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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #66, 97-04-30

U.S. State Department: Daily Press Briefings Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Department of State Foreign Affairs Network (DOSFAN) at <http://www.state.gov>


838

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Wednesday, April 30, 1997

Briefer: Nicholas Burns

ANNOUNCEMENTS
1        Foreign Policy Town Meetings in Tucson and San Antonio
1        TAJIKISTAN: US condemns terrorist attack on President Rahmonov
1        Secretary Albright met this morning with Spain Foreign Minister
         Matutes

ZAIRE 1-2 Ambassador Richardson's meetings with Mobutu, Kabila; visit to refugee camps 2,7-8 --Richardson's message, next steps, travel plans 2-5 Refugees: Access; UN investigation of alleged massacre by rebels 3 --Kabila response re possible rebel soldier involvement in massacres 3 --Potential for sanctions against rebel alliance in response to massacres 2 Kabila clarification of 60-day "limit" for refugee repatriation 2 Status of Mobutu-Kabila meeting 3-7 US assessment of government transition, Kabila, democracy in Zaire; US contacts w/ political leaders 3-4,8-9 Numbers of Americans in Zaire 8 Role of Angola, other nations, in conflict

SOUTH KOREA 8 American citizen arrested; US consular assistance

CYPRUS 9 Renewed UN effort to resolve Cyprus problem; US efforts

TURKEY 9-10,13 US relations with Turkish leaders, view of current internal problems

IRAQ 10 UN Sanctions: Request for increase in oil sales under UN Res 986

BELARUS 10-13 Former Amb. David Swartz claim that NSC expedited agricultural assistance 11-12 US decision to provide food assistance; support for de-nuclearization, democratic reform

SPAIN 13 Readout of Secretary Albright mtg w/ Foreign Minister Matutes


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #66

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30,1997 12:26 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. BURNS: Okay, welcome back. I have a couple of things to announce before we go to questions. First is that we're proceeding with our schedule of town meetings. We had a foreign policy town meeting in Seattle, Washington, yesterday. We have one coming up in Tucson, and we also have a town meeting in San Antonio, Texas, on May 7th of this year. The World Affairs Council of San Antonio and the State Department will cosponsor it. Jeff Bader, our Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian Affairs, our resident expert in Chinese affairs will be there, as will Judith Johnson, who is the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, along with John Sammis, who's a member of the policy planning staff. That's May 7, 1997.

I do have a statement today on Tajikistan. The State Department condemns the terrorist attack on Tajikistan's President Rahmonov and other government officials that took place in the northern city of Khojend today. At approximately 11:00 a.m. Tajikistan's local time, a hand grenade was thrown at President Rahmonov's car as he was on his way to a public appearance. We're very pleased that the president was apparently not seriously injured in this attack. But we do want to express our condolences to the families of the victims and to those who were injured.

This attack was condemned by opposition leaders in Tajikistan. We see no reason why this incident should have any detrimental effect on the peace negotiations in Tajikistan. The inter-Tajik negotiations have come a long way. They now stand on the threshold of a successful national reconciliation. It is important that both sides allow that commitment, their commitment to the peace process to continue and not allow any diversions to deflect them from the path to peace that they have embarked upon.

Finally, I just want to let you know the Secretary met with Spanish Foreign Minister Matutes this morning. As you know, Prime Minister Aznar is here; in fact, is over at the White House, meeting with the President right now. They had a very good breakfast meeting. They covered a full range of issues on our agenda. The President was looking forward to his meeting with Prime Minister Aznar.

Other than that, I think that's all I've got, George.

QUESTION: What do you have on Ambassador Richardson's activities?

MR. BURNS: Well, Ambassador Richardson is meeting at this hour with President Mobutu in Kinshasa. As you know, he's had a series of meetings. He met with President Mobutu yesterday in Kinshasa. He met with Minister Kabila in Lubumbashi. This morning Ambassador Richardson traveled to Kisangani, where he visited the refugee camps and talked to the relief officials there. He's now returned to Kinshasa and is meeting with President Mobutu. His basic message in all of these meetings, on the political side, has been to urge the government of President Mobutu to agree to a cease-fire and to agree to political reconciliation talks that might pave the way for a peaceful transition in Zaire.

In addition to that, Ambassador Richardson has spoken privately to Mr. Kabila about the very serious concern we have over the plight of the nearly 100,000 Rwandan Hutu refugees up in Kisangani. In that respect, we have urged the rebel alliance to allow the United Nations relief teams access to those refugees, and to allow those refugees to be transported to safety in Rwanda. Similarly, we have very grave concerns about the persistent allegations of mass atrocities in Kisangani, in and near Kisangani, the credible and persistent reports from the refugees that those atrocities have taken place.

Now, we understand that the U.N. Special Rapporteur for Human Rights, Mr. Garreton, who was to have arrived in Kisangani to investigate these reports -- we understand that his team has been blocked from entering into Zaire. We believe that the United Nations should be able to investigate these reports, and we believe that justice must be done. Therefore, the U.N. should be allowed on the scene to interview the refugees who have reports, or who themselves suffered from retribution by soldiers, and a full accounting of these massacres must be written by the United Nations. That is very, very important. Ambassador Richardson has made a big deal of this on his current trip.

Now, Mr. Kabila did indicate to Ambassador Richardson that the so-called 60- day time limit that Kabila set on the repatriation of the Rwandan Hutu refugees was not, in fact, a firm limit. It was a goal, not a deadline. Mr. Kabila said that he would be prepared to extend the time frame if a good faith repatriation effort is underway. We hope that is the case. We hope there will be some flexibility here because it is not the fault of the United Nations that these refugees have not been repatriated. It is the fault of those who control Kisangani and who block access to the refugees. That, I think, has to be put in that light.

Mrs. Ogata, who, of course, leads the U.N. High Commission for Refugees, that office, is in Washington today. She is talking to Assistant Secretary Phyllis Oakley and Assistant Secretary George Moose. We continue to be deeply concerned about all of these problems affecting the refugees, and we give our full support to the United Nations, including our financial support to help these people.

So I think Ambassador Richardson is off to a good start on his trip. It remains to be seen whether it is going to be possible for Mr. Mobutu and Mr. Kabila to meet. They have been going back and forth on whether they would meet and where they would meet. Bill Richardson is working on that. That is a very tough nut to crack at this point, and I don't know what the results of his meeting with President Mobutu will be. So we will just have to stay tuned to that.

QUESTION: Nick, can you get more specific on who is blocking the U.N. investigating team? And is it time for the U.S. and others to raise the prospect of sanctions against those who bear responsibility for the massacres?

MR. BURNS: Well, first, we think that the people who control the area in fact, the rebel alliance, the soldiers there, are the ones who have blocked at least temporarily we hope -- we hope only temporarily - the investigative team from coming in. This team has a humanitarian mission to perform. It must try to uncover those who are responsible for the deaths of the refugees, the massacre of refugees over the last several days.

We are working with Mr. Kabila and his associates to get the team in as soon as possible. I think what is stake here is the credibility of the alliance - the rebel alliance, those who say they want to take over Zaire. It is their credibility that is at stake. They are in control of a substantial amount of the territory of Zaire and they must be held accountable for what happens on that territory. Now, I'm not saying that Mr. Kabila is personally guilty or personally responsible for what has happened. In fact, what he has said today - and I think this is very helpful - he said that soldiers should not mistreat the refugees, that he will punish severely any soldiers who are found to have mistreated the refugees in any way, and that is positive.

We hope that those actions will translate - excuse me, those words will translate into actions. I think it's too early to talk about sanctions, especially, Howard, sanctions on a rebel army that is moving quite fast. We have to wait and see what happens in Zaire. But the United States has lent its voice very urgently to this humanitarian crisis, and we are on the side of the refugees. We want the refugees to be protected.

QUESTION: The issue came up a week or two ago about the number of companies, including many American firms, who were flocking to sign business deals with the rebels, Pat Robertson, apparently being the latest. Is that an avenue that the U.S. can use, cutting off such access? I mean, is there any leverage there?

MR. BURNS: Well, I think it might be a little precipitous in this sense. There is a government in Zaire, and that government is not comprised of the rebel alliance. Zaire is in a state of civil war. It remains to be seen who will eventually lead a new government of Zaire.

We hope that that transition is peaceful, and we hope that it is stable. In the meantime, we urge American citizens, for their own safety, not to travel to Zaire - certainly not to go out into regional cities where there is fighting and a lot of instability and land mines. I think these American companies ought to just wait and see what happens in Zaire before making any long-term commitments because that could be quite risky to them, certainly to their corporations. But also just risky to the people they send in there personally. We do not advise American citizens to travel to Zaire. It is a war zone. Betsy.

QUESTION: Nick, do you have any updated count of the number of Americans who are left in Zaire?

MR. BURNS: I don't have one at this very moment. But I bet we can get one in about five minutes. Christopher (Bush), could you just call the Africa Bureau? We had statistics last week, numbers last week. I think it's several hundred.

QUESTION: Well, I wondered if it had gone down.

MR. BURNS: Why don't we just call the Africa Bureau and see if we can get that, Chris, if you wouldn't mind? Well, get it by the end of the briefing. Yes.

QUESTION: Just to clarify, what you were saying is that Kabila cannot hope to accede to any leadership position in Zaire unless these allegations of atrocities are cleared up?

MR. BURNS: Well, it's going to be -- the United States, France, South Africa, the United Nations is not probably going to control who becomes the next leader of Zaire. That is going to be decided by Zairians. We hope that that process is through negotiations and not through a civil war, not through fighting.

QUESTION: We can't hope to control who the next leader is. We hope the next leader is a democrat who will set elections for the country and allow the people to determine the future of the country. What is at stake for him, if he does become the next leader of Zaire - if he does - is his credibility.

There have been reports of massacres. There has certainly been mistreatment of the refugees. There have been innumerable delays in getting permission for the U.N. to take the refugees out of the country. This is very serious because people have died as a result of these actions and inactions. So that is what is at stake here for the alliance in general.

Now, I do want to call attention to the positive public statements of Mr. Kabila today that he will severely punish soldiers found to be implicated in the massacres, and that he does want to be flexible in this so-called deadline for U.N. action in Kisangani. It is simply not appropriate for him or anyone else to set deadlines on the United Nations, when the United Nations wants to get in but is being prevented from getting in. That doesn't make much sense.

QUESTION: A follow - has Mr. Kabila acknowledged that massacres have taken place, first of all? And does he assert that he is in control of all of these forces? Or does he say that he is not?

MR. BURNS: On the first question, I am just not aware of everything that he may have said or hasn't said over the last 24 hours publicly. I do know in the meeting with Ambassador Richardson that he accepts the fact that there have been some at least very credible reports of massacres. There is physical evidence on the refugees themselves, those who have survived the machete attacks over the weekend, and that this needs to be looked into. He accepts that.

As for his own control over the territory, it stands to reason that if this is a cohesive alliance that seeks to take over the country, and if they control more than half the country, they are responsible for what happens in the areas under their control. If they have taken over control of Kisangani from the government, well, they are responsible for what happens in Kisangani. What has happened is that the refugees have been left unattended. They have been denied international assistance - medical and flight evacuation. Over the weekend, several thousands of refugees were subjected to vicious machete attacks, and that is what needs to be investigated by the United Nations.

QUESTION: Conceding that the U.S. has very little control over events on the ground in Zaire, are there any questions in policymakers' minds about whether it is wise to try to ease a transition of power? Conceding also that Mobutu's regime was not the best, aren't there indications that Mr. Kabila, having supported - having permitted atrocities to occur in the area under his control and having prevented, or having allowed his aides to prevent UN officials from investigating them - this is a long sentence, isn't it?

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: I'm following it, though. I still follow it.

QUESTION: But you're following it?

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Good.

MR. BURNS: I'm very patient. I'll wait till the end of the sentence.

QUESTION: Well, is there - are there any questions in policymakers' minds about whether it's right to ease the transition in any way towards a regime headed by Mr. Kabila?

MR. BURNS: There are no good options here for all the countries that are looking into Zaire - South Africa, the European countries, the United States, the United Nations. We must accept reality.

Reality is that Zaire is a country that has been torn apart by civil war. The institutions of the Mobutu regime no longer have any credibility. They are crumbling before the eyes of Zaire and all of our eyes. The government is not carrying on its responsibilities to protect its own citizens. More than half of the territory of the country has been taken over in a civil war by a rebel alliance.

It is not an option to support the status quo for the United States. It's not an option to support dictatorship. This has not been a sudden decision by the United States. For the life of this Administration and even into the end of the Bush Administration, the United States had basically made the calculation - and had communicated this - that the Mobutu regime was nearing an end. It's clearly on its last legs.

Now, we don't control Mr. Kabila. We have not been particularly close to him in the past. We have had a lot of diplomatic contact with him, recently, and we will continue that. It is in our interest to have diplomatic contact.

He has been many things in the past. He has never led a government. He has led guerrilla movements. He has taken Americans and others hostage in the 1970s, which is a despicable thing to do. We hope that if he does govern - and that's a question that we can't answer - that he governs on democratic principles, and that he leads the country through elections to a democratic future.

That, I think, is the standard by which we hold any elected leader or appointed leader or anyone who takes control of Zaire by other means. We will hold them to that standard and to speak about a democratic future in Zaire is not farfetched. If democracy can take root in South Africa, in Russian, in El Salvador, if the war was ended in Cambodia, then certainly peace can come to Zaire. That ought to be the international objective for Zaire, and it ought to be the objective for all Zairians. That is our hope for Zaire.

But in the meantime, we are just going to try to use our influence as we can to promote a stable transition, a cease-fire and end of the killing. I think all of us can work to protect the refugees. We owe them that. They are defenseless.

Mrs. Ogata has been a sterling leader, and Secretary General Kofi Annan has, I think, displayed great moral leadership in denouncing the injustices committed against the refugees. We fully support the United Nations, and we will continue to do that. That is the message that Mr. Kabila and Mr. Mobutu are both hearing on that score.

QUESTION: Can I follow?

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Yes, Nick. From Mr. Richardson's discussions with Mr. Kabila, does the United States now have a better understanding of why the refugees, these defenseless Rwandan people, are being persecuted? Why they are being attacked? This started back, I think, in the Summer when the camps were scattered by attacks by the rebels. Do we have - do we understand what's happening?

MR. BURNS: Bill, I think what's happened in Central Africa for the last three years is ethnic violence -- ethnic differences trying to be resolved by violent means, which is a bad idea and to horrific ends if you looked at the genocide of 1994 and if look at the terrible attacks on the Rwandan Hutus now.

QUESTION: These are ethnic persecutions, you believe?

MR. BURNS: It certainly seems to be the root of it.

QUESTION: You said a while a back - a week or two ago - that you saw nothing to indicate that Kabila had any democratic instinct. Is that an accurate paraphrase of what you said?

MR. BURNS: I don't think it's possible for me to stand here and tell you that I think he is a democrat. I don't think he has ever described himself as a democrat in the past. He has had - he has followed other ideologies. I think it's such - we all know democracy when we see it. We all know a democrat when we see him or her, and we hope that in this transition, democrats will emerge to lead Zaire.

But I cannot tell you that we think he is a democrat. He is a rebel leader. He is trying to take over the country. We hope that the situation can be - can result in a peaceful transition. That has to be the basis of our current outlook and our current policy.

QUESTION: Nick, aren't there others within Zaire -- a Mr. Tshiskedi, if I'm not mistaken, who have sort of formed an opposition over the years? And admittedly, they don't have an army behind them, but is the U.S. doing anything to reach out to them at this point?

MR. BURNS: Ambassador Simpson, our ambassador in Zaire knows all the political leaders, those who are in power, those who are out of power. We are in touch with all of them. We are in touch with President Mobutu. We are in touch with Tshisekedi. We are in touch with a variety of parliamentary leaders in Kinshasa, and we have an embassy officer in Goma whose main responsibility is to be in touch with the rebel alliance.

Dick Bogosian, our very fine special negotiator based here in Washington, has been in touch by satellite phone with Mr. Kabila just in the last couple of days. Bill Richardson has met with him. So all of our tentacles are out, and all of our avenues of communication are out. We will be in touch with all of these people. That makes sense, given the fact that Zaire is in the middle of a dynamic transition and a very unstable one with disastrous consequences for its people.

We are not going to side with any of these political leaders. We are not going to anoint any of these political leaders with an American imprimatur. We are going to stand by and hope that democrats emerge. If democrats emerge, we will support those people. Betsy.

QUESTION: Nick, do you know when Richardson is going to leave Zaire?

MR. BURNS: When?

QUESTION: Yes.

MR. BURNS: He hasn't made any distinct plans right now. He is engaging in shuttle diplomacy. So he is making those decisions probably on a quarter or a half-day basis. He had his - he's in his third meeting with President Mobutu now. There is a possibility that there could be some travel to neighboring countries.

I know he was interested in seeing if he could travel to Angola, mainly to warn the Angolans that they ought to stay out of the Zairian civil war. That is true, we think, of all nine of Zaire's neighbors. They ought to say out and not contribute to the chaos.

QUESTION: Another area?

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: North Korea.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Do you have anything on a U.S. executive who has been arrested there?

MR. BURNS: In North Korea?

QUESTION: Mm-hmm.

MR. BURNS: No, no.

QUESTION: South Korea.

MR. BURNS: In South Korea, yes. I saw a report that there had been an American arrested in South Korea. I understand that we have not obtained a Privacy Act waiver from the American citizen. Without that waiver, I am not at liberty, under our law, to provide you with his name or the circumstances of his arrest.

But you can be assured that our embassy in Seoul is following this case. We have an obligation to this individual to try to advise him of his rights and to provide all necessary consular assistance to him. But perhaps we will try again tomorrow. But until he gives us that waiver, we can't talk about it.

Let me just go back to Betsy's question , and Chris (Bush), thank you for getting this, I understand that as of today there are 49 official Americans or American diplomats resident in Kinshasa and roughly 400 private Americans in Zaire. That totals 449 roughly, Americans.

As you know, we look at the situation of the Americans on a daily basis. Secretary Albright has asked Under Secretary of State Pat Kennedy to do that. He reports to her on a daily basis about the security situation in Kinshasa. We will be very conservative in protecting our people. I mean conservative. I mean we will watch this very closely, and we will take all due precautions with our own people. It does make sense to have American diplomats there now represent our interests with these variety of politicians who are angling for power and to protect and to represent the American citizens who are still there.

But our very, very strong advice to the American public is not to travel to Zaire if you are considering travel. If American citizens are in Zaire, our very strong advice for them is to leave Zaire. There are commercial flights out of Kinshasa. There is river traffic across the river to Brazzaville in Congo. They ought to take advantage of that because Zaire is an unpredictable country right now. We don't know which way the civil war is going to turn. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Mr. Kofi Annan, the General Secretary of United Nations, made this statement and said that he is trying to bring two Cypriot leaders together on the 1st of June. Are you supporting that accords?

MR. BURNS: We absolutely support the efforts of Secretary General Annan and to his special representatives who have been working very hard on the Cyprus problem. We hope very much that the leaders of the two communities in Cyprus will agree to talk. We believe there should be a settlement of the problems on Cyprus. We are very encouraged that there may be this incremental step forward. We would call it progress in diplomatic terms.

We have been very emphatic, publicly as well as privately, that Ambassador Ken Brill is available to be of assistance to the Cyprus government, to the Turkish community in northern Cyprus. We work hard through Ambassador Niles and Ambassador Grossman in Athens and Ankara. Secretary Albright has a special interest in Cyprus, in the Eastern Mediterranean, and we want to be of help. But we certainly will be the first to congratulate the United Nations if something good comes from these talks.

QUESTION: Turkey. You were recorded by the Dutch media as saying that the only leader we trust in Turkey is President Demirel and I know you said later you didn't make such a statement. But could you clarify your position on President Demirel?

MR. BURNS: I would be very glad to do that.

QUESTION: Does the U.S. want to see him play a new role?

MR. BURNS: That's the second time I was misquoted today. You know, I have generally been very well treated by the press corps in my two and a half years here, but here is an example where I am just really - I am just puzzled. You all heard what I said on the record yesterday about the situation in Turkey and in our background session afterwards, of course, we can't reveal what was said but I will reveal - I will make an exception and just say that I never said anything like this.

I talked to Ambassador Grossman this morning. What he and I have been saying publicly is that we hope very much that the Turkish political leaders will be able to resolve Turkey's problems in a democratic fashion. We have great faith in the secular democratic foundation of modern Turkey since Ataturk took over in the 1920s. Turkey is an ally and a friend of the United States. We wish it well. But that is all we have said.

I have never made a statement of the type, Yasmine, that you quoted. I know it is not your quotation. You are just reporting it. I know it was reported on Turkish television last night. I have just never said it. I wouldn't say it. It doesn't reflect U.S. policy and I am very disturbed that there could have been such a miscommunication on such an important issue at such an important time for Turkey. Yes.

QUESTION: Earlier this week, Mr. Al-Anbari, an Iraqi envoy, told a conference on sanctions that the U.N. should at least double the oil for food sales because the Iraqis are not getting enough revenue to buy food and medicine. What is the U.S. position on this?

MR. BURNS: Our position is that we think that the U.N. Resolution 986 is being implemented faithfully by the United Nations; that the general terms of the deal that were arranged up in New York are good, they are satisfactory. If there is any reason to adjust the volume of oil or the volume of food going into Iraq, the food going into Iraq, the oil going out, that decision has to be made up at the United Nations. The United States has an imperative, and that is we want to help the Iraqi people who have suffered under Saddam Hussein. That is why we sponsored the resolution. It was our idea.

The Iraqi regime has a lot to be responsible for here. They have to be held accountable for the millions of dollars spent by Saddam Hussein and his family on their own personal pleasure - the houses, the mansions they have constructed for themselves. If the Iraqi government and if Mr. Al-Anbari truly want to help the Iraqi people, they should stop threatening their neighbors; they should stop pouring millions or billions of dollars into their military hardware in a vain attempt to recreate their former military power; they should stop the money going to overseas bank accounts of senior Iraqi government officials.

If they really want to help the suffering Iraqis, they should take the revenues that the Iraqi state has and direct them to helping ordinary Iraqis. You know, they have a budget that is all out of whack. It goes to the clan from Tikriti, the Saddam Hussein clan, and it goes to the military. The only people helping the civilians in Iraq are the United Nations, the United States, the United Kingdom and the other members of the United Nations. So I think we have to put the responsibility where it deserves to be put.

QUESTION: So I take it from that answer the U.S. has no plans at this time to seek modification of the -

MR. BURNS: I said that's an issue for the United Nations to decide. The United States will participate in any fair discussion of any problems associated with the implementation of U.N. Resolution 986. We think it has been implemented effectively. But we certainly want to see the Iraqi people get the food and medical assistance that they deserve. We don't have any argument with the Iraqi people. We want to see them helped, but their government is not sensitive to their needs and is not serving their needs.

QUESTION: Nick, do you have any response to the charges made by retired Ambassador David Swartz that in '93 you helped expedite aid to hard-liners in Belarus?

MR. BURNS: Well, as I read the article this morning, I thought to myself there is good news and there is bad news about this article. The good news is that Bill Gertz finally wrote an article that is not based on a leak of highly classified intelligence. I thought that was the good news. The bad news is that the story that you wrote is a total fabrication. It is not only false, it's malicious; and frankly, it is needlessly malicious.

Let me just tell you a little bit about the Clinton Administration's foreign policy towards Belarus. I had the great honor to carry out faithfully the policies of two Presidents towards Belarus for five years when I was at the National Security Council. I served for three years under President Bush, a Republican, and two years under President Clinton, a Democrat. I worked very well with both Republican and Democratic officials during those years. The particular decision in your false article this morning had to do with the decision by President Clinton to provide food assistance to Belarus in 1993.

That decision, which was based on a request from the government of Prime Minister Shushkyevitch -- excuse me, President Shushkyevitch, was a decision that was looked at by the Agriculture Department, the State Department, the Treasury Department and the National Security Council. The decision to go forward with the food aid was made by the President, following the advice of all those cabinet secretaries.

As a National Security Council official, I carried that policy out faithfully, I supported it personally, and I carried it out. The State Department was not only fully involved, they were one of the authors. During those years I was joined at the hip with the State Department and worked very effectively with the State Department.

I would respectfully submit that anybody interested in this issue ought to judge the Clinton Administration; and if you want to judge me, Bill, judge me and this Administration by what we accomplish in Belarus. The overriding national security interest of the United States in 1991 and 2 and 3 was to convince the Belarusian leadership to rid themselves of nuclear weapons. That was in our national security interest, supported on a bipartisan basis, both houses of Congress, both political parties. We did that.

President Clinton was able to convince the Belarusian leadership, President Shushkyevitch, to give up their nuclear weapons, to transport the nuclear warheads back to Russia where they had been destroyed. That was a significant foreign policy accomplishment of this administration. Everything that we did in those years with Belarus was oriented towards that result. I don't think you can argue with that success. I think that, in fact, the fact that Belarus and Ukraine and Kazakstan chose to get rid of their nuclear weapons was probably one of the most significant accomplishments of American foreign policy since the destruction of the Soviet Union in 1991, and it was my great honor to be associated with that policy.

I feel very proud of the record of the Bush Administration towards Belarus and the Clinton Administration. I am very proud of my service on the National Security Council and I am going to stand by that.

Now, Bill, you included some very harsh personal attacks on me in that article. I was surprised by that because Mr. Swartz has never been good enough to address any of those to me personally. But I'll tell you what, I'm not going to respond to those attacks because that would be uncivilized. That would be ungentlemanly and I am a gentleman. I am just not going to respond to those kinds of gratuitous, unfair attacks.

QUESTION: Well, on the policy, you did mention that the policy back then was to support democratic reform but, basically, what you are saying here is that the policy was not to support democratic reform but to get Belarus to get rid of its nuclear weapons. And since Belarus has basically abandoned democracy, are you still saying that the policy was successful?

MR. BURNS: Bill, you ought to do your homework better before you write malicious articles. Let me tell you that the policy of this administration and the Bush administration was to support democratic reformers in Belarus. The only person who has emerged as a democratic leader in that country over the last five and a half years was Shushkyevitch, and we supported Sushkyevitch wholeheartedly. In fact, President Clinton invited him to the White House in July of 1993.

When President Sushkyevitch came, do you know what he brought with him? He brought with him the instruments of ratification of Belarus to the Non- Proliferation Treaty, and in the Cabinet Room he handed over those instruments to President Clinton. That was one of the greatest days for our country's foreign policy towards Belarus because it meant that Belarus was giving up its nuclear weapons which posed a threat to the American people because the nuclear weapons in that country had been trained on the American people.

All of our efforts were to support the democrats in Belarus. What has happened in Belarus since then? President Sushkyevitch did not survive politically, much to our disappointment because we supported him. Who has taken his place? An authoritarian figure, Mr. Lukashenko, whom we regularly have criticized. In fact, Bill, if you had been at my briefing yesterday you would have heard a very sharp criticism of Mr. Lukashenko because President Clinton in his foreign policy has never supported communists or neo-communists. We support democrats.

QUESTION: You didn't really answer the question.

MR. BURNS: I answered your question fairly and directly, sir, and you probably don't deserve much more of an answer than that.

QUESTION: There was an allegation in here, Nick, that says that the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is investigating you. Are you aware of any such - or is that false or do they have any cause to investigate you if you weren't a candidate for an ambassadorial office?

MR. BURNS: Bill, it has been my great - it is my great pleasure to serve here as spokesman of the State Department. I have not been nominated to any other office. I am unaware of any kind of investigation.

QUESTION: May I follow up what you said on the Turkish President?

MR. BURNS: Sure.

QUESTION: What you are falsifying is the reported quotation, quote, that you allegedly said Mr. Demirel was the only Turkish leader you support? Otherwise, a couple months ago you on record said that you respect Mr. Demirel and you go through him as the channel in certain issues. That stands as is, isn't it?

MR. BURNS: Ugur, what I can tell you is that there was a report on Turkish television last night - I have a copy of it - which alleges that, you know, I said the words that you quoted. It's just not true. I have never made such a statement. We have an excellent relationship with President Demirel. We have a relationship with Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ciller, as you know. We work with Mr. Oyman. We work with a variety of Turkish officials. We work with the general staff. We work with the defense minister. So we work with a variety of Turkish leaders and we'll continue to work with a variety of Turkish leaders.

I am glad that you asked this question because it is very important for the United States position in Turkey that the Turkish people know that we have relationships throughout the government there and that we intend to continue them, and that our hope is that Turkey's secular democratic roots will be maintained. Yes.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) meeting with the Spanish foreign minister this morning.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Can you tell me whether they spoke about the NATO expansion and about the Helms-Burton or any other thing?

MR. BURNS: Yeah, they discussed Spain's important role in international peacekeeping efforts in Bosnia, in Guatemala, and in Albania. They reviewed preparations for the Madrid summit, as you would expect. They talked about the NATO enlargement issue, about the course of the NATO-Russia charter negotiations, and they also did include a discussion of Spain's entry into the military structure of NATO. Now, what I expect, of course, is that all those issues, because they are very important, are being discussed right now at the White House by President Clinton and Prime Minister Aznar.

Thank you.

(The briefing concluded at 1:02 p.m.)

(###)


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