stability in northern Iraq. I think that
speaks for itself.
Yasmine.
QUESTION: On Iraq. This morning, Nick, a group of international relief
agencies told some journalists here in Washington that they've been calling
the White House and State Department to act upon the evacuation of the 4,
000 Kurds in the region. I understand there have been some talks between
the State Department and these agencies at the beginning of this week.
I have two questions. First of all, can you tell us why there has been such
a difference in the assessments of the U.S. Government and relief agencies
there in the region about the imminency of the threats? And, secondly,
could you elaborate on these talks --
MR. BURNS: I can tell you that we continue to monitor the entire
situation in northern Iraq quite carefully on a day-to-day basis. We put a
lot of people on this question and are looking at it. There have been some
high-level discussions in the Administration about this very issue just in
the last couple of days.
We have not made any decisions to evacuate any further workers from the NGO
community from northern Iraq into Turkey and into Guam.
As you know, we did make a series of evacuations. Those people are on Guam.
In fact, some of them are now making their way to the United States through
the asylum process. We do remain concerned about the well-being of people
who were affiliated with American and European organizations. We're keeping
their situation under close watch. We're not aware that there's any
imminent threat to these people.
We're aware, I think, of two cases of drivers being attacked; but we don't
see from that, given the fact that we're talking about 4 or 5,000 people
any pattern that would lead us to believe that there's a threat to this
particular group of people.
Furthermore, Ambassador Pelletreau has talked to both Mr. Barzani and Mr.
Talabani and has received concrete assurances -- specific assurances --
from them that they will be mindful to protect the security of this group
of people. These people are well-known. We think that for the time being
that is sufficient.
QUESTION: Nick, on this subject, how is it that Barzani and Talabani are
not taking part?
MR. BURNS: When Ambassador Pelletreau talked to them last week, when
Ambassador Pelletreau -- the United States successfully arranged the cease-
fire in northern Iraq, Mr. Barzani and Mr. Talabani agreed that they would
not be present at the talks; that their seconds would be -- senior members
of both factions and that Mr. Pelletreau would remain personally in touch
with both Barzani and Talabani as the talks proceed. I expect that
will happen all throughout this week.
QUESTION: That implies that they are such blood enemies at this point
anyway, they won't sit down at the same table?
MR. BURNS: I think, rather, Jim, it implies or it states that these are
difficult talks. The gap between these two factions is quite large. They
have ethnic, historic -- they have historic and personal rivalries,
certainly.
It's our judgment and their judgment that we should start off at a slightly
lower level. These are going to be very difficult talks, and we are mindful
of that as we begin.
Charlie.
QUESTION: Nick, to follow up on an earlier point. On the people from
northern Iraq who have been taken to Guam, you said that they've started
making their way to the U.S. Do you have any numbers?
MR. BURNS: Yes. I understand that roughly 40 people have already arrived
in the United States. Most of these are people with medical problems who
required immediate medical attention that was not available at Andersen Air
Force Base in Guam, and some of their family members.
I understand that the Immigration and Naturalization Service has completed
the asylum processing for all of these people. Remember, this group of
roughly 2,100 people -- I believe it was 2,140 people -- they were
employees of the United States Government. They worked for U.S. Government
agencies for the last five years.
All of the asylum processing has been completed. Final security checks and
arrangements for resettlement in the United States are now underway. I
think as early as next week we'll see the first major group depart Guam for
the United States as part of this process.
It's our view that the great majority, if not all of these people, will be
accepted for asylum in the United States. But there are these final
security checks that are being done right now.
QUESTION: Do you know where they're going to be taken or brought to in
the U.S.?
MR. BURNS: The asylum process works -- it's a decentralized process.
There are hosts that are found to receive asylees as they enter the United
States. These people will go where American citizens have offered to take
them into their communities and help them settle in the United States. So,
all over the United States.
Yasmine.
QUESTION: Has the U.S. Government asked any agencies to help these people
with their settlement, like the Kurdish Institute which is newly established
here?
MR. BURNS: The Immigration and Naturalization Service normally does work
with groups as well as individuals in the United States. It wouldn't
surprise me at all if a variety of Kurdish-American groups wanted to help
sponsor the resettlement of some of these people, but I don't have names
for you. Again, this is a separate government agency that's working on
this. It's the INS, and you should feel free to contact them.
Still on the same subject? Sid, you have a question on this subject?
QUESTION: (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: Same subject, yes.
QUESTION: On the eve of these talks being held in Ankara today, the PUK
said that the (inaudible) Talabani met with the PKK delegation. This, of
course -- (inaudible) Turkish Government as to what he's trying to do with
that organization. How would you react to that?
MR. BURNS: I haven't seen that statement. I was unaware that Mr. Talabani
had any such meeting. In general, you know our position on the PKK. It's a
terrorist organization. We wouldn't encourage Mr. Talabani to cooperate
with it because the PKK has been a sponsor of terrorist acts against the
government and the people of Turkey, and we're an ally of Turkey. So we
have a very clear position on that.
QUESTION: Another question on the same subject. Turkish Ambassador Nuzhet
Kandemir has said that his government expresses concern over (inaudible) TV
which has PKK propaganda. The U.S. broadcast firms lease satellite dishes
to this (inaudible) organization. What's your position on that? Can't you
at least write --
MR. BURNS: I'll just have to check that for you. I haven't heard of that.
I haven't heard of it. I'm just not aware of any of the specifics of those
charges.
Sid.
QUESTION: A different topic. There was signing schedule between Russia
and the United States on Thursday in Geneva. Apparently, that's been called
off. Can you say why?
MR. BURNS: Comments? Yes. This has been called off. There will be no
signing ceremony in Geneva on Thursday, most unfortunately. But we will
continue to work the problem.
If you'd like, I just can go through some of the background on this. As you
remember, in September, when Secretary Christopher and Foreign Minister
Primakov met, they issued a joint statement in New York concerning the
demarcation of strategic and theater missile defenses. This joint statement
was the product of work over many years by the Russian and American
governments to try to resolve this very, very important issue.
In that statement, the United States and Russia recorded that Part I of
these negotiations was related to lower-velocity theater missile defense
systems. That was successfully completed during the last Standing
Consultative Commission meeting which I believe concluded in June of this
year -- June 1996. It was therefore duly noted in the joint statement that
agreement had been reached on lower-velocity theater missile defense
systems.
In addition, the joint statement of late September noted that the Standing
Consultative Commission would reconvene on October 7, which it did, where
the sides would conform and prepare for signature the Part I documents --
prepare for signature the Part I documents -- and begin discussions on Part
II of the demarcation negotiations.
Part II refers to higher-velocity theater missile defense systems.
Finally, the statement said that by the end of October, the Part I
documents would be signed in Geneva and then the SCC Commissioners would
report to the governments on Part II.
They have been meeting since October 7 in Geneva. Progress was made on Part
II issues, the higher-velocity theater missile defense issues. Last week, I
understand that all the parties in Geneva completed the process of
conforming the Part I documents and they were sent to Moscow and Washington
for approval.
So as of last week, we here in Washington were under the impression that
there would be a signing agreement on the Part I -- the lower-velocity
theater missile defense system -- that's been such an important issue under
discussion by our two governments.
Unfortunately, late last week the Russian Government introduced a series of
proposed modifications to the Part I document that had been so painstakingly
worked out for so many years. We believe that these modifications would, in
effect, tie the entry into force of Part I to the conclusion of Part
II.
So rather than going in a two-step process where you sign an agreement on
lower velocity, keep working on higher-velocity theater missile defense
systems, the Russians were now proposing as of late last week that we tie
the progress on the first to the progress -- the signing of the first -- to
progress on the second.
These proposed changes are unacceptable to the United States. They are
inconsistent with the agreement reached by Secretary Christopher and
Foreign Minister Primakov just six weeks ago.
Under these circumstances, it will not be possible to go to Geneva on
Thursday and sign the Part I documents.
The Standing Consultative Commission continues to meet. We will continue to
talk about this issue with the Russian Government. We hope very much that
we can return to our previously agreed upon understanding that was reached
by the two Ministers in September.
QUESTION: Nick, what is your understanding of why this all broke down? Is
this a reflection of the power struggle in Moscow, a deterioration of
central authority there?
MR. BURNS: We're disappointed by Russia's reversal of its own position
late last week. I don't want to stand here and try to speculate on what
internal reasons may have led to this decision. We have to judge Russia by
what it says and does with us, and we're very disappointed. We're urging
the Russian Government to come back to the agreement made at the highest
level that these things normally go.
QUESTION: Is that a situation where the government of Boris Yeltsin has
been unable to get START II through, which is arguably a very important
agreement? You've now got this agreement which has fallen apart. It's not a
very fortuitous trend?
MR. BURNS: START II is perhaps one of the -- it's certainly one of the
major objectives of the United States in our security relationship with
Russia. The Russian Government supports Duma ratification. The Duma at this
point does not support its own ratification of START II.
Secretary of Defense Perry was there just two weeks ago, and he made
actually a presentation to the Russian Duma and a very impressive one; and
we hope that over time the Russian Duma will agree that START II ratification
makes sense.
On this issue, this issue is very different. This is not in the hands of
the Russian Duma. It's in the hands of the Russian Foreign Minister, and
the Russian Foreign Minister made a very specific agreement with Secretary
of State Christopher. We expect that should be honored.
We don't see any reason now to abruptly -- after so many hundreds of hours
of negotiation, to abruptly shift gears and insist that they're not going
to sign the lower velocity agreement until we conclude the higher velocity
agreement. That's no way to proceed on these issues.
QUESTION: Has Primakov reversed himself, or was Primakov forced to
reverse the Russian position?
MR. BURNS: I just can't answer that question. In diplomacy, the guy
sitting at the table is accountable and responsible; and the guy here, in
signing the joint statement with Secretary Christopher, was Foreign
Minister Primakov. I just don't know what may have led -- what are the
internal decisions that led to this ultimate reversal.
QUESTION: Nick, when you say there was progress in Geneva on Part II, can
you elaborate on that a little bit? Was there agreement, for instance that
there are high velocity systems that can be tested without either
renegotiating or abrogating the ABM Treaty?
MR. BURNS: I'm not able, Barry, to take you through the details of how
we've made progress. Progress has been made, but that doesn't mean we have
an agreement on Part II -- on the higher velocity systems. We do not yet
have an agreement on the higher velocity systems, and how that might have
an impact on the ABM Treaty.
QUESTION: Yeah. I mean, you understand that apart from this instant
dispute, there's a great body of folks out there who think the two of you
together are killing the ABM Treaty, and there's another body -- contrary
body -- that says, "Let's go ahead and kill it, and let's set up defenses
all over the planning."
MR. BURNS: We're not killing the ABM Treaty.
QUESTION: Well, that's what you have to say.
MR. BURNS: That's the truth. We're not killing the ABM Treaty.
QUESTION: When you drew a line between Part I and Part II, it's because
this Administration -- the Russians were happy to go along; they have other
fish to fry -- when you drew a line between Part I and Part II, you had all
the systems in Part I -- the U.S. position was -- could be tested without
even renegotiating ABM, let alone doing away with ABM.
Now, Part II were things that raised questions about that. It wasn't just
an arbitrary distinction. There were systems that the U.S. thought could be
tested safely without a legal problem, and then there were others.
In that "others" category, have you now decided, like the Navy system or
other systems, also can be tested without violating the agreement?
MR. BURNS: Barry, as you looked down the road a long time ago and looked
at this entire set of negotiations, we and the Russians were clear about
the distinctions between Part I and Part II. The Russians knew it and we
knew it. Okay?
QUESTION: Right.
MR. BURNS: There was an agreement to go forward on one and to conclude
one and try to go forward on another. We're just saying now, "Let's codify
the progress that has already been made and continue discussing the issues
that you're interested in."
Since these issues are currently under negotiation, I can't go into our
negotiating position in public and tell you what we're doing, what we're
not doing, what we're agreeing, what we're not agreeing to. But I can tell
you that progress has been made.
QUESTION: The U.S. version of progress, as Part I exemplifies, is to find
systems that can be tested with the Russians' approval. All right? When you
say there was progress in Part II, the simple question is, have you
subsequently found other systems that the two of you think you can test and
the ABM Treaty stands tall nonetheless?
MR. BURNS: Barry, I'm just not in a position to tell you -- to define
progress, Part II, because we're in the middle of the negotiations. Our
normal response on a question like that.
Yes, sir. You want to follow up?
QUESTION: I want to follow on Russia.
MR. BURNS: Are you on ABM/TMD or another issue?
QUESTION: Let me follow this. Two points. Secretary Perry failed to sell
the Duma on START II. Do you see this reaction to the theater missile
treaty as some kind of indeed a negative reaction by the Russians? And,
secondly, does the failure of the Perry mission to Moscow -- is that
reflected in the words of Strobe Talbott, with regard to the troubles in
trust between the U.S. and Russia?
MR. BURNS: First, Bill, I think you're asking good questions, but I think
the first one I would just say this to that: The Russian Government agrees
with the United States that the Duma ought to ratify START II. Therefore,
it wouldn't make sense for the Russian Government to link the problems of
ratification of START II to this particular discussion on theater missile
defenses. I don't see any common sense logic that would lead the Russian
Government to do that.
Secondly, I would encourage you to read Deputy Secretary Talbott's speech
of last evening in New York at Columbia when he talked about the future of
the U.S.-Russian relationship in a changing world, and particularly the
latter part of that speech when he does talk about the fact that Russia
needs to make sure it does not isolate itself in the future.
Russia needs to make sure that it works with the United States and Western
Europe on these host of security questions, and that we believe that by
putting in place the programs that President Clinton and NATO have
suggested -- NATO enlargement; a Russia-NATO relationship, a treaty or a
charter -- that we can set up a lasting, positive relationship between
Russia and the United States. It's a very important speech, and I encourage
you to look at the last part of it especially.
QUESTION: Do you think that Strobe is speaking to the failure of the Duma
to work a deal with Mr. Perry?
MR. BURNS: I think the speech is self-explanatory, and it just accounts
for the current climate in U.S.-Russian relations and what we perceive the
challenges to be in moving forward in that relationship.
QUESTION: What kind of communications have you gotten from the Cuban
Government regarding this gentleman who is now on trial for air piracy?
MR. BURNS: Mr. Fernandez Pupo?
QUESTION: Fernandez Pupo.
MR. BURNS: He is under indictment for air piracy. His case is being
investigated by the Justice Department, and I suppose there's going to be
further judicial action brought against him at some point. But it's a
judicial matter, so I can't speak to that.
As for the Cuban Government, I don't believe there's been any request for
extradition of Mr. Fernandez Pupo, and I would remind you that we do have
an extradition treaty in place. I believe it dates back to 1904. But it has
not been exercised by either the United States and Cuba, I don't believe,
since the revolution of 1959.
QUESTION: Nick, on a different subject. What do you have to say about the
conviction of Mr. Wang in China? Also, is that causing the Secretary to
rethink his plans on going to China, as he did when Wei was merely
arrested?
MR. BURNS: The United States condemns the Chinese Government's decision
to sentence Mr. Wang Dan to 11 years in prison. This is an attempt to
silence the voices of democracy in China. Freedom of expression is among
the rights recognized by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Mr.
Wang Dan and others are entitled to exercise this internationally-
recognized right.
The Chinese Government charged Mr. Wang with conspiracy to subvert the
government. We understand that the actions that Mr. Wang took that led to
these charges included the following: publishing articles in the overseas
press that were deemed objectionable by the Chinese Government; receiving
donations from abroad for the provision of humanitarian relief to
imprisoned and released dissidents in China; and receiving a scholarship
from the University of California for self-study.
These are the charges. These are the supposed offenses that led to the
conviction and an 11-year prison sentence for Mr. Wang Dan. This unjustified
process of prolonged incommunicado detention, the sudden formal arrest, the
quick trial that just required a couple of hours, provided Mr. Wang with
very little time to prepare his defense, to consult with legal advisers.
The Chinese authorities handled this particular case in a way that clearly
violated Mr. Wang's internationally recognized rights to a fair and public
hearing of the criminal charges against him. You know that many of your
colleagues, journalists in Beijing, and some American diplomats tried to
witness the trial and were prevented from doing so by the Chinese
Government. We regret the Chinese Government did not allow international
observers to attend the trial.
President Clinton, Secretary Christopher and other senior American
officials have consistently raised the issue of human rights with the
senior Chinese leadership, and we will continue to do that. We continue to
be concerned by Mr. Wang's condition. We urge the Chinese authorities to
show clemency to this courageous man whose championing of democratic values
has gained him deserved international recognition. We will certainly
continue to follow this case very, very closely.
Sid, you've asked a further question: how will this affect the Secretary's
trip. I can tell you that Secretary of State Christopher intends to go
forward with his trip to China. The Secretary has raised human rights
concerns in all of his meetings -- all of his 14 meetings -- with Deputy
Premier and Foreign Minister Qian Qichen, and he will certainly raise our
concerns about this case and others when he is in Beijing and Shanghai in
mid-November.
We believe that we need to engage directly with the Chinese leadership on
all of the issues in our relationship -- human rights, trade issues,
political issues, security issues. We believe that isolating China -- if
you look back in history when China has been isolated, we can see that
there has been no positive effect on the human rights of the Chinese
people.
We need to take these issues directly to the Chinese leadership, and that's
what Secretary Christopher intends to do. We have a broad, strategic, very
important relationship with China. We have some issues where we're working
quite well together. I think Korea is probably the best example of that,
where we've been together in the UN Security Council in the last couple of
weeks. We've worked together on the four-party talks. We've worked
together on the Agreed Framework.
There are issues where we disagree completely and human rights is one of
those. All issues are on the table. All those important issues will be
discussed, and the trip is going forward.
QUESTION: (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
QUESTION: Will Secretary Shattuck go with him?
MR. BURNS: The Secretary has not decided yet who will accompany him to
China in a couple of weeks' time. I suppose we'll have to make that
decision in the next several weeks.
QUESTION: Have all these statements had any -- you say isolation doesn't
work. Do public declarations and the President's remarks and the Secretary's
remarks to the Foreign Ministry -- do they have any impact, have you
noticed?
MR. BURNS: Mike McCurry answered the same question this morning, and I
agree with what he said. We look back over the last couple of years, and
we're very disappointed at the record of the Chinese Government on these
very important human rights issues.
Responsibility rests with the Chinese Government to improve this situation.
We do have a responsibility to speak up publicly when a noted champion of
human rights is given such a severe sentence and when he's only been
charged with the expression of his political views. We will continue to
speak up publicly in similar circumstances.
QUESTION: Why not use leverage? It's clear as can be that the Chinese are
eager to ship their underpriced goods produced by underpaid and in some
cases probably prison labor to the United States. It's also clear that
American businesses are glad to have cheap imports, which, of course,
compete with American goods, which cost more because Americans are paid a
living wage.
Why not use leverage? Why not use the economic -- China has recently
replaced Japan as the country with which the U.S. has the largest trade
imbalance. The economic benefits to China are self-evident. Why do you
continue to de-link the leverage that you could apply to China? What is the
point of making these public statements if pro-democracy people get thrown
in jail for 11 years?
MR. BURNS: First of all, Barry, I think it is important that the United
States and other countries speak up publicly and say what they think when
there are these unjustifiable sentences brought against Chinese citizens
solely for the expression of their political beliefs.
So I wouldn't belittle public statements. I think pubic statements are
important, and you might ask the dissidents themselves -- those who have
made their way to the United States and other countries -- if they think
that public statements are important when this type of thing happens.
Secondly, you know very well -- and I don't need to remind you -- that both
this Administration and the Bush Administration, I think, have found that
the Chinese Government's record is disappointing; that attempts to link it
to other issues have not worked in the past. We've gone forward in this
Administration with Most-Favored-Nation status for China.
But that doesn't mean as we continue our trade relationship that we do not
take very seriously and have as a prominent part of our agenda the human
rights problems --
QUESTION: But President Clinton ran against --
MR. BURNS: -- the human rights problems that are abundant in China. I
know what you're going to ask now. But, Barry, I think this Administration
spoke to that issue back in 1994 and 1995 and this year, and we've made a
decision. We've made a decision, and it's engagement across the board.
QUESTION: I say, Clinton four years ago ran against the Bush policy. He
set three conditions for trade privileges. Proliferation must be restricted.
Trade practices must improve. Human rights records must improve. On all
three counts, I don't think you could argue that China has much to be
praised for.
Then again, you still go ahead in '94, and you give them the privilege to
send in their cheap goods at low prices to compete with American goods
produced by American labor, some of whom actually even get union wages. Now
you've had a two-and-a-half year period of testing that out, and you see
the trials continue. So what's the point of making these public statements?
Aren't you enhancing their prestige by Christopher going to China, and why
would you do that?
MR. BURNS: Barry, would you recommend that in the wake of a sentence like
this morning's sentence, the United States Government say nothing? I don't
think so.
QUESTION: I didn't say that.
MR. BURNS: Well, yes, you did say that.
QUESTION: No, no --
MR. BURNS: You suggested that, and you devalued the importance of public
statements. I'm here to say, once again, that the world's greatest
democracy, the United States, needs to speak up when there are fundamental
abridgements of human rights occurring -- this case -- in China.
That's what the American people expect of their government, and that's what
we've done in this case. I think it speaks well of our government, and it
speaks well of our country as a whole.
QUESTION: It may make American officials feel good to speak in Jeffersonian
terms, and indeed presumably you should, this being a democracy. But why
not do something more than just making statements?
MR. BURNS: I disagree with your belittling these types of public
statements. I think you're off-base --
QUESTION: I'm saying it's not --
MR. BURNS: You have a right to say it --
QUESTION: I'm saying it doesn't seem to be enough.
MR. BURNS: You have a right to say it. But I think you're off-base, and I
think you perhaps under-estimate the importance of public statements when
they represent a country's point of view -- the point of view of our
country, the United States, and obviously the point of view of the American
people who believe that people like this individual, Mr. Wang Dan, ought to
be free to say what they want to say, even if they live in a country
like China, which is not a democracy. I think those statements are
important.
QUESTION: Nick, in you sending a public message to the Chinese by your
statements here and by previous statements, has it occurred to you that the
Chinese may be sending a message in return by such cases as the Wang case,
and that the message is one of defiance?
MR. BURNS: You're going to have to judge the Chinese Government and try
to read their minds and try to analyze this as to why this decision was
undertaken. It is certainly representative of the decisions that the
Chinese Government has taken for a number of years. The Chinese Government
has violated the human rights of many of its most noted citizens for a long,
long time. It's not as if this is the first time that's happened.
But this young man, who's 27 years old, is a champion of democracy. He's
somebody that we ought to stand up for publicly. I can't imagine the day,
frankly, when the United States will remain silent publicly in the face of
these outrageous violations of internationally respected human rights.
That's why we speak up.
QUESTION: Right. I'm asking you not what the Chinese Government is
thinking, but has it occurred to you --
MR. BURNS: You asked me, and I said that you're going to have to be the
judge of that. I can't.
QUESTION: Yes, but has it occurred to you as part of your policy
considerations that this may be a clumsy, maybe brutal way for the Chinese
to send a message of particular defiance to the United States and others
who raise human rights issues?
MR. BURNS: Oh, I can't judge motivations here. All we can do is judge
actions, practices, what the Chinese Government does on the ground. China
is isolated in the world on this issue. The vast majority of countries and
people around the world do not agree with this type of action, and it's up
to the United States, obviously, to say what it must on issues like
this.
Jim, there are probably 100 reasons why a decision like this was taken. I
don't believe you're just talking about the actions of one ministry here or
one group of people. It's complicated, but we oppose it, and that I think
represents our views today.
QUESTION: This is switching the subject, if I may.
MR. BURNS: You want to get off China?
QUESTION: Yes, please.
MR. BURNS: Well, I think we have some other people who want to continue.
Then we'll go back to you.
QUESTION: Okay, I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
MR. BURNS: Then we'll go back to you.
QUESTION: Would this Administration continue to encourage people like
Wang, democracy activists, democracy seekers, to continue with these types
of activities?
MR. BURNS: Sid, we believe, and I think all Americans have believed, for
over 200 years that people all over the world should be free to say what
they think and write what they think, and we, of course, encourage people
to continue to be democrats and to exercise the principles of democracy.
QUESTION: Even when it ends up with such brutal response from the
government where in the countries you're encouraging them to do that?
MR. BURNS: The curious inference here is that somehow then we would bear
some responsibility. I'm just reading into your mind for a little bit now.
Sid, I think that the responsible people here, the Chinese Government, you
ought to judge them. The United States Government is doing what it can to
bring attention to this problem. We think it's an important issue, and
we're going to continue to speak up about it.
QUESTION: I can imagine the message as it's received there is that the
United States is behind us. They think some day China will democratize, and
it's been X number of years now, and it hasn't, and you all continue to
encourage this, and these people continue getting pounded on.
MR. BURNS: Under that logic, then, the United States never should have
said anything about Solidarity; never should have said anything about the
dissidents in the Soviet Union; shouldn't talk about Aung San Suu Kyi and
her struggle for human rights and freedom in Burma.
Under that logic, we might as well all just go home and never talk about
any country in the world; never talk about democracy. We can't do that,
because this country is a democracy, and our people -- the American people -
- expect the government in Washington to stand up for democratic rights
around the world, and that's the right thing to do. So we're not going to
take your advice.
QUESTION: In every one of those cases, the United States has backed up
its rhetoric with sanctions or actions or discussions of sanctions. It
backed it up with a stick, and you all have --
MR. BURNS: Each of those cases was complicated. In each of those cases we
continued the relationship with the government in question. I beg to differ
on the history.
Yes. No, actually I think we were -- ladies before gentlemen. She's been
waiting, Mr. Lambros.
QUESTION: Talking about Israel now and moving on to the Israeli troop
movement in the Golan Heights, for fear, they are saying, of a Syrian
attack. What do you make of that, and how do you think it's going to affect
the already tenuous negotiation process?
MR. BURNS: I think, as we said yesterday, there's no reason to think that
there's any imminent concern, imminent cause, that would lead these two
countries to a conflict. There have been military exercises on both sides
of the Israeli-Syrian border along the Golan Heights -- both sides -- just
in the last couple of days.
Military exercises are not unusual. Most militaries exercise and train. We
are watching the situation very carefully. We're aware of high emotions on
both sides of the border, certainly in both capitals -- in Jerusalem and in
Damascus -- but nothing that we see would lead us to believe that there's
any undue cause for concern here.
QUESTION: Nick, also on that point --
MR. BURNS: Yes, please.
QUESTION: There's nothing to worry about because of movements on the
ground, but is there a reason to worry because of a possibility of
miscommunication and misperception in both capitals, and was there any move
on your part to translate intentions between Damascus and Jerusalem?
And another question on this Middle Eastern track. It was said in Jerusalem
parliament today that the pending agreement on Hebron is an exact replica
of the pre-election agreement that was on the table in the previous
government in Israel. Does this mean that a lot of the American effort was
focused recently on actually moving ahead towards the permanent settlement,
or insuring to the Palestinian side that Hebron will not be the end of the
process but rather the beginning of it?
MR. BURNS: On the second question, I can't speak to comparing the
original Oslo accords versus wherever the Hebron talks stand today and
whatever words are connected to the present status of those talks. I mean,
that's for others to do, and we've taken a vow of silence on that. We're
not going to publicly engage in trying to interpret exactly where we
are.
These talks over the last three weeks have been about Hebron, redeployment
of the IDF from Hebron, and associated problems -- security problems within
the city of Hebron, the status of the Jewish community there, etc.
They have not been about the final status talks -- about Jerusalem and the
settlers and the right of return for refugees. Those talks will occur at
some point in the future when the Israelis and Palestinians decide to begin
them.
Certainly, our view is that Oslo needs to be implemented fully. Therefore,
the commitment to withdraw from Hebron must be met, and that's an Israeli-
Palestinian decision. We believe that they'll make that decision in the
next couple of weeks. We believe those talks will be successful.
They then have to decide when they go forth to the final status talks.
That's their decision. But we fully expect that they will go forward in
those talks because they agreed to do that. Here we, I think, agree with
both Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat that the Hebron talks are
not the end of the process; they're someplace in the middle of the process.
The process goes forward beyond them.
QUESTION: On the question of translating mutual intentions in order to
prevent misconception in Damascus, is there any effort on your part to make
it clear?
MR. BURNS: We are obviously a friend of Israel, and we're in contact with
the Syrian Government. We have contacts with both when it's useful.
Sometimes we do pass messages between the governments.
I think we do understand and do believe that both governments fully
comprehend how serious a situation it would be if there was a conflict
around the border. It would be a catastrophic situation. Both governments
are rational governments, and they understand that. We don't believe that
any conflict is imminent.
Henry.
QUESTION: Africa?
MR. BURNS: They want to just continue with the Middle East.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) Dennis' travel, if he decided to go back? Has he
briefed the Secretary? When is he going to talk to us?
MR. BURNS: Dennis did his most important briefing today, and that was
with the Secretary of State this morning. He's back in his office. He has
not yet decided the specific day when he goes back.
QUESTION: Is he entertaining the notion of talking to us?
MR. BURNS: We'll have to see what high-level decision is made on that
issue. But I promise to you that I continue to raise it.
Judd.
QUESTION: Henry had a question.
MR. BURNS: Yes, Henry.
QUESTION: The Secretary General this morning appointed a Special Envoy to
the Great Lakes region. He is the current Canadian Ambassador to the United
States, Raymond Chretien.
First of all, if I might ask, does he enjoy the confidence of the United
States? And does that Office of Special Envoy enjoy the confidence and
support of the United States?
MR. BURNS: The United States is very pleased that the Secretary General
of the UN has appointed Ambassador Chretien -- Ambassador Raymond Chretien -
- to this post as UN Special Envoy for the Great Lakes region. We know him
very well. He's the Canadian Ambassador to the United States. He has the
highest respect of everybody in this government -- from Secretary
Christopher to Under Secretary Tarnoff, everyone who has been working with
him.
I understand that Under Secretary Tarnoff and others in this building --
our African specialists -- will be consulting with him personally in the
next couple of days before he leaves on his month-long trip to Central
Africa. He has our respect, he has our best wishes, and he will have our
support in every way -- political and otherwise.
I think there's a coincidence of views here between the United States and
Canada. I think both of us feel that there has to be a greater effort made
by the governments in the region to stop the fighting. Both of us support
the efforts of Mrs. Ogata, the UN High Commissioner on Refugees, to deal
with this nearly disastrous humanitarian situation.
I know that Assistant Secretary of State Phyllis Oakley and other American
officials are going to be up in New York talking to Mrs. Ogata about that
refugee situation. We'll stay in close touch with the UNHCR.
QUESTION: As a follow-up to that, of course, appreciating that Canada and
the United States and other nations are in tune on this, it is, however, a
United Nations office. A couple of requests on the part of the Secretary
General of this Special Envoy, and I read them to you: "To give advice on
the size and structure of the United Nations political presence which
will be established in the Great Lakes region," does that give
this Administration difficulty?
And, secondly, the attempts to establish a cease-fire, does the Special
Envoy have unilateral action and your support to do both of those things?
Or are there concerns that you would express here today about those?
MR. BURNS: I wouldn't express any concerns. I think he's got a very
difficult mandate and a very difficult mission ahead. He has our full
support.
We would like to see a cease-fire in eastern Zaire, along the Rwandan
border -- in Bukuvu, in Goma, and other places. We'd very much like to see
a cease-fire, because it's been the fighting that has produced, motivated
we think, over 500,000 people to leave the refugee camps and to flee in
different directions. Now those people are in danger of not having adequate
food and medical and water supplies to keep them going, to keep them alive
over the next couple of weeks.
This is a real humanitarian crisis that we've got here. So all of our
support goes to Ambassador Chretien. He will need, obviously, to figure out
-- he will need to address these questions as he goes along in his mission.
We will keep in contact with him and the UN as he does.
QUESTION: But given some of the difficulties that exist between the
United States and the United Nations, this question of an establishment of
a UN political presence in the region, isn't that difficult, to say the
least? And aren't you concerned and won't you be watching that particular
part of his mission?
MR. BURNS: We will have to see what recommendations are made by
Ambassador Chretien to the UN Secretary General. We don't want to
anticipate what his conclusions might be. We ought to give him some
latitude in order to give him some time to figure out what he thinks the
best solution is.
What we have said, Henry, is that the idea of some kind of regional
conference to bring the warring factions together is a good one as long as
the regional governments are represented and as long as the people coming
to the conference are serious.
As for any kind of permanent political presence, we'll have to see what
that means. But we don't start off, in looking at Ambassador Chretien's
mission, with five reasons why he's not going to succeed. He's a very able,
experienced diplomat. He's got the confidence of the Canadian Government as
well as our government. There's every reason to think that he's the man for
this job. We ought to let him go out there and see what he wants to
recommend and then we'll react to it.
QUESTION: Will the U.S. contribute to an international presence in the
Great Lakes region?
MR. BURNS: We'll have to see what that means. I don't think that there's
any serious planning underway for any U.S. military presence, if you're
asking. There's no planning for that right now.
A political presence to us would mean something quite different. Perhaps
we're talking about an augmented group that would be available to arrange
and coordinate the humanitarian assistance. We'll just have to see what is
in mind, but we don't start off with the presumption that American troops
will go to Central Africa. I don't believe that's in the cards right
now.
There's one more question. Africa.
QUESTION: Norway, yesterday -- the Foreign Minister of Norway has asked
the United Nations Security Council to intervene militarily in eastern
Zaire. Does the U.S. support that -- not necessarily U.S. troops, but if
other people can do it?
MR. BURNS: We'll have to see what Ambassador Chretien recommends to
Secretary General Boutros Ghali. We don't want to get ahead of those
recommendations.
We have said in the past, and Secretary Christopher said throughout his
Africa tour, that the idea of some kind of crisis response force, manned by
the African countries makes sense. It's not going to be possible to have
that force ready to be of assistance in the current crisis in the Great
Lakes region. This crisis points to the need, again, for an African Crisis
Response Force -- a force that African countries would control; that
African countries would contribute to; and that they could use along with
others in the international community such as the United Nations for
situations like this.
Whether or not Ambassador Chretien recommends X, Y, or Z, we'll just have
to wait and see. We ought to give him some liberty and some room to take a
look at the situation and then we'll respond.
QUESTION: The Greek Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Khristos Rozakis
-- R-O-Z-A-K-I-S -- the so-called "Professor" (inaudible), the top advisor
to the Prime Minister, the real architect of the upcoming partition over
the Aegean Sea, proposed yesterday and today to Ankara a moratorium of --
an embargo on --no Greek and Turkish military exercise in the entire Aegean
around the year.
Since this is unusual proposal about the Greek official is questioning the
Greek national rights in the entire Aegean Sea, and since your government
is mediating on the Greek-Turkish differences, may we have the U.S.
position on the Rozakis proposal?
MR. BURNS: Thank you, Mr. Lambros. We'll have to take a look at Mr.
Rozakis' proposal before we can present an official view in public.
QUESTION: But we need a kind of comment due to the point that some Greek
professors quoted the same line when Mr. Rozakis are claiming privately in
Athens that the proposed moratorium is a U. S. plan. I am wondering if the
U. S. Government authorized any of those professors who haven't even the
sense to promote such a plan, taking also into consideration that the
Rozakis proposal already is creating an anti-American sentiment in Athens,
in Greece.
MR. BURNS: Well, we don't want there to be any anti-American sentiment in
Greece because we are a great ally of Greece. We are a good friend of
Greece. And I think the Greek and American people, if you polled them they
would say that. They like each other, and the two countries get along very
well.
So, first of all, we are all for Greek-American harmony and having an
excellent relationship. Second, I really do -- will need to look into this
particular statement before I can give you our considered view in
public.
QUESTION: Mr. Burns, in your excellent piece you wrote the other day in
the last issue of the "Harvard International Journal of Press and Politics,
" you are saying, inter alia, quote, To be successful I have found that the
spokesman must meet two requirements. First, he or she must be and be seen
to speak already clearly and authoritatively for the Secretary of
State." But I --
MR. BURNS: Right. I agree with myself on those words. Well put.
QUESTION: I have a complaint. In the case of Greek-Turkish relations, you
are not following your own advice. Why?
MR. BURNS: Thank you for your generous comments on my article. Let me
just tell you --
QUESTION: Why --
MR. BURNS: I am speaking clearly and authoritatively in saying we need to
look at this before we can give you a public comment. It's a clear and
authoritative statement by the United States State Department.
QUESTION: You are not following your own advice in the context of my
questions.
MR. BURNS: But I am, because you wouldn't want me to mislead you. You
know, we have people in this building far more expert on Greece and Turkey
than myself, and you would want me to consult with them before I gave you
our considered views in public and that is what I intend to do.
QUESTION: But when? That's the point -- when?
MR. BURNS: Well, I will consult with them as soon as I can and as soon as
we are ready, we'll give you an appropriate response.
QUESTION: But these discussions went for eight months and there is no
concrete answer from the above. This is my point.
MR. BURNS: The United States has spoken very clearly about this issue and
we stand ready to help Greece and Turkey at any time, but, you know, we
have talked a lot today about responsible parties. Who is responsible? It's
Greece and Turkey. So you ought to address your questions first to the
Greek and Turkish Governments, then to the United States Government, and I
am always available to answer these questions when I can, but you need to
give me a little bit of leeway on some of these statements.
Betsy. Thank you.
QUESTION: Nick, a question on Taiwan. In September of 1995, the President,
President Clinton met with Lin Tai Ying, who is Finance head of a Taiwanese
political party in Taiwan, at a fund-raiser in San Francisco.
While not illegal, do you think it appropriate? Does this building think it
appropriate for the President to be meeting with a Taiwanese political
party officials?
MR. BURNS: Well, first let me say, I have no idea whether this meeting
took place. I think it is a rumor, it's an allegation. I would check with
the White House on this. I cannot possibly answer that question.
Putting that question aside, is it appropriate for the United States,
United States officials at whatever level, to meet with Taiwan authorities,
and the answer is yes. From time to time, we have an unofficial relationship
with Taiwan, but from time to time, American officials travel to Taiwan, to
Taipei, and from time to time they have meetings. Larry Summers, our Deputy
Secretary of the Treasury made a trip there and met with Taiwan authorities.
It is not unusual.
But your first question, Betsy, is an important question. I can't answer it,
and you'll have to ask the White House.
QUESTION: The White House said the meeting did take place.
MR. BURNS: Well, I was unaware of that. I didn't know you checked with
the White House, but I would certainly put great stock in what the White
House says.
QUESTION: Are you aware of whether the President has met with any other
Taiwanese officials?
MR. BURNS: No, I am not. I think they have a couple more questions here.
Yes, sir.
QUESTION: Do you have any response today to Syria's suicide bomb attacks
which left many civilians in Turkey? You said you were going to look at
it.
MR. BURNS: Right. I don't believe that the United States is in a position
to confirm the origin of these suicide bomb attacks, but I can tell you
that we are very -- we certainly oppose them, and we are very concerned by
them, and we hope the Government of Turkey is able to find those responsible.
QUESTION: Does the Clinton Administration concur with the opinion of the
Speaker of the House and Chairman Gilman with regard to the sale -- this is
an Indonesian-Chinese brokered sale of five Super Puma helicopters equipped
with air-to-ship missiles manufactured by the Chinese? Should this be
stopped?
MR. BURNS: This is another case where we need to check the facts first
before we speak, and, you know, there have been some allegations made. We
need to check into them before we can substantiate them.
QUESTION: Don't you believe, Nick, that Mr. Gilman and the Speaker know
that this is a real issue?
MR. BURNS: Bill, putting that aside, you know the Speaker and the
Chairman have a right to say what they want to say. You are asking us for
our opinion. We need to know more facts before we can substantiate these
charges.
QUESTION: All right. Thank you.
MR. BURNS: Thank you.
(The briefing concluded at 2:13 p.m.)
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