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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #140, 97-09-30

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>


944

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Tuesday, September 30, 1997

Briefer: James P. Rubin

MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS
1		Rundown of Agreement in New York (Interim Committee Talks,
		  Meeting on Four Agenda Items) / US Position
2-3		Definition of "Time Out" / Environment for Talks / Final
		  Status Talks
3		Schedule for Oslo Process (Redeployment, Security, Upcoming
		  Agenda Items)
3-4		Tactics re PM Netanyahu's Recent Statements / Palestinian
		  Authority Actions on Security / Israeli & Tax Receipts
4		Syrian Track

EGYPT / LIBYA 5 Kidnapping and Death of AmCit in Libya / Secretary's Discussions with Egyptian FM

ISRAEL 5-6 Return to US of Murder Suspect / State Dept & Embassy Involvement

AZERBAIJAN / ARMENIA 6-7 US Position on Legislation to Lift Blockade / Caspian Oil Possibilities

IRAN / FRANCE 7-12 Total Company Contract on Oil/US Support of Legislation/October Mtgs with EU and Canada to Increase Pressure/Reasoning Behind Companies Pursuit of Contract/Impact of Sanctions Against Companies/Eizenstat Trip to Paris/Possible Waiver of Sanctions/Violations of ILSA/Developing Guidelines on Critical Issues

CUBA 11 Helms-Burton & Extraterritoriality Issue 14-16 Cuban Nationals Hijack Boat / Interviewed at Guantanamo / Returning to Cuba / Earlier Plane Hijackers Tried in US / Earlier Boat Hijackers Tried in Cuba

SUDAN 12-14 US Goals / Restaffing US Embassy / Premature Announcement Last Week

GREECE 14 Supplying the PKK

GREECE / TURKEY 14 Statement in New York


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #140

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1997 11:53 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. RUBIN: Greetings, Washington members of the State Department press corps. Some of you we saw in New York. Some we didn't. Some may want to come back with us this afternoon. Some may not. Anyway, I have no statements. I will turn over the floor to George.

QUESTION: Have you seen Prime Minister Netanyahu's statement this morning concerning settlement construction activity and that he intends to continue it to accommodate normal population growth despite the --

MR. RUBIN: I am aware of the government of Israel's position. Let me try to go through in some detail what we did yesterday and how his statement affects that. What we did yesterday was get an agreement to begin, for the first time since March, negotiations in the interim committees. Those will begin on October 6th. Both sides have pledged to work quickly in good faith to conclude those negotiations and implement their results as soon as possible with the objective of achieving - and this is important - a mutually agreed target date. These meetings will take place in the region. When we have more details, we'll give those to you.

Then, a week later, here in the United States, Ambassador Ross will meet with the two parties to begin discussions on the four items that were agreed to. Essentially those four points in the statement Secretary Albright read are the agenda items for those discussions. They will include discussions of security cooperation. They will include discussions of further redeployments of Israeli forces, and they will include, for the first time, in this kind of formalized way, the definition and content of a time-out regarding unilateral steps.

The final item, again, is acceleration of permanent status negotiations. The parties have now agreed for the first time to discuss the content and timing of a time-out in the context of overall discussions on the issues I have just mentioned. As far as our position is concerned, we believe that in order to create a more positive environment, conducive to final status negotiations, which will be extremely difficult and would be difficult in the best of circumstances, that both sides should refrain from unilateral acts the other side considers provocative.

So what this means is, that as the parties begin the process of re-engaging in the peace process, coming back from the abyss, we think that now the parties are doing that re-engagement, that they are beginning to re-engage, it is all the more important to refrain from unilateral actions that are seen by the other side as provocative. Now that they have agreed to discuss the content of the time-out that would take place, we think it's important to refrain from unilateral acts.

For those of you who were in New York yesterday, there was a lot of to-ing and fro-ing on what exactly is this time-out, so let me jump ahead to that question which would naturally come next. We do not think it is wise for us to discuss publicly exactly what such a time-out would entail. We are now going to engage in a negotiation beginning very soon, in about two weeks, on exactly what that time-out would entail.

We have a sense that both parties know what the unilateral acts are that make the environment difficult and make it hard to envisage a successful negotiation. What exactly that time-out is also depends, to some extent, on what the environment is, and in an environment in which the situation has deteriorated to the point it had prior to yesterday, a very small action by one party could yield a great reaction by the other. In an environment in which things are going well and negotiations are proceeding and in which there is progress at the table, specific actions may not yield the same kind of reaction.

So the time-out is a flexible tool. The Secretary gave a list in the region of things that are perceived as provocative by the Palestinians that the Israelis might engage in, and that is a guideline for the kind of actions that we think the Israelis ought to refrain from. Now, we haven't achieved agreement with the Israelis on this. We have stated what we think is helpful and what we think is not helpful, and we will continue to do that. But in terms of specifying what the content of the time-out is, we would prefer to wait at least until the parties have had a chance to talk about it a little bit more.

Steve.

QUESTION: Cutting away all the verbiage though, didn't Madeline Albright say in

Jerusalem --

MR. RUBIN: Verbiage?

QUESTION: -- a couple of weeks ago... made a call, a specific call, for the Israelis to take a time-out on settlement activities? It wasn't just unilateral acts, but she specifically mentioned settlement activity.

MR. RUBIN: Right. As I said, that was on the list, and Secretary Albright believes that the environment for talking about talks and then the environment for the talks would be greatly improved if neither party conducted unilateral acts of the kind that you mentioned. That is our general view, but if we are going to get to this actual negotiation where we will be going through the most excruciating issues, the final status issues that you know, then it will be all the more important for us not to have business as usual in the area of unilateral actions.

So there is a general desire to improve the environment and, frankly, the fact that the Israeli government, Prime Minister Netanyahu, agreed with us to work in the Ras al-Amoud case to try to prevent any change in the status quo, to try to agree that the character of the neighborhood would not be changed, is an example of the kind of action that you would want to see taken to prevent the environment from collapsing and that would be necessary for peace talks.

Tom.

QUESTION: The Secretary reaffirmed while she was in the region US support for the Oslo process and the interim steps on the road to the final stage. Do you have any understanding or commitment from the Israelis on the scheduled redeployment, the next redeployment?

MR. RUBIN: That is one of the topics that will be discussed. I think there are letters, the letter that Secretary Christopher wrote. There is a note for the record regarding a schedule that says, as I understand this -- and I think this is public information so if I get it a little wrong, please forgive me -- that they are all supposed to be completed by the middle of next year - the first, second, and third redeployments. So that is the schedule, but the first further redeployment did not take place this March, as you know. It is an Israeli responsibility, and they did not take that further redeployment. As you also know, the Palestinians regarded it as woefully inadequate. So there is a schedule that hasn't been met, but that schedule is also linked to full-scale cooperation by the Palestinians in the area of security.

What we have tried to do in this four-part agenda is put everything necessary into that agenda that would make it possible for the peace process to be genuinely reactivated, as opposed to just the interim committees, a political negotiation in which all the concerns - security, the time-out, further redeployment, and this accelerated permanent status - could be negotiated, discussed and hopefully agreed on a schedule to do so.

QUESTION: Jamie, in the Administration --

MR. RUBIN: Nice hair cut, Sid.

QUESTION: Thank you. You could use one yourself. The Administration's view --

MR. RUBIN: No, I was saying, nice haircut.

QUESTION: In the Administration view, can the final-status talks go on without this time-out?

MR. RUBIN: It is the Administration's view that the final-status talks will have a real, real hard time succeeding in the absence of a time-out. We are very clear in our minds that, in the absence of a time-out, the prospect for success in the final-status negotiations would be greatly reduced. Yes.

QUESTION: Jamie, what is your analysis of the statements that Prime Minister Netanyahu has been making in the case that...the Secretary asked a couple weeks ago in the region, said something the other day in New York in reaction to a statement, and yet he continues to make statements? I'm not asking you to speak for him; I'm asking what your analysis is of what he is saying. Is it a negotiating tactic? Is it that there is a fundamental disagreement? What?

MR. RUBIN: The Israeli Government has its own views and they can speak for themselves. From our standpoint, what's important is that our role be one in which we let the parties know - both parties - when we think particular actions are unhelpful. We have said that just as recently as last week. As you know, the Secretary viewed the decision to build houses, 300 houses at Efrat, to be an unhelpful decision. So we have seen - as far as we know, Prime Minister Netanyahu has told us he is committed to the peace process. We take him at his word on that. What we can now do is try to encourage that process by letting him know and letting his government know when we think adjustments need to be made and things need to be done differently.

Foreign Minister Levy, like any good negotiator and any good foreign minister, yesterday said that they understand that a negotiation is not about getting everything you want, but it's about meeting your basic principles. We think the best way to meet the basic principles for peace that Prime Minister Netanyahu has laid out is to come to this discussion on October the 13th and negotiate seriously on these four points.

Any more on this? Yes, one more.

QUESTION: One more. Among the other things that the Secretary asked the Israelis to do, did she asked them to turn over the remainder of the withheld tax receipts?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I don't think that came up yesterday. That process has been moving along quite smartly. Both the Israelis and the United States yesterday made the point that they thought there had been significant steps taken by the Palestinians in the area of security cooperation. We have seen arrests of the right people. We have seen them go after institutions, a dozen or so institutions that constitute part of the infrastructure of Hamas. They have a plan. They have been working with us on that plan. I think the feeling is that the security cooperation has improved.

In that context, as you know, the government of Israel has eased the closure. They have allowed for the transfer or additional elements. We have said quite clearly for some time that we did not understand the logic of withholding this money, and that is still our position. But I don't believe it came up in the meeting yesterday.

New subject. One more. Yes?

QUESTION: On the Syrian track, the Secretary also met yesterday with the Syrian foreign minister. Did she achieve anything new?

MR. RUBIN: I don't have any new progress to report to you on the Syria track. There obviously was discussion of that in New York yesterday and we have the same objective, which is to try to find a way to bridge the gap between the Syrian position on what is necessary or not necessary in this case to begin negotiations again, and the Israeli position on what is necessary. There are still significant gaps and I have no progress to report to you today.

QUESTION: Still on the Secretary's meeting yesterday - and you may have covered this up there yesterday. If you have, then just forget about it. The story that Egypt was involved in the kidnapping of an American dual citizen who was later executed in Libya.

MR. RUBIN: Right. It actually didn't come up, but I think our position on this is pretty clear. I tried to say what I could earlier in the week, which is that since the beginning of 1993 when this case first came to our attention, the United States has pursued this case vigorously. We raised it with all the relevant authorities at the time.

Since that time, the United States has developed credible information that Mr. Kikhia was killed earlier this summer. When we developed that information, we communicated it to his family and we raised it directly with the Egyptian government in all its aspects. I can't comment on the specifics of that information because of its nature, but I can say that Secretary Albright and the Administration are taking this case very seriously and intend to pursue it with all the relevant authorities until we get a satisfactory understanding of what might have happened.

QUESTION: And was this part of the discussions with the Egyptians?

MR. RUBIN: I was not in that. I can get you a formal answer. I would be surprised if it didn't come up, but to what extent it was discussed with Foreign Minister Moussa, I don't know.

QUESTION: What are your options at this time regarding that case besides - -

MR. RUBIN: Well, we are not at the option stage. We are at the trying-to- determine-who-is-responsible and getting-to-the-bottom-of-it stage. After we are at the conclusion stage of what happened, a determination has been made finally about what happened, then obviously we have options. But our bottom line option is that anyone who is working with the Libyan government or the Libyan government itself needs to be held responsible for murders and abductions overseas. It's part of a pattern of terrorism that is unacceptable to the United States.

QUESTION: Different subject, same area. Does this Administration have a view on the Israelis' failure to return a young man who is accused of murder in this country?

MR. RUBIN: I'm sure the Administration has a view, but the view that I am permitted to express from this podium is that this case is a legal matter and needs to be discussed by the Justice Department.

QUESTION: Was this building involved in the negotiations to try to secure his return?

MR. RUBIN: I would have to check that. I'm sure at some level we were involved, but even at the most logistical level. But the specific answers to this subject I have been advised are not to be discussed from here and to be discussed by the Justice Department.

QUESTION: How about the consular aspects? Any visitations? Anything that the embassy is doing?

MR. RUBIN: I will try to get you some information on that. I'm sure our embassy there would be engaged in its proper consular function.

Yes, David?

QUESTION: New subject?

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: What is the Administration's position on Section 907, which prohibits --

MR. RUBIN: Aid to Azerbaijan?

QUESTION: Yeah, and which is coming up in the House-Senate Conference in the next 48 to 72 hours. Do you want to have it entirely repealed at this point? Is that your position, or are you going for a compromise and what kind of compromise?

MR. RUBIN: I remember being there when that awful section was written by the Senate in the Bush Administration, and we had no idea what we were doing, obviously, because by doing that, we have tied the hands of the Administration and its ability to promote peace in the region. My understanding is that we think this is an unnecessary restriction on our ability to operate and that we share the goals of the legislation; namely, that we would like to see the blockades on Armenia lifted, but that this kind of a flat prohibition that can't be waived even if circumstances require it or would justify it, is going too far.

As far as what our specific position is on a current piece of legislation, I will have to get you an answer for the record because I don't know what iteration the legislation is right now. But generally speaking, we think that the Administration should have the flexibility to determine whether assistance to Azerbaijan would promote the national interest of the United States and not have a flat, unwaivable prohibition, especially in an area that's becoming increasingly important to all of the world as the Caspian oil possibilities and gas possibilities are discussed. This is an understandable provision given the suffering that has occurred for the Armenians, but it's not a wise tool for foreign policy.

QUESTION: The Armenian-American community feels that the oil companies have gotten to the Administration on this.

MR. RUBIN: I can assure you as someone who watched that piece of legislation be drafted and then switched over to the Administration and knew about our views on it, that prior to the oil companies having any view on it, the Bush Administration hated it because it limited the flexibility of the President in this area.

When I first came into the Administration and Secretary Albright went to that region --we didn't have too many meetings with oil companies -- she quickly observed that this was a piece of legislation that harmed our flexibility and harmed our ability to conduct wise policy in the region. If oil companies agree with us, that's fine, but that's not the reason.

QUESTION: Another subject?

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: On Iran.

MR. RUBIN: Which part?

QUESTION: Well, on this particular issue of the oil and gas deals that have been cropping up.

MR. RUBIN: Correct. I'm trying to get to my book quickly, because it's in the Europe section.

QUESTION: I see.

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: How long do you think it's going to take for the Administration to come to some sort of conclusion on this particular case, the Total Gazprom Petronas case?

MR. RUBIN: It's in the Europe section, but I can't find it. As I saw some official quoted in the newspapers, we're not likely to get immediate faxed copies of the contracts so it will take some time to study this.

Frankly, I think in understanding this issue and understanding our thinking about this issue, it's important to bear in mind the reasons why we supported the legislation in the first place. That is because we share the view of Congress that we need to get other countries in the world to agree to ratchet up the pressure on a government that has so blatantly supported international terrorism, that is determined to develop weapons of mass destruction, and is such a determined opponent of the peace process. The objective of the legislation is not to impose sanctions. The objective of the legislation is get other countries, in Europe in particular, to work with us on the subject of tightening up the pressure on Iran.

What we have been doing in that regard is we have had an intensified dialogue with the European Union and Canada aimed at seeking greater convergence in our policies towards Iran. Those experts will meet again on October the 8th, and a follow-up working group meeting is planned for October the 28th. In other words, this coming month we're going to be talking with our allies about ways to ratchet up the pressure. That is a factor that will go into any decision-making because the law itself specifies the option of waiving a sanction in the event that the governments themselves have agreed to tighten the pressure up.

As far as how many days it will take us to determine that it fits the criteria, I can't answer that question. All I have been told today is that we are studying it. As soon as I have some time frame for you for a determination, I will give it to you.

QUESTION: But as you stipulate the legislation's goal, it seems to be a failure. All you have done so far, it seems, is stoke trans-Atlantic trade disputes with the allies. How can you point to any success in this?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I remember those very questions were directed at a previous spokesman on the subject of Helms-Burton. We were in a very similar situation. We had a situation where other governments believed our laws were extraterritorial and they were unfair. They disagreed with the intent of the law and the law itself. But I think everyone can agree that after the work of Ambassador Eizenstat, European governments and other governments improved, from our perspective, their willingness to be tough on Castro when it came to human rights. That was the purpose of Helms- Burton.

As a result of those improvements and that ratcheting up of the pressure, a decision was made to continue to suspend the application of parts of Helms- Burton. So what I am saying to you is, if we had been sitting here the day after we made the first announcements or first decisions on Helms-Burton -- and European governments were taking their positions, however, with joy or pleasure or whatever emotion they might have about it -- we explained what the purpose of the law was, and I think at the end of the day, when the negotiations were done and the dust settled, the purpose of the law had been met because the pressure had been ratcheted up against Cuba.

QUESTION: But there are people who feel you just sort of punted that issue down the road, and that it remains a festering dispute across the Atlantic. And there are some who have even said recently, some Europeans have said that they are not sure that there can be a real resolution. But I want to ask another sort of related question, and that is, you have known about this Total deal for some months and yet you weren't able to keep it from going forward.

MR. RUBIN: Correct.

QUESTION: Why were you unable to keep it from going forward and why do you think that now you will have any more success?

MR. RUBIN: We were unable to prevent the deal from going forward because the companies themselves - and again companies made this decision, we don't believe that governments made this decision, we believe companies made this decision - decided that it was more important to purse oil and gas efforts in Iran with a government that is a sponsor of international terrorism, that is an opponent of Middle East peace, that is determined to develop nuclear weapons, than it was to withhold the pursuit of additional profit. We have told our companies, by law, that they are not allowed to pursue profit in Iran. That's because we believe the danger is great. We believe you can't do business with countries like this by day and expect to be protected from the terrorists they support at night. That is the position of the United States and we have put our money where our mouth is when it comes to our companies.

We wish that other countries would recognize the danger that is posed here and understand that it's worth taking measures that are extraordinary because the dangers are extraordinary. Now, obviously, they don't see it that way and they believe that engagement at some level with the government of Iran is the best course, and we don't. That is reason we were unable to convince governments to encourage their companies to not go forward with this kind of a decision.

But as I said, only time will tell whether this kind of law, as a result of additional work -- and I'm sure we're going to be working on this very hard and carefully in the coming days -- will yield greater pressure on the government of Iran the way the Helms-Burton law yielded greater pressure on the government of Cuba.

David, yes.

QUESTION: Have you done any analysis yet, since you have known this deal was coming down the pike possibly, of how much impact sanctions might potentially have on Total and Gazprom and the other company? From what I've read, Total has sold off - the day before the deal -- sold off its largest holding in the United States. Is there really any way the US Government can have any real impact on that French company?

MR. RUBIN: The sanctions, as I understand them and as they have been provided to me, are the following six possible sanctions: a ban on EXIMBank, meaning Export-Import Bank assistance; a ban on export licenses; a ban on US private sector loans over $10 million per year; a ban on United States Government procurement; and an import ban; and if the sanctioned person is a financial institution, a ban on performing certain types of financial services in the United States. If, indeed, a company has protected itself by not caring if any of those things happen to it, then the sanction won't have any effect, by definition.

We are obviously aware of the company involved. We were aware of the possibility of this contract. We took steps in our discussions with the French government, both in Paris and at the Secretary's level, to try to explain our reasoning and make the points that we thought might be most useful in trying to convince them to avoid this kind of festering dispute, which certainly will fester as this continues.

But it's not a new dispute. We have had a dispute with the government of France and other European governments about how to approach Iran for some time, and I suspect it's not going to go away any time soon. But I hope that when people write about that dispute they bear in mind that we have a general agreement and a deep agreement with the government of France and other governments about the need to prevent weapons and weaponry and weapons of mass destruction from going to Iran. They have a different view over whether the money is fungible and whether to deny Iran the possibility of developing its oil and gas sector will impact on the issues we agree on, but that is a tactical difference. I will try to get you an answer of what we know about Total's interest in business in the United States but, if you say they have gotten out, I believe you.

QUESTION: These few days of meetings - you talked about October 8th and the 28th. Will one of those meetings be Mr. Eizenstat going to Paris for talks or going to Europe for talks?

MR. RUBIN: No, this is an expert level dialogue that has been ongoing, and what it is designed to do is to develop goals that we both have for improved behavior on the part of the Iranian government and, in theory, actions we would take if that improved behavior didn't occur. So it is designed to marry, to the extent possible, our views and their views on how to promote improvements.

Now, whether Mr. Eizenstat, UnderSecretary Stu Eizenstat, takes on this task -- and I suspect he will; I spoke to him this morning -- I think he is going to have a tough job ahead of him. Whether it involves travel of the kind you mentioned I don't think has been decided, but he will be one of the point men in the Administration on this subject.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) going to be taking part in this as well?

MR. RUBIN: I hadn't heard that. I mean, he obviously has a piece of the puzzle because he is working on the specific question of missile technology to Iran. But that's not really the issue at stake here other than, I suspect, trying to make aware the government's concern of the ways in which Iran is going about pursuing this effort.

QUESTION: Just finally one more. I just want to be sure I understand what you're saying. As far as what France or the Europeans might be willing to do, what you are saying is that if you are satisfied with a set of new conditions or steps or whatever, then you may reconsider or you will consider favorably the possibility of waiving the sanctions?

MR. RUBIN: You can draw that conclusion. I can tell you what the law says. The law says if the Secretary determines that sanctionable activity has occurred, she has three options under the act: immediately impose two or more of the sanctions; waive the imposition of sanctions if the Secretary determines and reports to Congress that it is important to the national interest to do so.

One second. I don't know where that piece of information is. But, again, I'm trying to deal with a situation where we don't have a decision yet, where we don't have a decision yet; we don't have a decision that the contract itself yields a trigger that would yield those three things. But I certainly think that just as the purpose of the Helms-Burton law was to get governments to work with us to put pressure on Fidel Castro, the purpose of this law is to get other governments to work with us to put pressure on Iran, and any action in that regard would have an effect on our national interests and how we might interpret the law.

QUESTION: Mr. Rubin?

QUESTION: On the same issue --

MR. RUBIN: Same issue?

QUESTION: Yes, please.

MR. RUBIN: Sure.

QUESTION: When you say you don't have a decision yet, are you saying that you don't have a decision whether this Total deal is violating ILSA?

MR. RUBIN: Correct.

QUESTION: Okay. So there is no certainty even on that yet?

MR. RUBIN: We're studying the contracts to the extent we can get information about them, and when we have information about whether they would yield a possible sanction, we'll give that to you.

QUESTION: Jamie, could you deal with the confusion over the staffing of the US embassy in Sudan, please?

QUESTION: Could I just raise one point? You talk about Helms-Burton as if the time of contention is past. Sir Leon Brittain was in town last week and he said, if you'll excuse the expression, the "time-out" in applying the sanctions on Helms-Burton expires on October 15th and there is no agreement yet with the United States on the extraterritorial issue. And at that point last week, he said the European Union would go ahead and bring the case to the World Trade Organization.

MR. RUBIN: Right. I didn't say the dispute had gone away. I think I was very clear on that. I said that the problem that was being presented to me in the question was a similar problem that was being presented during the time when we were discussing Helms-Burton, and we believe we achieved American objectives through the process of negotiating with our European allies and we would hope to achieve the same for this law.

QUESTION: The point is that the extraterritorial issue lies in --

MR. RUBIN: You are stating a fact and I agree with that fact. The extraterritoriality issue remains a matter of disagreement between countries in the world. Yes.

QUESTION: One last question. What can France, Russia and Malaysia do to address your concerns about Tehran in terms of terrorism in the Middle East peace process?

MR. RUBIN: Well, we have been discussing in detail some of those issues. As you know, some of those governments view an engagement policy with Iran as the best way to promote improvement. Since they all agree with us on the problem of terrorism, the problem of weapons of mass destruction and the problem of opposition to the Middle East process, they have been saying engagement is the best way to promote progress. We've been saying, well, that hasn't worked. Then they've been saying that our policy hasn't worked.

So what we are trying to do is see whether we can agree on some guidelines that would help answer the question of which of the policies might work best; and that, in our view, would yield greater concerted action, which is the key to success.

QUESTION: Sudan.

MR. RUBIN: Sudan. The question here was on Sudan. I was hoping to escape that question, but I guess not. We in the Government all have the same objective, and that is to increase the pressure on the Sudanese Government to comply with international demands on human rights and terrorism and ending the civil war. But there are considerations on how to use our personnel and resources most effectively, including questions of timing and any re-staffing.

Any final decision on this subject needs to be taken in the context of the ongoing Congressional action on Sudan. There is some sanctions legislation that is now before the Congress so there is still no decision to re-staff our embassy in Khartoum. Any decision will take into account the factors that I just mentioned, namely whether to ratchet up the sanctions and the fact that Congress is now considering the matter.

QUESTION: You know what the next question is. How did it happen last week that there was an announcement to the effect that the embassy would be re- staffed?

MR. RUBIN: So one question wasn't enough?

QUESTION: No.

QUESTION: It rarely is.

MR. RUBIN: Well, it happened that there was an announcement that was premature. We are still working this problem and no final decision has been made. Yes.

QUESTION: In the British Daily Observer a long interview was published by a PKK terrorist who took asylum in Britain....

QUESTION: You know, this building is not a building that sort of makes decisions and puts things on paper willy nilly; in fact, there is usually a hundred people who approve any one paragraph. So how did this --

MR. RUBIN: I'm sorry. We're still on the other subject.

QUESTION: I'm asking a question.

MR. RUBIN: Yes, but it's the same subject.

QUESTION: The Sudan.

MR. RUBIN: Yes, they are still on the Sudan. I was trying to move off, but it didn't work.

QUESTION: Oh, all right.

QUESTION: So how does it happen that a change of position like this is made public, as you say, prematurely?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I don't think it will serve anybody's purpose to wash all the dirty laundry on this subject in public. Clearly, a decision to prematurely discuss this in public was a mistake. In the future we will try to not make such mistakes, to discuss such subjects prematurely with the Congress and the media.

Yes.

QUESTION: So, basically, Congress pulled you back on this?

MR. RUBIN: That's not correct.

QUESTION: Can you say why? I mean, that's exactly what the scenario you have described looks like. You had a desk officer on the Sudan desk call up The Washington Post and announce it. I hate to air your dirty laundry in public --

MR. RUBIN: No, you don't.

QUESTION: That's what happens when you're on the 10th floor.

MR. RUBIN: You like it a lot.

QUESTION: And then apparently Congress said, wait a second, we have got some legislation that might affect this. Explain how that is not the case.

MR. RUBIN: All I can tell you is that there are still considerations that are being taken into account before a decision is made to increase the staffing. When this process is over, you may find that it's not all that different than it started. But the process has to include taking into account the views of the Congress, taking into account the need we have to ratchet up the pressure so that Sudan gets the message that when it comes to terrorism, when it comes to human rights, and when it comes to the peace process, that we are not satisfied with their policies.

So when this all is put together and finally, correctly discussed publicly, you may find that it's not all that different than - you are always telling us you want to watch the policy process unfold in public. Maybe you did a little bit. Yes.

QUESTION: The Observer published a long interview by a PKK terrorist who took refuge in Britain, and he gave very interesting and long details of the help the Greek government gave to PKK, including Stinger missiles, I understand. In last year's report, the State Department's Terrorism Report, it was admitted that the Greek government "tolerates terrorist groups in Athens."

On the basis of this interview, has there been a reassessment of the help the Greek government gives to terrorists?

MR. RUBIN: I will get information. I have no information on that. I wasn't aware of the interview. When I get some on it, we will give it to you. Yes.

QUESTION: Question on Cuba. Do you have --

QUESTION: Same subject, sir.

MR. RUBIN: Yes, one more on that. Yes.

QUESTION: The U.S. Government always encouraged Greece and Turkey to calm down and to ease the tension between the Aegean two sides. Then last week in New York, the Foreign Minister of Greece used some verbs out of the rules and regulations, he blamed the Turkish side as the killer, rapist, and the thief. I wonder if this kind of statement, did you think it was helpful to ease the tension between the two countries? This kind of statement?

MR. RUBIN: I haven't seen the statement. We will take a look at it and try to get you a comment. Yes.

QUESTION: Could you give me what information on the two Cubans who have been arrested for hijacking a boat to get into this country?

MR. RUBIN: Yes. Six Cubans were picked up on September 25th, were taken to the Guantanamo Naval Base for further processing. The vessel they were on, which belongs to the Cuban Border Guard, is in the custody of the U.S. Coast Guard in Florida. All six Cubans were interviewed by the Department of Justice investigators regarding the events. Based on statements provided by all six to the investigators, two of the Cubans, a port security guard and his brother-in-law, hijacked the Cuban Border Guard vessel, taking four hostages in the process. The two were armed with AK-47s found on the vessel and a knife.

The Border Guard machinist forced to operate the vessel was struck several times in the head with the butt of a knife. The hostage-takers also fired multiple rounds at a Cuban Border Guard patrol boat that was chasing them. The Cuban Government has informed us that there was one injury aboard the patrol boat as a result. The patrol boat rammed the vessel in an effort to stop the hijackers.

The two, who admitted to the hijacking, were interviewed by INS asylum officers. They were found not to be entitled to protection and will be returned to Cuba. The four hostages, including three Cuban Border Guard personnel and a 15-year-old minor girl who was a friend of one of the Border Guards, were the four that were taken hostage. They declined to be interviewed by asylum officers and asked to return to Cuba as soon as possible. They were returned to Cuba on September the 29th.

We are looking into a request by the Cuban Government for the return of the Border Guard vessel. We will be repatriating the hijackers.

QUESTION: Jamie, in a previous case where a plane was hijacked to this country, the man was tried in a court of law. Why would these people not be tried in a U.S. court and why are they being returned?

MR. RUBIN: The five Cubans who hijacked the tugboat? Is that the case you're talking about?

QUESTION: No, the airplane hijacking. I think it was two or three years ago.

MR. RUBIN: I don't know. We'll have to get you a reason. But we are sending them back.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) the tugboat question, say something about that.

MR. RUBIN: All right, the five Cubans who hijacked the tugboat and an accomplice in Cuba were later tried by the Cuban Government and sentenced, depending on the level of involvement. The sentences were consistent with the normal length of sentences in Cuban hijacking cases. I'll get you some specific answers as to why in this case we're sending them back, if you're saying that in other cases we didn't.

QUESTION: Well, I'm wondering if it's a difference in policy?

MR. RUBIN: I don't think so. I think it just depends on the case. But I don't think there's any policy ramification. It depends on the case. We will get you details on how the cases differ. In fact, Lula Rodriguez, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs - our Principal Deputy is Jim Foley -- is one of the world's greatest experts on this subject. I welcome you to give her a call.

(The briefing concluded at 12:35 p.m.)


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