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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #71, 97-05-09

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>


1260

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Friday, May 9, 1997

Briefer: Nicholas Burns

ANNOUNCEMENTS
1              Introduction of  Visitors to the Briefing
1              Foreign Service Day on Friday, May 9
1-2            Secretary Albright's Travel/Visit to Denver, May 15

ALBANIA 2 Secretary Albright's Mtg with Albanian Prime Minister

CYPRUS 2-5 Decision on Overflights

VIETNAM 3 US Ambassador Peterson Arrives in Hanoi

PAKISTAN 3 Arrest of Pakistan Air Force Officers

TURKEY 5-6 Conference in Ankara on Kurdish Disputes 6-7 Planned Turkey-Israel Naval Exercise 18-20 Status of Transfer of Frigates to Turkey

LIBYA 7-8 Qadhafi's Plans to Travel to Niger and Nigeria

ISRAEL 8,9-10 Alleged Israeli Attempts to Obtain Sensitive USG Information 9 Status of US-Israeli Relations

MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS 9 Dennis Ross Meetings with Israeli PM Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat

DEPARTMENT 10-11 Passport Office's 1-900 Information Line

ZAIRE 11-12 President Mobutu/Kabila and Rebel Alliance/Prospects for Second Mtg. 12 Whereabouts of President Mobutu. 13 Reports American Companies Making Contact with Rebel Alliance

SAUDI ARABIA 13-16 Child Custody Case

NORTH KOREA 16 MIA Talks 16-17 North Korean Defector's Comments/US Access to Defector 17 Allegations of Kidnapping of Japanese Citizens

PERU 17-18 Prospect for US Report on Americans Held Hostage

LEBANON 20-21 Pope John Paul's Visit


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #71

FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1997 1:18 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. BURNS: Good afternoon everyone. Mr. Pemstein was chiding me on the Red Sox today. They're now closer to the Tigers than the Orioles, I guess, is what you said. I wore this tie for good luck. I do need it; we need it very badly.

I want to welcome today to the briefing, Mr. Jose Ramos Pinheiro, who is the director of information for Radio Renascenca. Am I pronouncing it right? It's a major radio network owned by the Catholic church in Portugal. He's here under the auspices of USIA. He's escorted by Mr. Joseph McGovern, interpreter and escort.

Thank you very much for coming today.

Today is foreign service day. This day culminates our week of talking about the importance of the civil service and the foreign service, public service. Tim Wirth gave a keynote address to all of the many hundreds of people who've come back to the Department - many of them retirees. They'll be further seminars this afternoon, including an address by yours truly on public diplomacy. We do want to welcome back to the State Department all of the former diplomats who have done so much to help our own country in the past. We're delighted to have them with us today.

I want to tell you a little bit about the Secretary of State, Secretary Albright's schedule. As you know, she continues with the President today in Costa Rica. This evening they'll be flying to Barbados, to Bridgetowne, for the Summit of Caribbean Nations.

They'll be there tomorrow. President Clinton will be staying on in Barbados for a couple of days. Secretary Albright returns to Washington tomorrow night.

On Tuesday, as I mentioned yesterday, Tuesday, May 13th, Secretary Albright will visit Denver, Colorado - excuse me, May 15th. This is a trip to, in essence, talk to the organizers of the summit, the economic summit in Denver, about all the preparations.

While she's in Denver, she's going to be visiting her alma mater, which is the Kent Denver School. That's where she went to high school while she lived in Denver with her parents. This is an event co-hosted by the Kent Denver School and by the University of Denver. It was at the University of Denver that her father taught for many, many years, and where he expanded the international affairs program. She's going to take questions from the students at Kent Denver and the University of Denver. That is open to the press for those of you, or those from your organizations who will be in Denver and like to cover that event. That is a morning event. I'll get the time for you later on today.

Then at 11:45 a.m. in the morning, Secretary Albright will meet with the members of the Denver Summit of Eight host committee.

This will be followed by a luncheon by this committee. She'll make remarks. That luncheon is also sponsored by the Women's Foundation in Denver, Colorado. She'll make remarks, take questions.

That event is also open to the press. Following lunch, Secretary Albright and the Mayor of Denver, Wellington Webb will participate in a joint press conference at City Hall in Denver at 3:00 p.m.

Before leaving, she wants to walk in some of the neighborhoods in Denver that she remembers. We'll have a press pool accompanying her on that walk.

If you're interested in covering her in Denver, or traveling out there, please contact Kitty Bartels. You can contact her through the State Department Operations Center in Costa Rica and Barbados -- Costa Rica today, and in Denver over the weekend. I can give you her page number, cell phone number if you're really interested.

Now, in addition to traveling to Denver on Tuesday, the Secretary on Monday, May 12th, will be meeting with Prime Minster Fino of Albania. She invited him to come to the United States to talk about our hope that the situation in Albania can be stabilized through elections. We very much support the electoral process there. We support the current visit to Tirona by former Austrian Chancellor Franz Vranitzky. That is underway.

She has some additional appointments throughout the week, which we can talk about at the beginning of next week.

Now for a couple of announcements. I have some good news on the issue of Cyprus today. We have at least one Turkish journalist here. I was hoping - and Dimitris is here, excellent. The United States welcomes the decision of the government of Cyprus not to invite Greek aircraft to overfly Cyprus during the Toxotis-Vergina exercise and the information that no other such overflights are planned at this time.

We welcome the information from the government of Turkey that Turkey has no plans to overfly Cyprus as long as Greek aircraft do not overfly the island. We believe that these separate actions by Cyprus and by Turkey contribute to a better atmosphere for the efforts currently underway under the auspices of the United Nations to try to further a solution to the Cyprus problem. I will be very glad to go into any aspect of this with you once we get to the question and answer period.

But I want to accentuate two points. The first is that these are individual actions by the governments of Cyprus and by Turkey and by the government of Greece on the question of overflights.

They were brought about because these governments decided to take these actions themselves, unilaterally. That is important because for a long time now - and specifically dating back to last summer when then-Ambassador to the UN, Madeleine Albright made a trip to the Eastern Mediterranean -- she has been pushing for this type of unilateral action on the part of the parties to the Cyprus conflict to make progress, to try to instill some confidence in the negotiating progress.

We think this is a significant step forward. We hope this will improve the climate for the negotiations that we hope will come this year to help resolve the Cyprus problem. We can go back to that if you would like.

Now, separately, I have some other good news today. Today is a good news. This is a historic day for the United States in Vietnam because today we exchange ambassadors for the very first time. Earlier today, at noon Hanoi time, Ambassador Pete Peterson arrived in Hanoi. His counterpart, Vietnamese Ambassador Le Van Bang will arrive in Washington this afternoon.

All of you, I think, know Ambassador Peterson's story. He was a POW for over six years at the Hanoi Hilton; he was a U.S. Congressman.

He represents a link between our tragic past with Vietnam and the hope that we have now that we can normalize fully our relations with Vietnam and open a new chapter in the 21st century in relations between our two countries. We have not had this kind of senior-level representation in Hanoi since the end of the Second World War, when the Franklin Roosevelt Administration had relations with the Vietnamese.

Ambassador Peterson is going to focus on obtaining a full accounting, the fullest possible accounting, for what happened to the American POWs and MIAs, and he wants to seize opportunities that are available, we think, to normalize our economic relationship with Vietnam.

We have the best possible American ambassador. He is a remarkable man. He is an admirable man, and we are very proud to have him represent us in Hanoi.

Now, one more item, then we'll go to questions. Yesterday, I was asked about our relations with Pakistan, an arrest by one of our employees - a Pakistani national in Pakistan. I want to give you some further information on that, because the questions came about arrests in New York of Pakistan Air Force officers and arrests of American employees in Pakistan. A Pakistan Air Force officer was arrested last month in the United States on narcotics charges. A second Air Force officer was subsequently detained in Pakistan. We do not see this case as an indictment of the Pakistani Air Force. This case is still under investigation, so I can't comment specifically.

But what I can say is that the government of Pakistan has stressed to us its strong commitment to anti-narcotics measures. Of course, the United States shares the commitment to work with that government on that basis. We remain in very close communication with the Pakistani Government regarding the investigation, regarding the prosecution of the two officers involved in this case. We have assured each other that we will cooperate fully. We believe that both the United States and Pakistan will benefit from cooperating, from the prevention of drug trafficking. We want to discuss ways to work together better on that very important issue.

George, with that, I'll be very glad to go to your questions.

QUESTION: Back on Cyprus, Turkey. Usually when you have a development like this, or often, the U.S. will try to build on the momentum which has been generated by a good news event.

Do you have anything in mind?

MR. BURNS: Nothing particular. I think this is the first time that this has been announced here at this briefing. I don't believe this news has been surfaced yet in the Eastern Mediterranean.

Obviously we are very pleased that Turkey, Cyprus and Greece have made these unilateral, individual decisions. We're very pleased about that, and we welcome these actions.

The United States has a commitment from our Secretary of State on down to work with all of these government to further progress in Cyprus. As you know, Carey Cavanaugh, our very fine diplomat, has been out in the region. We remain committed to working with all of these governments and the United Nations for progress.

I don't think there's any need for a big ceremony, George. It's a step forward -- a very positive and important step forward.

But I think we'll continue to work quietly for further progress.

QUESTION: No, I mean a specific diplomatic initiative, which obviously you're not prepared to announce yet simply because this just happened, right?

MR. BURNS: It just happened, just in the last couple of hours. We've been in contact with our three ambassadors in the region, and we're very pleased to make this announcement. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Nick, you said this is the right step in the right direction. Do you see the next step could be the cancellation of the Russian-made missiles to Greek Cyprus? Have you communicated a wish in that regard?

MR. BURNS: Well, the next step, we think, should be continuing efforts by all of these governments to reduce the tensions that clearly exist in the Eastern Mediterranean. That should be the next step. There are many possible ways for confidence to be built, many possible initiatives that can be taken. I don't want to say that the particular initiative that you talked about is the most important next step. It is clearly an issue where the United States has an important interest, where we've made our views open and clear. We don't support the acquisition of this air defense system. That's been clear for many, many months now; and our position hasn't changed.

QUESTION: Can I go back to the first thing that the Greeks have promised? They will not overfly the island during this military exercise - what is the name?

MR. BURNS: That's right. The name of the exercise - and forgive my Greek - is the Toxotis-Vergina exercise. T-o-x-o-t-i-s - V-e-r-g-i-n-a, Toxotis-Vergina, if my Greek is anywhere close to --

QUESTION: Do you know how long that exercise is planning to go?

MR. BURNS: I don't have the coordinates for the exercise.

But it was an exercise that had previously been announced. The fact that the government of Cyprus will not invite Greek aircraft to overfly Cyprus during that exercise, and the fact that the government of Turkey has no plans to overfly, as long as Greek aircraft do not overfly, is a positive development. That is what essentially has happened here.

QUESTION: Do you hope that this will be open-ended then?

MR. BURNS: Well, this is a confidence-building measure.

It's a positive gesture by these governments that they want to work together to build some confidence in each other. Because what lies ahead, we hope, are negotiations - a mediation effort - that would help make some progress on the much more difficult issues regarding the core of the Cyprus problem.

QUESTION: Have you asked - or have you expressed the hope to either of these governments that it is open-ended, and this will continue indefinitely?

MR. BURNS: We certainly hope this gesture will not be just a one-time gesture. We hope it will last because it's the kind of gesture that has the ability to move the negotiations forward. So we are not in a position obviously to dictate this.

These are individual actions that the governments are taking on their own, unilaterally. We would like to see more of this.

QUESTION: Are you saying that the U.S. had nothing to with these actions?

MR. BURNS: The United States has worked very hard, including just in the last couple of weeks -- through Carey Cavanaugh, through our Ambassador Niles, through Ambassador Brill, Ambassador Grossman, all of our ambassadors in the field - to urge progress, general progress. This is the kind of thing that Madeleine Albright as Ambassador to the United Nations urged directly in her meetings last summer. So we are very gratified, very pleased that this kind of progress has been made. But I do want to stress, these were unilateral actions taken separately by the governments involved.

QUESTION: So the U.S. did have something to do with it?

MR. BURNS: I think we ought to give pride of place here to the governments who made these individual, separate, unilateral decisions. But the United States certainly was encouraging this, and, of course we were talking to these governments. Yes, of course, we were.

QUESTION: Turkey.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: I understand the Turkish Government was supposed to have held a conference yesterday on the Kurdish situation but called it off. Do you have anything on that?

MR. BURNS: Yes, I do have something on that. I know that a number of European, Turkish, and American non-governmental organizations were organizing in Ankara to discuss their hope for a peaceful settlement of the Kurdish issue in Turkey and some of the Kurdish disputes there.

We strongly back the objective of this conference. We showed our support publicly because we sent senior members of our embassy team from Ankara to the conference. In fact, I think there was another conference last week that was similar to this where we also present. We regret very much the decision by the Turkish Government - the original decision - to ban the conference.

We understand that despite that, most of the conferees were able to gather informally, despite the Turkish Government ban, and that was an encouraging development because we believe that it's in Turkey's long-term interest that these issues be discussed freely and openly in Turkey. The presence of our embassy officers, I think, is testimony to the fact that we think that that kind of open dialogue builds cooperation, and to try to ban it didn't make much sense to us.

QUESTION: Any reason given for the ban?

MR. BURNS: You would have to address that with the Turkish Government. But I think the United States has made its view very clear. We were disappointed by that action. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: I have a question about the another exercise from the region. Turkey, the United States, and the Jewish decided --

QUESTION: Israel.

MR. BURNS: Israel.

QUESTION: -- for another exercise - Israel.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: -- decided for another exercise in the Mediterranean.

Iraq, Iran, and Syria is really angry about it. Do you have a comment?

MR. BURNS: Well, I think it's probably not surprising, unfortunately, to see that Iraq and Iran don't like the fact that the United States and Israel are working cooperatively with Turkey.

But it has been a strategic objective of the United States that Turkey and Israel ought to enhance their military cooperation and their political relations.

Israel is a very close friend of the United States, a close ally of the United States. Turkey is a close friend and ally. It seems to us natural and positive that Israel and Turkey would work together militarily. The United States is very pleased to participate in that cooperation. Frankly, we don't care that Iran and Iraq have objections to this because they are rogue states, and we are not going to take their point of view into consideration when we plan our security cooperation in that part of the world.

QUESTION: What about Syria? Because the Syrians suggested that is was the United States trying to promote this military cooperation between Israel and Turkey.

MR. BURNS: Well, I think we have a basic disagreement.

We think it's positive that Israel has friends beyond the immediate region in which Israel resides. Turkey is a very powerful, very important country in the Eastern Mediterranean. It makes sense to us that Israel and Turkey would want to be friends, would want to have military and political and economic cooperation. If certain other Arab countries don't like that, that's just tough. Israel is a country that needs broad support, broad support. We're very happy that one of our NATO allies is willing to extend that support.

QUESTION: Explain what's the objective of this military cooperation? Is it particularly directed towards Syria?

MR. BURNS: Absolutely not. As we understand the military cooperation between Turkey and Israel, it is defensive in nature.

It's designed to promote the security of both states. It's not offensive in any way. Israel is a country that wants peace in the Middle East. Turkey is a country that obviously wants peace in the Eastern Mediterranean. We have long supported this. This is not a new development. We've supported this for a long, long time. We're very glad to see that this kind of cooperation is taking place; very glad to participate in it when we can.

QUESTION: Do you have anything to say about Qadafi's trip to --

MR. BURNS: Oh, boy, where do I start?

(Laughter.)

Where do I start on Qadafi's trip? Yes, I do have a lot to say about Qadafi's cavorting with various dictators in Africa. He's a dictator himself. Let me tell you what we know about this.

There are very reliable reports that a fleet of aircraft flew from Tripoli to Niamey, the capital of Niger. Colonel Qadafi was one of the passengers. He got off and had some meetings with Nigerian government officials in Niger, in Niamey. He then left Niamey and apparently now is in Lagos. He's cavorting with General Abacha in Lagos. One wonders what they talk about.

What we are concerned about is the United Nations sanctions on Libya, which absolutely prohibit Libyan registered aircraft from flying anywhere in the world. Now, what we are doing now today, we've asked our embassy in Niamey, we've asked our embassy in Lagos to go to both of those governments and to inquire about the facts of this case. Believe me, we will be very disappointed with both of those governments if in fact they aided and abetted the Libyan dictator to fly - in violation of the UN sanctions - to both of those countries.

We are asking the Nigerian Government in Lagos to detain the aircraft on the ground in Lagos. Now, it probably stands to reason, if they let the aircraft come in, they're probably going to let the aircraft leave. What we'll do when we establish the facts in these cases - we want to go to both these governments and give them the opportunity to tell us if they've been involved. We will go to the United Nations, to the UN Security Council and to the Sanctions Committee, and we will request strong action by the United Nations in the form of a condemnation of the Libyan government actions.

This will have a very definite effect, and negative effect on Mr. Qadafi. The effect will be this - from time to time, we have to review the sanctions on Libya. There are some countries who argue that the sanctions ought to be lifted. Well, the next time that review comes around and we can establish the facts in this case, there ought to be a very strong decision by the Sanctions Committee and by the Security Council that there has been a significant violation. That ought to defeat any attempt to allow Libya to have these sanctions lifted. The sanctions were put in place because we believe that two Libyan agents placed a bomb on board Pan Am 103 in December 1988 and killed over 269 people.

We haven't forgotten those people. American foreign service officers were on that flight, innocent people were on that flight. We owe it to their families to try to bring these two terrorists to justice either in the United Kingdom where the plane crashed or in the United States, where these people can get a fair trial, but where we believe justice will be served. So Mr. Qadafi may think he's got some - that he's pulled a fast one on the West and on the United Nations, on the world community. He may delight in flying from one country to another. But this will simply reinforce the commitment of the United States and the international community to keep these sanctions in place on him. He will not be able to fly easily beyond his immediate region.

QUESTION: Nick, what about Niger and Nigeria? Is there any penalty for them cooperating with the violation of UN sanctions against Libya?

MR. BURNS: Well, we are going to, as I said, our ambassadors in Niger and Nigeria are going to have some very frank discussions with both governments today and tomorrow. If we establish the facts that these governments were involved in violating the UN sanctions, obviously it's going to have a negative impact on our relations with both countries. It's hard for me to imagine a more negative relationship with Nigeria than we already have, but perhaps we'll be able to take that relationship to lower depths.

I don't know.

What I do know, just in the last couple of minutes, is that the UN Sanctions Committee has agreed to look into this. It looks, on the face of it, to be a pretty clear violation of the UN sanctions.

QUESTION: The Mega affair. Does the Mega affair effect in any way the relationship between the United States and Israel?

And mainly between the State Department and the Israeli Embassy?

MR. BURNS: Well, first of all, on some of the stories that you've seen in the newspapers over the last couple of days, I simply can't comment on the facts of those stories. But I'm glad to comment on our relationship with Israel.

Israel is a close friend and ally of the United States. Israel will remain a close friend and ally of the United States. I would describe our relationship as excellent. Dennis Ross has just had two productive meetings with Prime Minister Netanyahu over the last couple of days. Israel and the United States have ties that are very close in all dimensions. There have been some rough spots in the relationship over the last 49 years, as you would imagine between friends. We've always overcome them. We are determined to proceed in a cooperative way with the Israelis for the future. We have a lot of important issues to discuss.

Dennis Ross met today with the Israeli defense minister, Defense Minister Mordechai. He is going to meet tonight with Chairman Arafat. He'll be meeting tomorrow in Sharmal Sheikh with President Mubarak. He'll be meeting with King Hussein, I believe, on Sunday or Monday, in Amman. So he continues his trip. The goal of that trip is to revitalize, re-energize the peace discussions. Israel's a friend; Israel will remain a friend of the United States.

QUESTION: There's no rough spot here as a result of the disclosures of the past couple of days?

MR. BURNS: Well, that's a separate issue. I can't comment on that. As you know, the Attorney General made a statement on that issue yesterday. It's not in my purview to comment on that.

I don't know what will transpire on that score.

QUESTION: It's clear from the stories that the United States Government intercept phone calls or messages from the Embassy of Israel. It is a regular procedure? Do you listen very often to other embassies?

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: You don't expect me to answer that question.

I know why you're asking the question. But you can't expect me to answer a question like that, because that question - we have a rule here that we all agree on. That question involves the I-word, not Israel -

(Laughter.)

-- intelligence. George, you're too quick for me today. No, I couldn't possibly comment in any way, shape or form on that question.

QUESTION: Generally speaking, do you think it's a procedure that is acceptable in relations with such very friendly country like the State of Israel?

MR. BURNS: I couldn't possibly comment on that particular question. But I would draw you back to my original statement, that we are a close friend and ally of Israel; and that's going to remain the case.

QUESTION: Are you disturbed with the fact, by the story on _The Washington Post,_ some of the officials in the State Department are on the list of suspects in passing sensitive information to Israeli officials?

MR. BURNS: I just have nothing for you on that story.

I read the story, and have no comments to make on it. Yes.

QUESTION: Could you explain why the State Department's passport information line has a 1-900 number?

MR. BURNS: Sure, I'll be glad to explain that. How much information would you like? I have so much information here.

QUESTION: On phone lines, I figured that I was just going to float in --

MR. BURNS: You know that the State Department is responsible for issuing passports to American citizens. I believe we issued around five and a half million passports last year, both in our 15 passport agencies around the country and our many embassies and consulates overseas.

Now, in the early 1990s, our Passport Service Office began to face a growing dilemma. Its resources were not keeping pace with the vast increase that we have seen in American citizens who wish to travel overseas. There has been a dramatic increase just in the last ten years. We had complaints, frankly, about unanswered and disconnected phone calls, about unacceptably long waits by American citizens for passports. While our workload continued to increase, we had a limit in how many people we could hire; and as you know, our budget has been reduced by 51 percent in real terms in the last 12 years by both Democratic and Republican Congresses.

So we decided that we ought to contract passport information.

We ought to let out a contract to a private organization, and that was our last choice. That is why we have gone to a 900 number.

We didn't take that decision lightly. It's not what we would have preferred to do. But in a world where the State Department is faced with a vast increase in the number of services demanded by the American public and a decreasing amount of resources - money -- given us by the U.S. Congress, we had no choice.

If we can get out budget up. If Secretary Albright and President Clinton's plea to the Congress to fully fund the Administration's resources request for fiscal year 1998 is met by the Congress, then perhaps we can do things in a different way. Now, we do have several congressmen who are concerned about this, and we are trying to reply in a reasonable way, as we always do, to those members of Congress.

QUESTION: Nick, on that issue. Apparently, a congressman has suggested putting $5 million in addition to the State Department budget to handle just this. And I am told, although I don't know if it's true or not, that the Passport Information Agency director said, thanks, but no thanks. Is that true?

MR. BURNS: Gosh, I can't believe that we would automatically reflexively turn down $5 million. I think that we continue to discuss that issue with the Congress. We are very pleased the some members of the Congress have taken an interest in this issue.

We want to hear their views fully, and will certainly consider any offer that they make to us.

QUESTION: Do you know if it is true that a former head of the Passport Information Agency now works for a company that has somehow found itself with the subcontract to provide this 900 number?

MR. BURNS: I have never heard that before. I'll be glad to look into it for you. I don't know anything about that. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: On another subject.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Have you confirmation that the rebel alliance in Zaire will not go to a second meeting with the Mobutu Government?

MR. BURNS: No, we don't have the confirmation of that, Jim. As you know, the South Africans are trying to set up a meeting for next Tuesday or Wednesday, again on board a South African naval vessel. We heard today earlier, there was a couple of reports that there might even be an agreement for a meeting, but we can't confirm that for you.

What I can tell you is the following about Zaire. Our embassy reports that the situation in the capital, Kinshasa, is relatively calm. The town of Kenge, where there was fierce fighting yesterday is now in rebel hands. Fighting continues around Bukanza-Longo, which is a town west of Kenge. We have also seen reports that the alliance has taken the town of Bandundu, which is about 185 miles northeast of Kinshasa.

We have strongly urged Mr. Kabila again today to negotiate a soft transfer of authority, rather than to take Kinshasa by force.

We have also urged him to stop the rebel alliance military movement in its tracks while the negotiations with President Mobutu are proceeding. We think that would be a good-faith gesture on the part of Mr. Kabila that he wants a soft landing, that he wants a peaceful, rather than a violent, transfer of authority. We are very strongly urging the rebel alliance to stop its military movement forward.

Yesterday, President Mobutu, in the Libreville communiqu&eacute;, declared that he would not be a candidate for the presidency of Zaire if national elections are organized. We hope very much that elections can be organized in this transition period because that is the best way to identify the future leadership of a country.

In fact, it's the only way to do that democratically.

We would be very pleased to help to prepare those elections, to give any possible assistance we could to that. So our watchword is, Kabila should stop the military offensive in order to allow room for negotiations. There ought to be a peaceful transfer of authority. There ought to be elections that allow the people of Zaire to decide their future, and there ought to be a continuing attention to the plight of the thousands of refugees in Kisangani.

The United Nations is doing a powerful, superb job in trying to bring them out to safety.

QUESTION: All right, it may be that Mr. Kabila is saying different things to different people. But reports that we see from there says that he's not planning to go to a second meeting.

But you don't think that's a final.

MR. BURNS: I don't believe we have a conclusive answer on the question of who will go to meetings and whether, in fact, the meeting will take place. Our own view is, it's just logical.

It makes common sense, and it's the best way forward Mobutu and Kabila to meet.

QUESTION: Has there been a response to the U.S. message to Mr. Kabila?

MR. BURNS: I don't believe Mr. Kabila has made a commitment.

He certainly did not to Ambassador Richardson, with whom I spoke this morning, about stopping the rebel military offensive. Of course, that is disappointing. There is nothing to be gained by killing people on the way to Kinshasa. It seems to us that this transition is going to take place. It seems inevitable.

Therefore, why can't it be done peacefully, rather than militarily, rather than by violence?

QUESTION: Another subject.

MR. BURNS: I think we want to stay on Zaire just for a minute. Yes.

QUESTION: Do you know where President Mobutu is? You know, the wires are reporting that he was going to return today to Kinshasa.

MR. BURNS: Well, last I checked, which was about an hour ago, he was in Libreville, in Gabon. He had not yet left. We don't know whether or not President Mobutu is going to return to Kinshasa, whether he will stay in Libreville, whether he will go someplace else. We are watching that very anxiously, as are all of you.

QUESTION: Has the embassy given you - in Kinshasa - given you any indication of what the response might be in the streets of Kinshasa where President Mobutu to return?

MR. BURNS: No, I have not seen any account, any predictions from our embassy in Kinshasa about that. David.

QUESTION: Can I raise a consular case with you?

QUESTION: Zaire.

MR. BURNS: Still on Zaire. Carole, yes.

QUESTION: I'm just - have you heard this delegation of 30 investors led by an American company? It's called American Mineral Fields that arrived in Lubumbashi today to discuss investment prospects.

MR. BURNS: Yes, we know that there is a group of American companies in Lubumbashi trying to make contact with the rebel alliance. We think this is most unwise. There is always a time for profits to be made. We think it is important for companies to keep their employees out of harm's way.

Lubumbashi is a dangerous place. There is a civil war underway in that part of Zaire. Why in the world companies would want to risk their own people for short-term profits is beyond me.

We strongly advise American citizens to stay out of Zaire. It's a dangerous place. We urge Americans who are living in Zaire to leave the country immediately.

You can get out by boat to Brazzaville. There are still flights out of the country to Europe and other parts of Africa. That is our advice to American citizens and the American business community.

Zaire is a strategically important country. It has got enormous economic wealth, mineral wealth. But we think American companies ought to exercise some good common sense here and keep their people out of harm's way.

QUESTION: Along those lines, Nick. James Wolfensohn of the World Bank said that he would be sending a delegation in June.

MR. BURNS: Well, that is different. That is entirely different. The World Bank has an obligation to help countries in transition, to help countries with severe economic problems.

I know the World Bank will make the best possible decision about when to send a delegation in. They certainly would not send a delegation into the middle of fighting.

We do have enormous respect for the people who work for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees and the International Committee for the Red Cross who have inserted themselves in the middle of the fighting. But that is because their job is to help people in need. But people who are simply looking for profits, they ought to exercise some good judgment here.

MR. BURNS: David, you were next, yes.

QUESTION: The consular case is the case of the two daughters of Patricia Roush, an American citizen who was at one point married to a Saudi man named Khalid Al-Gheshayan. She has not seen her daughters, except for two hours in 1995, for 11 years now. Could you run down for us, what is the U.S. Government doing about this case?

MR. BURNS: We are well aware of this very tragic case involving Mrs. Patricia Roush and her two daughters and her ex-husband.

First of all, let me say that we have enormous sympathy for Patricia Roush. This is a very difficult, very complex - and this a tragic case, where she has not been able to see her daughters. She has been given custody of her daughters by an American court.

Because of the difference in the legal systems between the United States and Saudi Arabia she is not able to obtain custody of those children, and has not been for many, many years. We are a vigorous advocate for her rights as an American citizen to obtain custody of her children.

Now, just in the last couple of days, our Ambassador Wyche Fowler, the American Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, working very closely with Prince Bandar, the Saudi Ambassador to the United States, has been able to work out permission by the father, which is necessary under Islamic-Shari'a Law for Mrs. Roush to visit her daughters in Riyadh. The Ambassador has also accepted the offer of a prominent attorney in Saudi Arabia to sponsor Mrs. Roush's visit. Every visitor to Saudi Arabia must have a Saudi sponsor, and in fact, to pay for her expenses on this - as he did on her initial visit in 1995.

Unfortunately, both American and Saudi legal specialists have concluded that there is no legal remedy under Saudi or U.S. law for a divorced American mother residing in the United States to compel a visit by her children with her in the United States when her children reside with the father in Saudi Arabia.

Furthermore, I can tell you that while there are federal arrest warrants in place in this case, federal arrest warrants in the United States against foreign nationals outside the United States must be enforced by a foreign government, and the subject must be put in the custody of the U.S. Government.

Now, there is no extradition treaty between the United States and Saudi Arabia. As you know, extradition treaties normally do not permit extradition for offense related to child custody disputes. Saudi law in this case, in all cases, does not recognize dual nationality. So under Saudi law, these young women, these young girls, are purely Saudi citizens residing with their father.

Saudi law is based on Shari'a law, under which the father has complete right to custody and control of his children. Therefore, only the father can make decisions which would successfully resolve a parental child custody dispute. Saudi law does not allow Saudi officials to forcibly take a child away from his or her father, in this case their father, and return that child to a foreign mother. It does not allow that to take place.

So what we are left with here is a clash of legal systems and a clash of culture. The United States supports Mrs. Roush. We think she should have custody of her children. We think she should be able to visit her children. But the United States cannot force the Saudi Government or this Saudi father to see things our way.

Unfortunately because of the difference of the legal systems, and because of they way Saudi law is constructed, we must rely upon the good faith of the father in this question. I think we have not seen very much good faith in the last ten or 11 years by this individual. So those are the particulars of the case.

We want to work with Mrs. Roush. We understand her enormous frustration, and Ambassador Fowler is ready to meet with her and work with her, as Ambassador Mabus did before him.

QUESTION: Is it not true that in the past, visas were denied to members of the family of the father because he was not showing any good faith in this matter? And if so, why are they not being withheld now?

MR. BURNS: I don't believe our visa policy has changed.

I understand that in the past when Mr. Gheshayan refused further contact with our embassy - because we were trying to contact him - our consul general, the chief of our consular section in Riyadh, began to explore legal ways of maintaining contact with members of the family. He instituted a policy of carefully screening and carefully reviewing visa requests by members of the Gheshayan family.

That policy has not changed. I understand we have had four applicants from the Gheshayan family, of whom two were issued visas, and I guess two were not. Both occurred while Ambassador Mabus was still serving in Riyadh. But the policy continues.

I know fairly well the dilemma that our consular officers faced.

All of us who served as consular officers have seen these terrible tragic custody cases. In this case, if a Saudi family member of Mr. Gheshayan presents himself or herself for a visa and fully qualifies for the visa, there are no grounds for the consular officer to refuse that visa, unfortunately. Under our law, we also have to be responsible to the Immigration and Nationality Act, which is the consular law of the United States.

So I do want to paint this in pictures of - this is a very grim situation, very tragic. We are accountable to our law. We cannot force the Saudi authorities or this particular Saudi individual to do the right thing. We have to rely upon their good faith.

QUESTION: One more. Sorry to everybody, but one more.

Mr. Al-Gheshayan apparently has a relative who is a senior official at the Saudi embassy here in Washington. Has this issue been raised with that diplomat? And are you satisfied in a general sense that absolutely everything that the U.S. Government can do in this case is being done?

MR. BURNS: I am not aware personally that Mr. Gheshayan has a relative at the Saudi embassy here in Washington. What is important is that this issue has been raised repeatedly over a decade with Prince Bandar, the Saudi Ambassador to the United States and with the highest ranking officials of the Saudi royal family in Riyadh and elsewhere.

We will continue to raise this issue at the very highest levels.

Ambassador Fowler, in fact, was just on the phone with our Near East officials this morning discussing this case. He is committed to doing everything he can to help Mrs. Roush. The United States cannot, as a government, violate the laws of countries in which we have our embassies and consulates. We cannot violate their laws. We must live under their laws. We must respect them.

We don't always agree with the laws -- in this case, obviously don't agree with the case where an American mother has been kept from seeing her children. That is an injustice, and that is wrong.

But we cannot willfully violate the laws of the Saudi Government or other governments. We can try to enforce our own laws. But the children are on Saudi soil. They got there through illegitimate, reprehensible means. They were forcibly abducted from the United States, and that is a tragic thing. But there is not a lot that we can do to compel this individual to give those children back to the mother. We will continue to represent her interests, because she is an American citizen, with the Saudi Government as best as we can do that.

QUESTION: Nick, on Pakistan. I understand the U.S. is spending a substantial amount of money in Pakistan to stop the growth or production of drugs, and now here we have a high-level official arrested on drug charges maybe about two kilograms, or whatever. Also, is this the first time any Pakistani was arrested on drug charges? And also PIA, the national airline of Pakistan, international airline, was also involved in the bust, carrying drugs from Pakistan in the U.S.

MR. BURNS: I don't know if it's the first time that a Saudi official - military official has been implicated in a drug case like this. I would remind you that this case is still under investigation. I don't believe there have been any convictions brought in this case. We are going to continue to cooperate with the Pakistani Government on narcotics because it's a great threat to Pakistan, as it is to the citizens of the United States. We rely upon the cooperation of that government and we have reaffirmed it to them, and they have to us, in the wake of these arrests - the arrest of the American Pakistani national, the American employee in Pakistan and the arrest of the two Air Force officers in New York.

QUESTION: Can you give us an update on U.S.-North Korea MIA talks in New York?

MR. BURNS: I know that the talks were underway today.

We had word from the Pentagon those talks might conclude today and there will be a statement from the Pentagon. John, has that happened yet, do you know?

MR. DINGER: No.

MR. BURNS: So, I think the Pentagon, which chairs these talks for the U.S. Government, will be the best source of information today on that. We do hope that it will have been possible to have made some progress. This is the first priority issue for the United States. More than 8,100 MIA cases remain from the Korean War and we haven't forgotten that.

QUESTION: Nick, also on Korea, can you comment on the wire, the Reuter wire, today about Kim Jung-Il saying, it says, "A war atmosphere has dominated North Korea since 1991 when he became the Supreme Commander of the Army." This is coming from Mr. Hwang who is being interviewed by Korean intelligence people. Basically, it sounds like North Korea is predisposed to war. It has already decided to go to war against the South.

Is there any validity in that?

MR. BURNS: Bill, with all due respect to Reuter's which is one of the great world wire services, I have enormous respect for it, you can't always believe everything you read in the newspapers and the wires. In this case, you have a secondhand report of what Mr. Hwang may have said to a South Korean official, so I wouldn't put too much stock in that.

I would say one other thing. The United States has a defense and security commitment to the Republic of Korea. We have 30,007 American troops there. We have many hundreds of thousands of South Korean troops ready to defend South Korea should that be necessary. But all of our indications are that North Korea wishes to open up its relations with the United States and South Korea on the food question, on the agreed frame work, on the issue of possible normalization of our relations at some point down the road, on the issue of the four-party talks.

So, we are not moving in the direction of war. We hope we are moving away from war and conflict and towards cooperation with North Korea; but we are absolutely ready to defend South Korea.

Secretary Albright went up to the DMZ, visited the most forward deployed American unit, which is a combined unit with the South Koreans right up on the DMZ, and those guys are ready. Now, hopefully, they will never have to go into action. Hopefully, this gradual process of talking reasonably with the North Koreans, their talking reasonably with us will continue.

QUESTION: When does the U.S. get some time with Mr. Hwang?

MR. BURNS: Well, we've been assured we will have access to him. I guarantee to you we will not announce that ahead of time. I don't even know if we'll announce it after the fact.

But I am sure we are going to talk to him. The South Koreans are our allies. They have made a commitment to us and they always keep their commitments to us. Yes. Still on North Korea?

QUESTION: Yesterday, Mr. Burns, you said that regarding Japanese citizens who alleged to be kidnapped from Japan, if there is something for the United States to be able to do, you would have to cooperate with Japan on this issue. Do you have any concrete plan to cooperate with Japanese Government on this issue?

MR. BURNS: I'd have to check with our East Asia Bureau to see if there has been a specific request from the government of Japan. I would just remind you that Foreign Minister Ikeda raised this issue with Secretary Albright. He described a very, very deep sense of concern on the part of the Japanese people for these terrible abductions. Reports of people, young women being abducted and we certainly sympathize with the families of those individuals and with the government. I am just not aware that the Japanese Government has asked us to do anything. I'd have to check for you on that. We would certainly be willing to help in any way we could. Yes, sir?

QUESTION: On the ten Americans, there's a Japanese wire report that there was a report written up about the experience of the ten Americans held in the Embassy in Peru. Do you know if that report exists and is it available to the public?

MR. BURNS: We have not made any report public. I believe there was seven Americans who were held for just two or three days at the very beginning of the hostage crisis. Six of them were American government officials, as I remember it, John -

MR. DINGER: One contractor.

MR. BURNS: -- and one contractor. We, of course, talked to them intensively about their experience. That was in December.

We have never published publicly any report on that. I don't believe we will.

QUESTION: Does a report exist?

MR. BURNS: I'd have to check. There have been individual conversations. I don't know if Ambassador Jett, Dennis Jett, prepared a report or not. Yes, sir, Savas.

QUESTION: Yeah. My question about the frigate. Last year when the President Demirel visited Washington, D.C., President Clinton promised to him his immediate delivery for the frigate.

And early this month, he send a letter on the same subject, one of the U.S. congressmen, he connect frigate delivery for the Aegean station. At the end of this month is the northern march for the Iraq operation is expiring and it has to be extended. Do you expect the Turkish Parliament approve the new extension under the unnamed, this arms embargo against Turkey?

MR. BURNS: Well, first of all, Savas, with all due respect, I don't want to accept the premise of your question. I'm not going to agree with you that President Clinton said any such thing in his letter. I'm not going to report to you publicly on what the President says in his correspondence with his counterparts, because that is improper.

Secondly, we expect Turkey will remain a faithful ally of the United States on our combined agreed strategy of containing Saddam Hussein, northward and southern - from the south and from the north; and Northern Watch is a very important part of that. There is no arms embargo on Turkey. The United States has a military relationship with Turkey as a NATO ally. We do want to continue the military sales relationship. It is often difficult to gain approval by members of Congress or committees of the Congress on certain arms cases. The Administration is a faithful ally of Turkey and we do want to see the modernization of the Turkish armed forces.

We want to see Turkey cooperate with Israel. We want to see Turkey cooperate with Greece, Savas, in all ways. We reported this morning - I don't know if you were here at the beginning of the briefing -- a very positive development, where Turkey, Cyprus and Greece, separately and individually have agreed now on a confidence building measure to reduce military tensions in the Eastern Mediterranean. We're very pleased about that.

QUESTION: What is the reason for - because Turkey already paid all of the frigates' money.

MR. BURNS: I'd have to check for you --

QUESTION: Please.

MR. BURNS: -- on where the frigate issue stands. I'll be glad to do that and report to you on Monday in this public forum. Yes, sir?

QUESTION: First, I thought you said this was included in a letter Mr. Clinton wrote to his counterpart, Turkish President, Mr. Demirel .

MR. BURNS: No, I don't --

QUESTION: Maybe I misheard you.

MR. BURNS: No, I don't - you mean just now?

QUESTION: Yeah.

MR. BURNS: No. I do not talk about the contents of the letters the President sends to his counterparts. I don't wish to do that.

QUESTION: But it wasn't a letter. It was a promise made during Mr. Demirel's visit to Washington.

MR. BURNS: Savas said it was a letter. So, I'm relying on Savas' -

QUESTION: Letter from President to U.S. congressman.

MR. BURNS: I understood Savas to be talking about a presidential letter. I don't know anything about the letter that you're talking about, if it's a letter to a member of Congress, I'm sorry.

QUESTION: Secondly, Turkey is now, I understand, Turkish defense minister said so thinking to bar U.S. companies from participating in bids in Turkey.

MR. BURNS: That would not be reasonable, Ugar. We're an ally of Turkey. I see no reason why Turkey would want to penalize American firms who, of course, produce the best military equipment in the world. You would think Turkey would want to have the best, not second rate equipment from second rate suppliers, but first rate equipment from the United States. It doesn't seem to be in Turkey's interest to do that.

QUESTION: Let me ask the question. What would you do if you made a contract with a company committed to yourself and made the down payment and you waited for a couple of years and the goods are not delivered, wouldn't you as a smart manager think about doing business with somebody else?

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: Ugar, you are a very tough debater. I admire your debating skills. Let me just tell you, the United States wants to continue a military supply relationship with Turkey.

We have a process in our government where the Congress must approve military sales. Congress doesn't always approve military sales to Turkey on a case-by-case basis. If we have made a good

faith contract, we try to uphold that contract, but in our system, you have to understand the separation of powers. Now, I will report to you both on Monday about the frigates and I'll give you the best possible answer I can give you. Thank you.

QUESTION: Can you take one more?

MR. BURNS: It depends, Bill. It's Friday afternoon. It's 2:09 p.m. Is it really urgent? People want to go home.

QUESTION: Pope John Paul --

MR. BURNS: I can talk about the Pope.

QUESTION: Pope John Paul is going to Lebanon --

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: -- to try to make peace, reconciliation between Christians and Moslems.

MR. BURNS: This is a good way to end the week.

QUESTION: I would expect this would be highly favored by the U.S. Government.

MR. BURNS: Bill, we'll end this press conference on a positive note. His Holiness Pope John Paul, II, will be traveling to Lebanon. We support very much his mission and message of peace and reconciliation among the ethnic groups there and the various religions.

We were even surprised, pleasantly surprised to see a positive statement from the head of Hezballah this morning about his visit, saying that the security of the Pope would be insured.

The security of the Pope must be ensured and we are very glad to see that all groups agree that the Pope should travel to Lebanon with his message of peace which we very much support.

QUESTION: Do you think this support by Hezballah is genuine in view of the fact that the Pope has a month ago --

MR. BURNS: We're putting our faith in the Pope, but not Hezballah.

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: -- putting his faith in God, I hope.

MR. BURNS: Thank you.

(The briefing concluded at 2:11 P.M.)

(###)


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