U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE 95/09/29 DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE 95/09/29 DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
OFFICE OF THE SPOKESMAN
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Friday, September 29, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
[...]
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Assistant Secretary Holbrooke's Mtg. w/Izetbegovic,
Travel to Zagreb, Belgrade, Sofia, Sarajevo ............13-17
--Continuance of Peace Process; Ceasefire Issue; Peace
Conference: Dimensions, Agenda; Territorial Issues;
Supply of Gorazde ....................................14-15
Contact Mtgs. in Rome, Moscow Expected ...................14
Progress on Cessation of Hostilities .....................19
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #146
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1995, 1:02 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q Dick Holbrooke had a six-hour meeting today with President
Izetbegovic and his advisers. Dick said that the meeting was most
productive -- in fact, one of the most productive meetings that he has
had with the Bosnian Government in some time.
They discussed specifically the very great hope that the United
States has that there might be a cease-fire throughout Bosnia-
Herzegovina. They discussed the question of the Map and other
territorial issues that will be at the center of a peace conference.
They discussed constitutional principles and specifically some of
the issues that flow out of the agreement that was reached on Tuesday in
New York. They discussed United Nations implementation of the Sarajevo
agreement of earlier in September and specifically on that the very
strong hope that the United States has that more roads may be opened
tomorrow to civilian traffic into Sarajevo.
I understand that some members of Dick's delegation are now meeting
with United Nations officials to try to ensure that in fact that will
happen.
Dick is going to be going to Zagreb and Belgrade over the weekend,
Saturday and Sunday, for talks with President Tudjman and President
Milosevic. On Sunday evening he will travel to Sofia, to Bulgaria, for
discussions with the Bulgarian Government. That will extend it to
Monday morning.
On Monday, he will return to Sarajevo for further discussions with
the Bosnian Government. He has not made any specific travel plans
beyond Monday, but he is on a shuttle mission, so I wouldn't be
surprised to see him stay in the region.
He is there, and he has set out on this trip to pursue the
following issues and the following objectives. We want to continue the
U.S.-led initiative for peace. We had a very positive development this
week, I think thanks in part to the intervention of the United States at
several points on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday morning, led by Secretary
Christopher and Dick Holbrooke.
There is a momentum for peace. There is in sight at some point in
the future the convening of an international peace conference on Bosnia.
Specifically in order to drive towards that peace conference, Dick
Holbrooke will be pursuing the issue of cease-fire -- the issue that
Secretary Christopher believes very strongly should be entertained
seriously by all the parties.
Second, the territorial questions that will lie at the heart of the
peace conference, specifically 51/49, and what impact the recent
territorial changes have had on the thinking of the parties to the
conflict.
Third, the situation around Gorazde, whether or not it will be
possible -- we hope it will -- to open a secure road into Gorazde. I
understand that just a couple of days ago a U.N. convoy made it into
Gorazde with 100 metric tons of food. That was the first convoy into
Gorazde since August 23. So the supply of Gorazde for the winter is a
very important question.
Last and perhaps most importantly, in all of these discussions Dick
Holbrooke will be focusing on the central question: What will be the
dimensions and parameters of a peace conference. What will be the
agenda of a peace conference, and how can we work in the next couple of
weeks and perhaps beyond that to establish a firm foundation for a
conference so that it will have a prospect of success once it is
convened. These are all very important issues.
As he finishes, the next couple of days, of shuttling among these
capitals, he will keep the Contact Group closely informed of what he is
hearing and what he is thinking. I would expect that there will be a
Contact Group meeting in Rome before too long; and, as you know, we
would hope very much that some session might be arranged as well in
Moscow. Those are both firmly in our view as part of our attempt to
keep the Contact Group together and focused on this imperative of a
peace conference.
We've gone through a lot of different permutations on this issue
over the last month. This is a very important stage. We now have an
agreement on constitutional principles. In fact, we have an expanded
agreement on that. We have an agreement on the territorial basis of a
peace conference, but we don't have an agenda. We don't have any
definite parameters. We don't have a commitment to a cease-fire, which
is desirable but not necessary, before a peace conference unfolds. So
we've got to make more progress.
Rather than let the situation sit for a week or two, the Secretary
thought that Dick ought to go out and take advantage of the progress we
made this week to try to make more.
Q Diplomats are saying that you're trying to pull together a
peace conference in the next few weeks. Is that the kind of urgency
that you're feeling?
MR. BURNS: There's a real sense of urgency in our government -- I
think from the President and Secretary Christopher on down -- to move
fast to give this peace process and infusion of American energy and
creativity, which is being supplied, I think, in spades by our
leadership.
There is not a good sense right now tactically as to when we're
going to be in a position to suggest to the parties that a peace
conference should be set and should convene. We'd rather do it sooner
than later, but in the Balkans it's always very difficult to predict
progress.
I would just remind you of the difficulty that we had on Sunday,
Monday and Tuesday when both Secretary Christopher and Dick Holbrooke
were on the phone at unusual hours with Sarajevo and Belgrade and Zagreb
to try to put back together what we thought we had established.
Frankly, it was harder than we thought to get the agreement on the
expanded constitutional principles, and so that leads us to believe that
there's hard sledding ahead, and Dick, I think, in his initial public
comments this morning in effect said that.
Q Why did he think it was one of the most productive meetings
he's had in some time with Izetbegovic?
MR. BURNS: Because he felt that the quality of the discussion on
these specific issues that I mentioned -- on the constitutional
principles, on the Map, on cease-fire, and on U.N. implementation -- was
very good. The spirit of cooperation was good. I think he sensed a
willingness to move forward on the part of the Bosnian Government.
But now, of course, he's got to go onto Belgrade and Zagreb, and
then back to Sarajevo. We don't want to declare a victory on the basis
of this. I just wanted to note that he felt it was a most positive and
productive meeting.
Q On what subjects did he sense new flexibility on the part of
the Muslims that caused him to think it was more productive than
previous meetings?
MR. BURNS: Let me just, David, rest on the fact that he says
"productive" and specifically on the issues that I mentioned. What I
cannot do, obviously, is go into a level of detail that would impair his
ability to negotiate privately.
Q You want all of us to go out there and write about the most
productive meeting since whenever. I had the same question as David
did, and you're not answering them, but you did mention three issues.
You got a little closer to explaining what was so productive.
What was productive about the 51/49 split? Did they agree to take
less?
MR. BURNS: We have an agreement here that we're not going to get
into the specifics of any of these issues as we have not over the past
month.
Q I understand. But when you were able to use -- a very recent
and big example -- when you were able to get the Bosnian Serbs or to get
Milosevic to say the siege would be lifted, the guns would be pulled
back, you were delighted -- the State Department was delighted -- to
announce it and for good reason, because it's impetus to the other
parties.
If you had gotten something out of Izetbegovic, I think State would
want to publicize it as a means of moving the other parties. It isn't
like we're intruding. State does make announcements when one of the
parties or another makes a major concession.
Did the Bosnian Government make a major concession that you could
tell us about?
MR. BURNS: They did not make a major concession that I can tell
you about.
Q The part about the discussion is a nice thing, but --
MR. BURNS: If we had made the type of progress today that have
been made in the past, if a fundamentally important step were taken,
then we would announce it today. We're talking about the quality of the
discussion.
The quality of the discussion last weekend was at times difficult
and very challenging. It took us many, many more hours to get to
Tuesday afternoon than we had suspected it would -- as recently as
Sunday morning.
The quality of discussion today was quite good. We wanted to note
that publicly. It's a good start to his mission but there was no
significant step taken today that can be announced as tangible, concrete
progress.
Q There's no specific step taken that you can announce, or
there was no specific step taken? (Laughter) I hate to keep harping on
it. You're moving awfully -- As Margaret Tutweiler used to say, "cute
by half."
Q Go ahead, Sid, harp on it.
MR. BURNS: Margaret used to say that?
Q That's what she used to say.
MR. BURNS: I meant to say exactly what I said. I really can't
interpret it any better. Our position is so well known on this one. I
can't really help you out on this one.
Q The Senate is now debating the State, Commerce, Justice
appropriations bill. We've heard at length from Department officials
about how these budget numbers would impair, in the Administration's
belief, its ability to conduct foreign policy.
Why should ordinary Americans care about this? If an American
travels abroad, will their services be affected in some way? Could you
give us some specific examples as to why a gentleman in Iowa should give
a damn?
MR. BURNS: I'd be glad to. This is the kind of question where I
can give concrete examples. (Laughter) You have to go? You don't want
to hear the answer?
Q This is going to be along answer.
MR. BURNS: This is a very important issue, Barry. I'm glad that
David has asked this question. The fact is that one of the fundamental
responsibilities of American embassies and consulates is to serve the
American public and in countless ways.
Last year, our embassies and consulates performed 1.7 million
services for American citizens. By that I mean, everything from birth
to death: Issuing birth certificates; issuing death certificates;
rescuing Americans who are in trouble, as the four Americans were who
survived the balloon incidents in Belarus a couple of days ago; helping
American mothers who have child custody problems; helping Americans who
are incarcerated; advising them of their legal rights when they're
incarcerated, when their imprisoned in foreign countries; helping to get
them legal assistance.
A lot of American citizens who are tourists, in places like
Bordeaux, in Florence, find themselves in trouble, find themselves ill
or in prison because they didn't understand the legal system or they
came crosswise with the system, and the only people they can turn to for
help are American diplomats. So it's critically important to the
average American -- and millions of Americans travel overseas every year
-- that they have Americans who can help them when they get into
trouble. It happens all the time. I can even go on if you'd like.
Q I'm sure you could. But this is general discussion. The
whole government's budget is being cut. Why is this more important than
something else?
MR. BURNS: First of all, the whole government's budget is not
being cut. Some Cabinet agencies are receiving significant increases in
their budget beyond what they asked for -- most notably the Pentagon.
The State Department budget is different. We don't have tanks and
planes. We don't have hardware that can be cut. We have people; the
people who help American citizens overseas. If 23 percent of our budget
is going to be cut, as is threatened by Senator Gramm, then we have to
cut into people. We have to cut into our ability to put people in
places like Bordeaux and Florence and other major cities where Americans
travel. That will limit the ability of the United States Government to
help people overseas, and we don't want to do that. Because since the
beginning of the country, since the time we first had diplomatic
missions overseas, the fundamental purpose of embassies is to serve
American citizens when they're in trouble as well as relating to foreign
governments. That's a service and a responsibility that the State
Department takes very, very seriously.
Q Nick, both you and the Secretary have emphasized the State
Department part of this overseas spending. Could the arms control
agency or the aid agency survive? By our reckoning, it's a 21 percent
cut. Not to quibble -- 21, 23. Should the Senate, which has taken it
up already today, but may not finish today, do this, would those two
agencies be able to survive?
MR. BURNS: State Department, AID, ACDA, and USIA would all suffer
from budget cuts. All of them have very important responsibilities that
they carry out, and we think that all of them should be able to continue
those operations.
Bill.
Q Nick, Secretary of Defense Perry, on Monday, stated that
continued hostilities in Bosnia would erode -- it was a danger to the
peace process there. Can you report progress on putting the pressure by
all sides -- Russia, U.S., NATO, the U.N. -- to bring about this
cessation of hostilities?
MR. BURNS: There's been very little progress towards the cessation
of hostilities. In fact, I think, after a lull last week, the fighting
seems to have picked up over the last couple of days, specifically, in
Western and Central Bosnia. I can't report any progress on that, but I
think you know our position, and that is that the fighting should stop
and that the parties should turn towards peace.
Q Does the State Department agree with Secretary Perry's
assessment that hostilities erode the process or the prospects?
MR. BURNS: They certainly have a direct effect on the political
process -- a directly negative effect in most cases. That's one of the
reasons why we think that the fighting should stop. It should also stop
because none of these countries is going to be able to achieve a
military solution to this conflict. They've been unable to do that for
four years. They will not succeed now. Sooner or later they've got to
turn towards negotiations.
[...]
(Press briefing concluded at 1:46 p.m.)
END
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