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US White House - Pres. Clinton and Stephanopoulos Exchange of Toasts 96-05-09
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release May 9, 1996
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT CLINTON
AND PRESIDENT STEPHANOPOULOS OF GREECE
IN EXCHANGE OF TOASTS
The State Dining Room
8:25 P.M. EDT
PRESIDENT CLINTON: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen.
President Stephanopoulos, Foreign Minister Pangalos, Education
Minister Papandreou, Members of the Greek delegation, to all of our
distinguished guests from the United States and from Greece.
Hillary and I are delighted to welcome President
Stephanopoulos to the White House. Mr. President, throughout your
long career in public life, you have shown an extraordinary devotion
to democracy and to serving the people of Greece. As a member of
parliament, as well as Minister for the Interior, Welfare and State,
you established a record of exceptional integrity and judgment. As
President of the Hellenic Republic, you have represented Greece with
dignity and wisdom, befitting the history of your great nation.
Hillary and Chelsea were so warmly received by you and by all the
Greek people recently. I thank you for that, and it now gives us
very great pleasure to return the hospitality to you.
We are especially happy to have the President here at
this particular point in the friendship between our two nations.
Aristotle speaks at length about how friends strengthen one another
by sharing virtues and characteristics. Well, Greece has turned to
President Stephanopoulos for leadership, and I have my own
Stephanopoulos. (Laughter and applause.) Mr. President, I think
we're both doing pretty well.
Though thousands of miles separate our two nations,
America has very deep roots in Greece. The evidence is all around
us. Most of you came to dinner through the North Portico, built in
Greek revival style during the presidency of Andrew Jackson. Next
door, the Treasury, is the largest Greek revival building in the
world. There are many other examples nearby. The Lincoln Memorial
was originally modeled on the Parthenon. And the architecture we see
outside is only the most visible expression of the values we share.
The earliest generations of our leaders who founded our
traditions and built our institutions, as the President said earlier
today, were deeply influenced by Greek thought, by the passion for
truth and justice that had been handed down from the ancients. They
studied history's first democracy in the original Greek. I wish I
were as well educated. Some were so moved by the struggle of modern
Greece for independence that they left home to join in that distant
fight for freedom. In 1824 Daniel Webster asked
on the floor of the House of Representatives, "Does not the land ring
from side to side with one common sentiment of sympathy for Greece?"
In this century, the relationship between our nations
deepened as we fought together in two world wars. Then the desire to
help preserve freedom in Greece moved President Truman to stand firm
against isolationism and for our postwar engagement abroad. His
actions led to the Marshall Plan, the establishment of NATO, and a
half century of unparalleled success for democracy. We stood
together in Korea, in the Gulf War. We continue to work shoulder-
to-shoulder today in the former Yugoslavia. Our alliance shows the
truth of the Greek proverb: Ou thniskei zeilos eleutherias; the
passion for freedom never dies.
Tonight we also thank Greece for the greatest of all
gifts it has given us -- wonderful Greek Americans. Our society has
been enriched beyond measure by them, whether an aria sung by Maria
Callas, films by Elia Kazan, the brilliant tennis of Pete Sampras, in
business, in the arts, in our public life. Greek Americans have
brought such energy and grace to the life of our nation, and we are
all profoundly grateful. In public life, we treasure men and women
like Senator Sarbanes and Senator Snowe, former Governor Dukakis and
former Senator Paul Tsongas. People who have shown a deep dedication
to serving the United States. And I know that all America is
grateful to the more than one million Greek Americans who have built
our communities, our businesses and our cities. Because of what they
have done, America is a stronger and a greater nation.
Ladies and gentlemen, let us raise a glass to the great
partnership between our nations, the heritage we share, and the
Greek-American community that is one of our greatest blessings. Zito
I ellada, and God bless America.
(A toast is offered.) (Applause.)
PRESIDENT STEPHANOPOULOS: Mr. President, Mrs. Clinton,
ladies and gentlemen.
I thank you most decidedly, Mr. President, Mrs. Clinton,
for the warm hospitality you extended to me during my State Visit to
Washington, D.C.
I wish to thank you all the more since in honoring my
person you undoubtedly express the feelings of the sincere friendship
and esteem that both you personally and the great American nation as
a whole feel towards the Greek people.
Ties of friendship and shared ideals between our two
peoples go back to more than a century, indeed, to the very
foundation of modern Greece. Soon after the start of our War of
Independence, committees of support were created throughout the
United States at the instigation of Edward Everett, while other great
Americans, such as John Adams, President James Monroe, Daniel Webster
and General Houston were outspoken in their support for the Greek
revolution.
Moreover, quite a few Americans, the first, Ben Jarvis,
did not hesitate to cross the Atlantic and came to Greece to fight
for the freedom of the Greek people, some never to return.
Later on, our two peoples were to fight side-by-side in
two world wars and at other critical junctures of world history. We
did so because we were united by our common ideas -- the principles
of freedom, democracy and the humanist values that were expressed for
the first time and with wondrous fullness in ancient Greece.
Speaking of the second world war, allow me, Mr.
President, to recall that in a repulsing fascist aggression, Greece
gave the allies their first victories in the common struggle for
freedom and democracy. It did so at the cost of tremendous suffering
as Greece mourned more than 400,000 dead out of a population of 7
million.
Having said that, I should also recall the assistance
that the United States offered to Greece in the aftermath of the
second world war in order to safeguard her freedom and to help
rebuilding her shattered economy. It is not only for their economic
strength and their technological and scientific leadership that
modern Greeks and I, myself, admire the great American nation and the
United States. We admire them even more for their faith and firm
commitment to the great universal ideals of freedom and democracy and
to the safeguarding of democratic institutions. It is this, more
than anything else, that has given them a leading role in our modern
world.
As we are waiting for the new century -- indeed, the new
millennium -- to begin, as we face new challenges in our perennial
quest for a more just, humane and prosperous planet, we know that our
two nations can count on each other to continue their long tradition
of cooperation. We know very well that, as in the past, our two
peoples will be able, in the future as well, to tap the same vast,
inexhaustible resources of goodwill, spiritual kinship in pursuit of
the realization of our common vision. In this, we shall be greatly
helped by the presence in your country, of a large number of
Americans of Greek descent who, while being loyal and devoted
citizens of their American fatherland, have not forgotten that they
have their roots in Greece.
Tomorrow, as I embark on a tour of American cities where
millions of these proud Americans of Greek descent live, work and
contribute to the greatness of this country, I shall take with me
strong, fond memories of this most gracious hospitality extended to
me and the honors bestowed upon my country. And I shall be able
confidently to stress to everybody that the traditional Greek
American friendship and cooperation are stronger than ever before.
Ladies and gentlemen, together with the expression of my
deep appreciation, I would like to ask you to raise your glass to the
health and personal happiness of the President of the United States
of America and Mrs. Clinton, to the wonderful Greek American
community, this living bond between our two countries and to the
continued progress, prosperity, and success of the American people.
(A toast is offered.) (Applause.)
END
8:38 P.M. EDT
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