|
|
|
|
|
|
||
|
Go to Campaign Finance Report
|
|
Transcript of President Clinton's News ConferenceFederal Document Clearing House Saturday, March 8, 1997; Page A10
Following is the text of President Clinton's news conference at the White House yesterday: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Today we learned some very good news about the American economy. Our nation has created almost 600,000 new jobs in the first two months of 1997, almost 12 million since January of 1992. At the same time, the deficit has been reduced by 63 percent. Investment in our people has increased. Inflation remains low. Our economy is on the right track. But to stay on that right track, we have to balance the budget while we go forward with the work that leads to continued growth and low inflation. That's what our balanced budget will do, eliminating the deficit in five years and strengthening critical investments for the future of all of our people. Last week, the Congressional Budget Office certified that even under its assumptions, because of the protections we built into the budget, it would be balanced by 2002. So I am hopeful, and I want to say again, that the talks that we have been continually having with congressional leaders in both parties will produce a balanced budget agreement this year and in the not-too-distant future. I also want to talk a moment about our commitments to our Gulf War veterans. And I thank Secretary [of Veterans Affairs Jesse] Brown and the other veterans leaders who are here, including Elaine Larson from the Presidential Advisory Committee on Gulf War Illnesses; the leadership of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and other veterans organizations; and the Persian Gulf veterans who joined with us here today. Two months ago, when I accepted the final report of the Presidential Advisory Committee on Gulf War Illnesses, I pledged to the committee and to all America's veterans that we would match their efforts with action. Today, I am announcing three important steps to meet that pledge and our debt to our veterans. First, I have approved Secretary Brown's recommendation for the new regulations to extend the eligibility period for compensation for Persian Gulf veterans with undiagnosed illnesses. We aim to raise significantly the window for gulf veterans to claim the compensation they have earned. Under current regulations, veterans with undiagnosed illnesses must prove their disabilities emerged within two years of their return from the gulf in order to be eligible for benefits. Experience has shown that many disabled veterans have had their claims denied because they fall outside that two-year time frame. The proposed new regulations would extend the time frame through the year 2001. That is 10 years after the cessation of hostilities in the Gulf War. Gulf War veterans who became ill as a result of their service should receive the compensation they deserve, even if science cannot yet pinpoint the cause of their illnesses. Second, I have accepted from the secretaries of defense, health and human services, and veterans affairs a comprehensive action plan to implement the recommendations of the presidential advisory committee's final report. I asked for this plan within 60 days, and they delivered. The plan addresses outreach, medical and clinical issues, research, coordination, investigations, and chemical and biological weapons. It will help us to do an even better job of caring for Gulf War veterans in finding out why they're sick. Third and finally, as the committee recommended, I have initiated a presidential review directive process to make sure that in any future troop deployments, we act on lessons learned in the gulf to better protect the health of our service men and women and their families. We need to focus on better communication, better data and better service. The committee's work in a massive, intense, ongoing review of millions of pages of documents by the Department of Defense and the CIA continues to bring new information to light, including recently released documents about possible exposure of our troops to chemical agents. The scope of the efforts is substantial, and if there is additional information, it will be found and released. We will be asking two very important questions about any such new information. First, should it change the research or health care programs we have in place to care for our veterans? And second, how will it help us to make the policy changes we need to better protect our forces in future deployments? What is most important is that we remain relentless in our search for the facts and that, as we do get new information, we share it with our veterans, with Congress and with the American people, and that we act on any information we uncover. That is what we have done and what we must continue to do. I will not stop until we have done everything we can to provide the care and to find the answers for Gulf War veterans that they need and deserve. And again, let me say, I thank all of you for your work and for being with us here today. Now, I'll be glad to take your questions, and I think, Terry, you're the first.
Most Ethical Administration?
I don't believe that they undermine the case. But let me begin by saying there were problems in the fund-raising in 1996, which have been well-identified and the Democratic Party commissioned its own audit, did a review, made the results public and took appropriate action. I think that is very important. And I'm proud of that. The second thing I want to say is I thought the vice president did a good job of explaining what he did and why, and explaining exactly what he intended to do in the future. With regard to Maggie Williams, I'd like to make a comment about that. She is an honorable person. She was put in a rather unusual circumstance, and as a courtesy, she agreed to do what the relevant regulation plainly provides for, which is to forward the check on to the Democratic National Committee. Now, in retrospect, with all the publicity that's attended the whole contribution issue, would it have been better if Maggie Williams had said, "Look, I can do this under the regulations, but I've decided I shouldn't do it and I want you to go mail it in yourself or take it over there yourself"? That would have been a better thing to do. And in the future, I expect that the White House will follow that course should such an occasion ever arise again. But finally, I want to make the point I have been trying to make to the American people. We had to work hard within the law to raise a lot of money to be competitive. We did work hard and I'm glad we did because the stakes were high and the divisions between us in Washington at that time were very great. We still fell over $200 million short of the money raised by the committees of the Republican Party. The real problem, and the reason you have some of the questions you have, I think -- unless you just believe that all transactions between contributors and politicians are inherently suspect, which I don't believe and I think is wrong, for either party -- the real problem is these campaigns cost too much money, they take too much time, and they will continue to do so until we pass campaign finance reform. If we pass campaign finance reform, as I have asked, by July the 4th, then the situation will get better. If we don't, we will still be raising too much money and it will take too much time and effort on the part of everyone involved. So I'm hopeful that we can. But I believe that both the vice president and Maggie Williams are highly ethical people, and I do not believe that either one would ever knowingly do anything wrong. This business of raising money takes a lot of time, and if you have to do too much of it, it will take too much time and raise too many questions. But, I, I do not agree with the inherent premise of, that some have advanced, that there's somehow something intrinsically wrong with a person that wants to give money to a person running for office and that if you accept it that something bad has happened. I don't agree with that. I don't think there's something intrinsically bad, but the system is out of whack. And I think we all know it, and we all know it's not going to get better until and unless we pass a reasonable campaign finance reform law.
Mr. President, [Colorado] Governor [Roy] Romer said that Maggie Williams was wrong to accept the check, and you obviously seem to agree in retrospect. But, in --
What I said was, I think that she would say in retrospect, and I would say, given the extreme sensitivity now everyone has to all these contribution issues, that she should have said to the gentleman in question, "Look, I can do this legally but I don't want to do it because I think we should remove all question, all doubt. I think you ought to go mail it yourself, go take it down there yourself." And that's what I think the White House should do in the future if someone physically is present in the White House and attempts to do that.
Aide "Completely Passive"
Maggie Williams in this case was completely passive. She didn't ask someone to come in and give her a check. And she had no reason to believe there was anything wrong with it, with the check involved. She just simply did what the regulation explicitly provides for, which is to pass it on. Now, in the case of the vice president, he can speak for himself, but I have to tell you, we knew what we were facing, we knew no matter what happened, we would be badly outspent. We believed in what we stood for, and we were, frankly, from time to time, we were surprised we had as many folks who were willing to stick with us as there were. But we are proud of the fact that within the limits of the law, we worked hard to raise money so that we could get our message out there and we would not be buried -- literally buried -- by the amount of money that the other side had at their disposal. There were the problems that we identified, which we've been very forthright about. We got an external auditor to come into the Democratic Party. They have taken the steps to correct them. But it was, we had never faced anything like that before in American politics, and we did the very best we could with it. And I don't think we were compromised by fighting for what we believed in within the limits of the law. I do believe that this system is not good now. It is so expensive. It requires too much time, too much energy. And the more effort you put into it, the more opportunity you have for some sort of something going wrong. So what I think has to be done is we have to reform the law. But until we get some energy behind an effort to reform the law -- you know, if it's just me and Senator [John] McCain [R-Ariz.] and Senator [Russell] Feingold [D-Wis.] and a few others who support us for it, we can't pass it, and you will be left with the same system next time and the time after that and the time after that, and because of the exponential rise in the cost of buying air time and other means of communication, we'll have all these questions all over again time and time and time again. Go ahead.
I'm going to ask your forbearance because this question is a little bit long. But this is about Johnny Chung, the person who gave the check to Maggie Williams.
In April of '95, about a month after he gave that check, he came in here to the White House. He brought in five Chinese officials. Someone on your staff sent a memo to the National Security Council saying that you were not certain you'd want photos of you with these people floating around. I wanted to ask you why you were worried about that and also why after a highly knowledgeable NSC wrote back that he was a hustler who will continue to make efforts to bring in his friends into contact with the president, first lady, and whose clients might not always be in favor of business ventures the president would support.
Why did he keep getting back in here? What was your relationship to him? And he now says that it was at least implicit, if not explicit, that he would get this access for the money he gave.
I just had, as I have said before on this question of White House access, we did not have adequate, an adequate system here. I assumed -- wrongly as it turned out -- that there were kind of established procedures which were sort of handed on from administration to administration that had nothing to do with whoever happened to be here about the controlled and developed access. And I was wrong about that. So that's what I assumed generally was in place until we became aware that they weren't. But on this particular day, I just had an instinct that maybe whatever the rules were that -- you know -- that we didn't maybe know enough about these folks to know whether there should be a picture there. I didn't assume anything negative about them. I just thought that we just didn't know. Now with regard to the memo about Mr. Chung, I can't answer that question because I never saw it and no one ever told me it had been written, and I don't know who did see it. So I really can't answer that whole cluster of questions because the first I ever knew such a memo had been written was when, when it was discussed in the public domain. I did not know that. I had no reason to believe that there was any problem there.
And what was your relationship with Mr. Chung? How did you come to know him? How did he get into your office and write you --
-- letters that you replied to? There's lots of record of that.
I don't remember how I met him, but I think I met him at some Democratic Party event. I'm sure that's where I met him. I didn't have a prior -- a relationship with him prior to my becoming president, to the best of my knowledge.
A Special Prosecutor
Why not make it easy for Janet Reno this time and similarly preempt her and say, "Yes, there's enough of a threshold, enough of the law has been met to go forward and get to the bottom of this?"
And you know, the American people will have to make a judgment about whether all this has been worth it when the facts come out. But the threshold of the law was not met, and I doubt very seriously if one ever would have been called if any law had been in place. Now, there is a law in place. It is a legal question. I do not think it should become a political question, and I have been very rigorous in dealing with this in saying it in just that way. And I'm going to stick with my position. Mr. President, you again today, Vice President Gore the other day, and your staffs have repeatedly told us that no laws were broken in the Lincoln Bedroom issue, in the phone calls for donations, in Maggie Williams' accepting and then passing along the donation to the DNC. But cumulatively, Mr. President, what are your thoughts on the propriety and the appearance of all these various actions? Well, let's take them one at a time. The vice president has said that he believes he should, if he makes further fund-raising calls as opposed to attending fund-raising events, he should not make them from his office, even if it is paid for with a political credit card. I have said that I believe Maggie Williams thinks, in view of the environment in which we now are, that even though there is an explicit regulation on this, right on point on this, that, you know, what she probably wishes she had said and what I expect future employees to say is, "Look, I can take this. It is legal, but we're not going to do it this way. You have to mail it in or you have to take it in yourself." On the third thing, you know, I just have a different view of this than you do. We have, I have done something no president has ever done. I have -- I mean, I gave you a list of the people that spent the night in the White House. And it shows that a relatively small percentage of them, about one in nine, were people that I met in the course of running for president who supported me for president, who either gave me contributions or also helped to raise money for me. You know, the people that did that, I'm grateful to them for doing that. I appreciate the fact that they helped me in that campaign in '92. And the document which was released, which most of you reported on, which showed the note I had sent back to [his secretary] Nancy Hernreich makes it clear that I wanted to get back in touch with those people. I appreciated what they had done. I didn't want them to feel estranged from me. And I don't think there's anything wrong with a president, me or anyone else, reaching out to his supporters. And some of them, including -- let me just give you -- I mean, I could give you lots of examples. But there had been a lot of different kinds of people who spent the night here. But one of the newspapers made an issue of [insurance company executive Bernard] Lee Rapoport from Texas. Well, he was my friend 25 years ago, when I was a defeated candidate for Congress with a campaign debt that was almost twice my annual salary; he was my friend. When I was the youngest former governor in the history of the republic and nobody thought I had any political future, he was my personal friend. I don't think there's anything wrong with having people like that spend the night with you. So, you know, you'll just, you can make your own judgments about this. But I have tried to be very forthright with you about this. I've given you all this information, and you can make your own judgments. But I just simply disagree that it is wrong for a president to ask his friends and supporters to spend time with him. And let me remind you of one problem. And a lot of you who have to travel around with me are acutely aware of this. This job, even when you're traveling, can be a very isolating job. Usually when you travel someplace, you go some place, you stay a little while, you turn around and leave. If you go to these fund-raisers, they're -- on the coffees, for example, I'm the one that's most responsible, or for the dinners out, you know, the fund-raising dinners. I get frustrated going to meetings and goings where all you do is shake hands with somebody or you take a picture, no words ever change. You never know what somebody's got on their mind, or they never get a chance to talk to you, you never have any real human contact. I look for ways to have genuine conversations with people. I learn things when I listen to people. But, I can tell you this. I don't believe you can find any evidence of the fact that I had changed government policy solely because of a contribution. It's just that I don't think I should refuse to listen to people who supported me or refuse to be around them or tell people, "Well, you contributed to the campaign, therefore, even though I'd love to have you come see me at the White House, I can't do it anymore." And, and you'll just have to sort through that and evaluate whether you agree with that or not, but that's how I feel.
Contact With Supporters
What I think is a bad thing is to say -- and, again, this may not be illegal either, and you know the documents also show that I stopped this -- I don't think a political party should say, if you give this amount of money, we'll guarantee you this specific access. If you give that amount of money, we'll guarantee you that specific access. I don't think that a political party should say, or the president should say, if you want access to us, you have to contribute, and if you want access to us, you not only have to contribute to us, you can't contribute to them. I never did any of that. You know, as I have said before, one of the most important meetings I had about China policy was one organized by Republicans. As far as I know, none of them had ever done anything in my behalf before. But it was important. I just don't think you should eliminate contacts with your supporters. And I don't think that anyone else -- if you really think about it, I don't think you'll think that either.
Mr. President, in listening to many of your supporters and aides respond to these questions over the last several weeks, one note that I think I hear is one of frustration, a sense that these questions are unfair and the focus on the Democrats is unfair.
But I also find something unsatisfactory in that response. And my question to you is somebody who has enormous power to lead by example, is it good enough to say that everybody else does it?
But what I do want you to know is when it is obvious that we have a disagreement, when I read reports or see them on television, and I think you see this in a certain way and I just honestly see it in a different way, I think it's helpful to the American people and to you and to me for me to tell you how I see it. That's all. But I think there are things that when we see them in the light of day, even if we've been given guidance about what the limits of the law are, it seems that it's not a prudent thing to do. I was, I thought the vice president gave a very upfront and forthright statement about that the other day. So I don't believe it's enough to say everybody does it. On the other hand, I don't believe either that we can afford to run the risk of having one party just kind of disappear from the scene because they don't do what -- they're unwilling to do what is necessary to be competitive in raising funds in the system that exists, which is why I say to you in the end, we should set a high standard. But if I honestly disagree with you about what's right and wrong, I should be free to say that. But in the end, the answer to this is to pass a reasonable finance reform bill this year. That's what I really believe.
What Is Legal?
Did the solicitation occur when he wrote the letter or when the letter is received? And the law is clearly that the solicitation is consummated, if you will, when the person is solicited, and where the person is solicited. But the, and the vice president thought that as long as he was not using taxpayer money to make the call, that it was legal. I think he was right about that. He also thought about it and said, "If I ever do this again, in terms of calls, I'm not going to do it in my office because it doesn't, it doesn't look right. We ought to have a higher standard." And I was proud of him for saying that. But I think that's what, that goes back to the question that John said. There is a difference between -- sometimes there is a difference between what is legal and what ought to be done. And this is a place where I think there is a difference, and I think we've made that clear. And I was proud of the statement that he made.
Mr. President, your press secretary this week left open the possibility that you, too, had made calls like the vice president did. Did you ever make those calls?
But I can't say over all the hundreds and hundreds and maybe thousands of phone calls I've made in the last four years that I never said to anybody while I was talking to them, "Well, we need your help or I hope you'll help us." So I told him not to flat-out say that I'd never done it because I simply can't say that I've never done it. But it's not what I like to do and it wasn't a practice of mine. And a couple, once I remember in particular I was asked to do it, and I just never got around to doing it. But I don't believe the vice president did anything wrong in making the calls. I know some people have advanced the proposition that the vice president should not ever ask anybody for funds, at least unless he's looking at them face to face as opposed to on the telephone. I just disagree with that. I do think he made the right decision about not doing it in the office. So I asked that that be, that [press secretary] Mike McCurry do it in that way not to mislead you or to be cute, but just simply because I don't want to flat-out say I never did something that I might, in fact, have done just because I don't remember it.
`Do You Have Any Regret?'
As I said, again, this is a matter of perception, you know. I really was, you see, I think I was more upset maybe than some of you were when I found out that my party was not checking the checks that were coming in. I was livid and stunned that in 1996, after all we've been through in the last 20 years, that could have happened. It took my breath away. I was upset when I saw a proposed brochure that says this is access you get to the president and the White House if you give this amount of money. And you give amount of money you get guaranteed a certain amount of other access. I thought that was wrong. But on the other hand, I have a different take on some of this than you do. And I am, as I said, I want to take personal responsibility for this. If you find the coffees offensive, and I can't say if somebody did something around the coffees they shouldn't have done, but if you find the fact of the president having coffee at the White House with people who either have supported him in the past or whom he hopes will support him in the future, I am personally responsible for that. And I take full responsibility for it. Because I enjoy them enormously. I found them interesting. I found them valuable. I found that all these people who -- many of whom had been active in public, in elections for years and they'd done all kinds of different things with their lives -- were given the first chance they'd ever had to just sort of say here's my idea, and I hope you'll consider it. Or here's what I think you should do, or here's where I think you're wrong. And I genuinely enjoy them. And I did not believe they were improper. And I still believe, as long as there was no specific price tag put on those coffees, just the fact that they would later be asked to help the president or the party does not render them improper. That's what I believe. My question really was, if you had it to do all over again, would you have moved these things outside of the White House or had stricter standards about what political things would be done in the White House? Well, if I had it to do all over again, we would fix what we have now. We'd have stricter standards about admission to the White House. And the answer to your other question, I hesitate to give you a general answer, because there may be some facts about a particular coffee or another that I don't know. All I'm saying is that based on what I thought the facts were, which is these were people that we hope would help us, some of whom had helped us in the past, some of whom had never helped us. And they were going to be invited here, and I was going to have coffee with them, and we were going to talk about things. After which some or all of them -- not all of them, as it turned out -- but many of them would be solicited to help in the campaign. I do not believe that was wrong. And I feel comfortable about what I did there. I wish, I've said this a million times, I almost wish that one of you had been in all these coffees, because they were, frankly, fairly pedestrian events in the sense that nothing very juicy was discussed. But people got to come out with their ideas, state their convictions. And maybe there ought to be some way of dealing with that. Maybe at least you ought to have some assurance that if these sorts of things are done like this on a regular basis, at least, that you ought to have some knowledge of what goes on in them. And that might make you feel better about it.
Should Contributions Be a Factor?
People who help you, people who try to help you put your program in, you try to stay in touch with them. So you're more likely to know if they want to do something than you are people who didn't help you and people who weren't involved in it. The instructions that I gave were, if someone who helped us wants to be considered for an appointment, they ought to be considered for the appointment, but they shouldn't get it unless they're qualified for it. They shouldn't be disqualified because they had been a supporter of ours. That's the way I felt about the trade missions. If someone wanted to go on a trade mission and was qualified and could make a contribution, then they ought to get to go. But if they would never get to go in a thousand years, that no one would think they should have any business on a trade mission, and the only reason they were going to get to go was because they contributed to us, I didn't think they should go. And I think, but I think it's disingenuous for anybody in public life to say that it doesn't help you to be considered for these things if you helped the person who happens to win an election, because you have to stay in touch with the people that helped you. And it is a good thing to do. That's the way, that's the way the political system works. That's the way -- I would expect that of a Republican or a Democrat or an independent who got elected to any office, that people that helped you and people that you know, people you have confidence in, you ought to listen to them. But you should never make a decision and do something solely because they have helped you before or solely in anticipation of something they might do for you in the future. And what we have to do is to have our decisions open enough and transparent enough that the American people can see that that is being done. And I can tell you, people come to you in all different kinds of ways. For example, let me just give you one example. It's not a trade mission. I'll just give you one example. There was a huge amount of money at stake in the private sector in the legislation involving the telecommunications reform. It was the first time we had reformed telecommunications in 60 years. You all are in it. You know better than I do how much it's changing, all the competition issues -- massive amounts of money. The vice president has been interested in this issue forever. We spent, in our weekly lunches, we spent endless amounts of time talking about the Telecommunications Act, what it should look like. And we took a position. We then found we had all these people who came to us and supported us -- many of whom had been Republicans their whole lives -- who were independent, long-distance telephone operators. And they came to us because the majority party had decided to take a position favored by the larger telephone companies. We had a clear public position beforehand. Should we not have accepted their contributions? Should we not have accepted their support and help? I think we did the right thing. Now, flip it around. If they had been helping us all along, but we agreed with them, should we have weakened in our advocacy just because they were supporting us? In other words, I think the whole reason for the first round of campaign reform -- let's go back to that -- is that all these contributions should be made public, and you should be free to evaluate them, and you should be free to determine and to speculate and to probe about whether the money we receive from such and such a group has affected a decision we make. And does it undermine or support the public interest? You should be free to do that. That's why full disclosure is important. But I think that as long as -- unless we're going to a completely publicly financed system, contributors will always have access to public officials. Then other kinds of people will who helped them. It just -- that's the way it is. Yes, you say that -- Mr. President, you say that there's no evidence that you've ever changed a policy because of someone you met with but what does appear to have occurred is that certain people traded on their access. In other words, access to you became a valuable business commodity to get new clients or impress their current clients. Do you think that that meets the higher standard that you want the White House to adhere to? Well, what I think about that is that we need to evaluate whether we did anything which would give the impression that we were trying to help someone get business. In other words, I can't say who beyond the reach of our personal contacts would be impressed with people who had their picture taken with me. After today, it may be that everybody will go broke unless they take the pictures off the wall. I don't know. But I mean, I can't say that. What I can say is that the White House should not knowingly permit the White House or the presidency or the vice presidency to be used to advance some private economic interest. I can -- and that, you put your finger on something that is troubling to me, and we have to evaluate that more and it's one of the reasons that I wanted to make sure that we had a system in place on access and on all these things that will meet that standard in the future. And I believe we've done that. But I think that's a legitimate problem.
`Partial-Birth' Abortion That's fair. No, that's a fair question. As far as I know, that did not happen. As far as I know, any other checks that came in we really didn't, were things that came in the mail and were just routinely referred and I don't even know if there were any of those or how many there were. But as far as I know, there was no other instance like the one involving Maggie. Now, now, let me answer the other question, as clearly as I can. This -- the admission by the gentleman in question that, you know, he, he thought he was misrepresenting the facts to the Congress in the last debate, has caused a lot of stir here. But, I believe that the, I believe, and I tried to be clear about this at the time, I was under the impression that the facts are just as we all said they were, more or less what you said. I don't know that we have exact numbers. What I said before was, and let me restate it, I sought to get a bill I could sign that would ban this procedure when it was inappropriate because there would be other avenues available if an abortion was otherwise legal. What I was concerned about, again -- and you said 500, I think, so let's just take your number, we don't really know -- Actually, I think it's 5,000, Mr. President. You have 5,000 total, of whom a small proportion, maybe 10 percent or so, are like those five women that I had in the White House. I will say again, they are my concern, they are my only concern. And I would remind you that three of those five women identified themselves to me as pro-life voters. And they were told that unless they had a procedure which would be banned under the law that I vetoed, after it was over the babies they were carrying would be dead and their bodies would never be able to have another baby. That is my only concern. I have made that as clear as I can. So, I can't answer the question that you asked me any clearer than that because I want to see the language of any proposed bill. I think you could make a very compelling case that for the small number of people I'm trying to protect, this is the biggest issue in their entire lives, and that for them my position is the pro-life position. And I believe that it would be a mistake for us to pass this bill one more time without taking care of those folks. When, because, as you just pointed out, Mr. Miklaszewski, because anybody that's in the first two trimesters that has an elective procedure will still have access to another one in a different way after the bill passes. So, in a funny way, this might not work to reduce the overall number of abortions at all, but in the end, what it could do is every year to take a few hundred women and wreck their lives and wreck the possibility that they could have further children. That's why I was working on this. And if we can solve that problem, I will happily sign this bill. This thing is a real, it has hurt the American people, dealing with this. I don't mean this harmed physically. I mean this has been a great emotional trauma for the American people, trying to come to grips with this issue and deal with it. It's a deep thing out there around the country, and it goes way beyond the traditional pro-life/pro-choice fight or disagreement. I would like to see us bring some harmony to this and put it behind us. But every time anybody mentions this, I remember so vividly the faces of those five women and their life stories and what happened to them afterward. And you know, a few hundred people a year -- they don't have much votes or influence -- but I, they're the people I'm concerned about, and they're the people I'm going to try to protect right down to the end. Let's take one from Sarah, and then I got to take one from Jill Dougherty because she's about to go to Moscow and she needs to have her parting shot.
This is on another subject. We have a very great problem in this country today, and I wonder if you will use your leadership to counteract the rumors, or rumor-mongers that are broad in the land who are spreading all these rumors and scaring people to death. Large segments of our citizens believe that the United Nations is taking over whole blocs of counties in Kentucky and Tennessee --
And some of them, they believe that --
-- we are going to [inaudible] in a concentration camp, and that you're going to give our army to Russia and all that baloney.
Can you do something about this because it's hurting the unity of the United States?
Let me just say this, for people that are worried about it, I would say there is a serious issue here that every American has to come to grips with, including Americans that don't much think about foreign policy until some great problem occurs. And that is how can we be an independent, sovereign nation leading the world in a world that is increasingly interdependent, that requires us to cooperate with other people and then to deal with very difficult circumstances in trying to determine how best to cooperate? That's the issue that you will all be reporting on for the next week and the Mexico certification issue -- did I do the right thing to certify Mexico? Or is, are the members of Congress who disagree with me right when they say we should have decertified Mexico and then give it a national interest waiver so we could continue to cooperate economically and in other ways? I strongly believe I was right. But we don't have -- you know, if you want to go into that, we can later. But the issue is, we live in an interdependent world. We have to cooperate with people. We're better off when we do. We're better off with NATO. We're better off with the United Nations. We're better off when these countries can work together. So I just think for folks that are worried about this out in the country, they need to be thinking about how we're not going to give up our freedom or our independence, but we're not going to go it alone into the 21st century either. We're going to work together and we have to.
Russia and NATO Well, I hope so. But let me answer the, I'd like to make two points about it. First of all, in this meeting that we're going to have in Helsinki, President Yeltsin and I, it will be very important. And yet, it's important to recognize that it's part of a regular pattern of meetings over the last several years which have changed the nature of U.S.-Russian relations, forever, I hope, so that it'll be a meeting that'll be extremely candid, extremely self, straightforward. And I hope it will deal with not only the question of Russia's relationship to Europe but also what we can do with the Russians to continue to reduce the nuclear threat and what we can do with the Russians to help them to build their economy, because I'm convinced that they have the capacity, if they can make certain changes, to enjoy a phenomenal amount of economic growth in a relatively short time, which I think would help a lot of things in their country. Now, on the merits, I have said, since 1993, that one of my dreams for the 21st century world is a Europe that for the first time is united, democratic and free. Since the dawn of nation states, about the beginning of the last millennium in Europe, it has never been so. There has never been a single time when Europe was united, democratic and free. The final capstone of that, I think, is working out a security relationship with NATO, a European Union that is expanding, and still tied, a Europe still tied to the United States and to Canada, to North America, not only economically and politically but also in terms of our security alliance, but also has a special relationship with Russia, and does not rule out even Russian membership in a common security alliance. My, the best answer I can give to President Yeltsin is, what are we doing with NATO today and with whom are we doing it? What we are doing today is Bosnia. We together ended the bloodiest war in Europe since World War II, and we are doing it with Russia. And there are lots of other things we can do with Russia. And the final point I want to make is, among the great questions, there are five or six great questions which will determine what the world will look like 30 or 40 years from now. One of those great questions is, how will Russia and China, the two great former communist powers, define their greatness in the next century? Will they define their greatness as we try to do, in terms of the achievements of our people, our ability to protect ourselves and our ability to relate to other people? Or will they define their greatness -- and I think that's a more modern definition, if you will -- or will they define their greatness in terms of their ability to influence, if not outright dominate the people that live around them, as well to control the political debate of people who live within their borders to a degree that I think is not helpful? If that debate is resolved in the proper way, the 21st century is going to be a very good time for the American people. And I think you, when you hear all this stuff about NATO, you have to understand -- so there's two things going on. The Russians want to know, are we aggressive in NATO expansion or defensive and looking at other targets like Bosnia? Then they're having to define in themselves, where do we want to be 25 or 30 years from now? And when they say things that we find offensive, I would ask the American people to understand their sensitivities -- we were never invaded by Napoleon or Hitler, and they were. So they're a little sensitive about the prospects of their borders. And we're trying to work together for a better, brighter world. I think we're going to get there. I expect that the Helsinki meeting will be positive. But you should understand that this is a tough debate and that they have reasons in their own psyche and circumstances that make it a difficult one. Thank you.
© Copyright 1997 The Washington Post Company
|
|
|
||
|
|
||