U.S. Department of State 95/10/25 Daily Press Briefing
From: hristu@arcadia.harvard.edu (Dimitrios Hristu)
Subject: U.S. Department of State 95/10/25 Daily Press Briefing
Office of the Spokesman
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Wednesday, October 25, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
[...]
CYPRUS
Membership in the European Union ..........................16
[...]
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Human Rights Abuses in Banja Luka/A/S Shattuck's Meeting.
with President Milosevic ................................25-29
--Access of International Organizations/Western Press .....26,27,29
--A/S Holbrooke's Letter to Milosevic .....................27
--Activities of the War Crimes Tribunal ...................28,33
--Role of Serbian President in Human Rights Abuses ........28-29
--Access to Witnesses of Human Rights Abuses ..............32-33
Representation of Bosnian Serbs at Proximity Peace Talks ..30
--Schedule for Talks ......................................33-39
Russia's Role in Peace Implementation .....................31-32
Representation of Croatia at Proximity Peace Talks ........40
Visa for President Milosevic ..............................42-43
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #159
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1995, 1:06 P. M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q Early in the morning, the Foreign Minister of Cyprus had a
meeting with Under Secretary Tarnoff here at the State Department.
Immediately after the meeting, the Foreign Minister made a statement in
which he said that the solution to the Cyprus problem is not a
prerequisite for the acceptance of Cyprus in the European Union as a
member.
Do you have any comment on that? Does the U. S. agree or disagree
with this position?
MR. BURNS: The U. S. position is that we would support Cyprus's
candidacy for membership in the European Union.
Q The entire island or part of Cyprus?
MR. BURNS: Well, Cyprus is a bizonal community.
[...]
Q Before I came in here, there was a little snippet on the
wires from the AFP, quoting Assistant Secretary Shattuck on the Bosnian
Serbs reopening detention camps near Banja Luka. Can you give us more -
- do you have more on that?
MR. BURNS: It's something that we are looking into today. To
answer your question, let me just review, for those of you who aren't
aware, that Secretary Christopher asked Assistant Secretary John
Shattuck over last weekend to travel to the region to look personally
into these allegations of human rights atrocities in Banja Luka.
He met with Mr. Milosevic yesterday in Serbia, in Belgrade, and had
a long meeting with him. Mr. Shattuck gave President Milosevic a
detailed personal account of his interview of the refugees whom he
encountered at Zenica last week.
He gave him on behalf of the Red Cross and the UNHCR a list of 1200
people who we believe are missing as a result of the Bosnian Serb
military activities in Banja Luka. These are family members of people
who have been kicked out of their homes in Banja Luka by the Bosnian
Serbs. These are Muslems and Croats who have made their way to Zenica
and who have missing family members from some of the terrible events
that took place over the last three weeks in Banja Luka. So that list
was handed over.
Mr. Shattuck requested that the United Nations and the
international community and the Red Cross be given direct and immediate
access to the sites in Sanski Most, in Banja Luka and in Srebrenica and
Zepa from the past nefarious activities of the Bosnian Serb military
leadership, where we suspect that there were human rights abuses.
In a speech last night on Serbian television, Mr. Milosevic said he
had met with Mr. Shattuck, that he had received the direct request of
the United States Government, and that he would attempt to comply with
it. We heard from the Serbian Government this morning -- in fact, from
the Serbian Foreign Minister, Mr. Milutinovich -- that international
organizations will be given access within the next day or two to Banja
Luka and specifically to those areas where the refugees in Zenica say
the human rights abuses occurred. This is a positive development.
The words have been very good and welcome out of Belgrade, but we
are going to remain interested in positive deeds as well as words. What
I mean by that is that we hope very much that we will be given full
access -- we, meaning the United Nations, the International Committee of
the Red Cross, the United States Government and other interested
governments -- full access to these sites, unfettered access to these
sites, and access to any individuals who may have additional information
on the terrible events that we believe took place in Banja Luka.
So that is some of the good news in a very bleak situation that
came out of Assistant Secretary Shattuck's trip. He will remain in the
region. He will remain in the region to lead the Administration's
efforts to look into these incidents personally. He is working very
tightly, together with the United Nations and the International
Committee of the Red Cross as part of this effort.
This was the third trip that he's made to the region in the last
four weeks, which I think demonstrates quite clearly the fact that we in
this government believe that whoever perpetrated these crimes ought to
be brought to justice. This is the beginning of that effort.
Q You told us a few weeks ago about the letter that Holbrooke
wrote Milosevic on this issue. A lot of the charges that have been
made, a lot of crimes that were alleged to have been committed, in fact,
apparently happened even after that communication took place. What was
the response to that letter? In the meantime, was the matter just
dropped, or what?
MR. BURNS: The letter, I think, was sent last week, Tom -- the
letter that Dick Holbrooke sent. But even before that letter was sent,
our Charge in Belgrade, Rudy Perina, had both spoken with Milosevic and
Milutinovic on the phone and gone in to see Milosevic.
We have heard consistently from President Milosevic and his
colleagues in the Serbian Government that they are opposed to summary
executions and murders and human rights brutalities against Muslims and
Croats; that they would assist the international community in trying to
locate the people who committed them. Those are positive words. But as
I said before, words are not really sufficient in a situation like this;
only deeds are.
We are now beginning to see, at least, the appearance of action on
some of those words. We now have a statement out of the Serbian
Government just this morning that they will give the international
community access.
By the way, John Shattuck asked for access by the Western press as
well. He felt, and we do feel, it's very important that cameras go into
Banja Luka and that print reporters -- people who know the area and are
expert in the area -- go into Banja Luka, people who will recognize, we
fear, some of the same signs of Bosnian Serb brutality as you and others
saw in 1991 and 1992.
We need now to see a fulfillment of the commitments that were made
on Serbian television last night and directly to Mr. Shattuck and prior
to that, to Mr. Holbrooke. We're counting on the Serbian Government now
to give us every assistance that we're going to need -- we in the
international community -- to pursue these allegations of brutality.
Q Nick, is there a selective use of Serbia's influence here?
You make the request to open up these areas to outside inspection and
they snap their fingers and say, it's going to be done. This follows
two weeks of appealing to them to use their influence to stop the
slaughter and they didn't do it.
MR. BURNS: I'm not here as an apologist for the Serbian
Government. I am here as one who has said pretty consistently
throughout this briefing in the last couple of weeks that deeds are a
lot more important than promises and words. I've already said that we
don't believe that there have been sufficient number of deeds to back up
these words, but we may be beginning to see some action on the part of
the Serbian Government.
We will remain skeptical about everything that we're told about
these events by the Bosnian Serb leadership, certainly, until we have a
chance to go in with our own eyes to verify some of these terrible
stories that were told to Mr. Shattuck last week by the refugees in
Zenica. We're going to keep at it because it is in the interest of the
international community to strengthen the War Crimes Tribunal.
I should also say that as part of the discussion yesterday in
Belgrade, Mr. Shattuck gave President Milosevic a very detailed
description of the activities of the War Crimes Tribunal; the fact that
a number of Bosnian Serbs have been indicted, including the two leaders
of the Bosnian Serb community, Mr. Karadzic and Mr. Mladic, and a
description of how the information that we have developed over the last
two weeks or so concerning the situation in Banja Luka will be helpful
to the War Crimes Tribunal. We thought that was a very important part
of that discussion.
Barry.
Q Three thousand Muslim draft-aged men disappeared and were
feared killed by the Bosnian Serbs. You -- the State Department -- was
asked if there was a connection to Milosevic. There was no evidence at
that point.
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q There's been a lot of contact with Milosevic now -- Shattuck
and others. At this point, you're looking to the future and saying,
he's going to use his influence. These people are dead.
Can you now say whether there is any connection between those
marauding bands of killers and the President of Serbia?
MR. BURNS: Barry, we have believed for a very long time that the
Serbian Government, including Mr. Milosevic, have influence, obviously,
on the Bosnian Serb community, in general, and we believe in the Bosnian
Serb military.
I am not aware of any direct connection between President Milosevic
and these events. I choose those words very carefully. Those are the
same words I used in weeks past.
I am not aware of any information inside this government that I
have seen or that anyone else has told me about that would link him
personally to these events.
Given the situation, we are willing to pursue these leads wherever
they may lead. That's always been our position, and that, in fact, is
part of John Shattuck's mandate as he travels through the region. He's
currently in Zagreb.
Q (Inaudible) Milosevic has protected him consistently since he
committed crimes in '91 in Croatia. He seems to be the one that was
responsible for this. Isn't that a connection?
MR. BURNS: We know something about Arkan's activities both in
prior years and also, we think, about his activities over the last
couple of weeks. He's a criminal. He runs a rogue paramilitary group.
He is a Serbian. He does have a residence in Belgrade.
As to his personal relationship, Tom, with President Milosevic, I
don't know. It's a question that I'm quite willing to be asked every
day. It's a question that we're willing to look into, but I don't know
anything about his personal relationship with Milosevic.
Q Nick, did the Serbian Foreign Minister also say that the
Western press would be given access to those areas, or just the
international relief organizations?
MR. BURNS: I know that John Shattuck gave a press conference just
in the last two hours in Zagreb. I've not seen a transcript of that. I
had two conversations with him this morning. It was not clear at that
time just who would be given access. We think now it will definitely be
the United Nations and the ICRC. I don't know if the Serb and the
Bosnian Serb authorities will give -- in this case, the Bosnian Serb
authorities -- will give the press access. We have requested that. We
will continue to request it. We'd like to see it happen.
We think it would be a positive development to have independent
people, objective people, journalists, investigate the situation for
themselves.
Q I thought you said it was someone in Washington who spoke to
Milutinovic, but it was Shattuck?
MR. BURNS: No. It was John Shattuck who spoke to Milutinovic. I
don't know if I misspoke or not, but it was John Shattuck who spoke to
him.
Q Another issue on --
MR. BURNS: John was in Belgrade, and he met with Milosevic and
Milutinovic and then had subsequent phone conversations with
Milutinovic.
Q Another issue on Milosevic.
MR. BURNS: Let's just go here to Bill.
Q If you've got one on the Tribunal, go ahead.
MR. BURNS: Why don't we just go ahead with your question.
Q Concerning Milosevic and the meetings with Secretary
Christopher in New York, Nick, there was the issue last week, reports
that basically the Bosnian Serbs would withdraw from the peace talks, or
not participate in the peace talks unless Russian or other friendly
troops were involved in the PIF force.
My first question to you, did this turn out to be true? Was this
coming from Milosevic and the representatives of the Bosnian Serbs, this
particular demand?
MR. BURNS: I don't believe that that demand has been made to Dick
Holbrooke or to Secretary Christopher or anybody else involved in the
peace effort. I've never heard of it.
The Bosnian Serbs and the Serbs will be in Dayton, Ohio, late on
the 31st to convene the talks with us on November 1. I'm just not aware
of this demand.
Q Then, may I ask, to follow up --
MR. BURNS: Perhaps they're saying things publicly but they're not
being said to us privately. It's more important what they say
privately, of course.
Q Okay. It's very important to know. And then the summit
assignment that was given by the two Presidents to Perry and Grachev to
get it together so the Russians could participate was then not a
response to Bosnian Serb threats --
MR. BURNS: Not at all. The facts are that the United States and
our NATO allies are planning to be the core of a peace implementation
group -- military group -- after a peace agreement is secured.
We would very much like Russia to be part of the effort. Russia,
of course, will not place its troops under NATO command. Russia will
not be as tightly integrated with our forces, for instance, as will,
say, Canadian and French and British forces. But we think there is a
role for the Russians. President Clinton and President Yeltsin, I
think, agreed on that. Now it's up to Secretary Perry and General
Grachev, when they meet here tomorrow, to get into this issue very
deeply, as they've already begun to do. We hope to produce a solution
to this.
Q If a solution isn't produced -- just a minute, Barry, please
-
- if a solution isn't produced, this is not then viewed as a deal-
breaker or something that's going to a priori, negate the --
MR. BURNS: No. We've never been told by the Bosnian Serbs that
this is a concern that will impede their participation in the talks or
their participation in the solution to these problems.
Q Nick, would there be a role for a military force as a non-
combatant sort of role in a peace implementation force -- civil
engineering types of things? How important would that be to --
MR. BURNS: For the Russians? For the Russian Government?
Q Right.
MR. BURNS: That's certainly along the lines of what we've been
discussing with the Russian Government -- perhaps a role having to do
with reconstruction, with engineering, with mine-clearing, that kind of
thing. That kind of role was discussed at Hyde Park. It will be
discussed when Secretary Perry and General Grachev get together.
David.
Q Before we get off the Russians, you may have seen a Reuters
story out of Brussels that purported to know what's going to happen, and
said that a group of 2,000 crack troops would be sent and would be under
some sort of a tactical Russian command but under the overall umbrella
of the NATO commander, much along the lines of what the French have done
in the past. Any accuracy in that report?
MR. BURNS: None, (Laughter) in the sense that President Clinton
and President Yeltsin came out and spoke to you on Monday afternoon and
said they did not have such an agreement. I know that there has been no
follow-up since then at the senior level. That won't happen until the
two Defense Ministers get together. So there's no truth to that report.
I saw the same report you did and was amused by it.
Q A follow-up on the previous question. You mentioned that Mr.
Shattuck asked, among other things, for access to individuals who might
know more about what happened around Banja Luka.
MR. BURNS: That's right.
Q Do those individuals include Arkan?
MR. BURNS: I think that the international War Crimes Tribunal and
anyone interested in human rights would appreciate the opportunity to
talk to him.
Q (Inaudible) made available?
MR. BURNS: I don't believe that John Shattuck put forward a list
of people with whom he wanted to talk. But, certainly, when the
international community goes to Banja Luka, when the Red Cross and the
U.N. does, they'll need to talk to people who we believe, or who local
authorities believe, may have had either a role or some knowledge of
these events.
These events were not carried out in secret. There have to be
many, many people who either were a party to this or perhaps have some
limited knowledge that could be helpful in piecing together the larger
picture of what happened. That's of interest to us.
Q If I missed it, I apologize. Did Milosevic convey any sense
that he would cooperate in giving access to relevant people?
MR. BURNS: I do know that he has specifically now said that he
agrees the international community should have access, and that the
Serbian Government will be helpful in this process through its influence
with the Bosnian Serb authorities inside Bosnia.
I don't know if he had made any specific commitment that the United
Nations will be able to question specific people. I just don't know.
Q You mean access to sites, not individuals?
MR. BURNS: Sites -- yes, that's right.
Q What about individuals?
MR. BURNS: I don't know if he has made any specific commitments
about access to individuals. He has made a specific commitment about
sites..
Q The international War Crimes Tribunal, earlier I think there
were many problems -- they didn't meet, they didn't have funding to
operate and everything. Are they functioning now normally and do they
have a headquarters? I know that they were building a headquarters.
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q How is it functioning now? Did they meet?
MR. BURNS: The Tribunal is functioning in The Hague. It's headed
by Judge Richard Goldstone, a South African jurist is highly respected.
It has an international staff.
The United States has provided some of the staff members from the
U.S. Government. We've also provided several million dollars in
financial assistance. We have an obligation -- all of us -- to keep
this organization well funded so that it can do its business.
Q Nick, what can you tell us about the pre-Dayton -- the summit
meeting that's been arranged with Boris Yeltsin? What's the purpose of
it? How does it advance the Dayton talks?
MR. BURNS: Let me just take you through, I think, what will happen
in the next couple of days leading up to that meeting and the November 1
meeting.
First, the Secretary is going to be having an all-day discussion
tomorrow with the Bosnian peace team and a number of his closest
advisors at a U.S. Government facility outside of Washington. He wanted
to get everybody in one room together before he, the Secretary, leaves
for Amman and Dick Holbrooke and his peace team get into the final days
of preparation for the peace talks.
The Secretary will review our diplomatic agenda for the talks --
both our strategy and our tactics; the proposals we may be making to the
parties once these talks convene -- to discuss some of the press and
logistical arrangements for the Wright-Patterson talks, and also to talk
about how we can use our contacts around the world and our alliance with
our Contact Group friends and colleagues to further the peace talks, how
we'll work with them -- the Russian Government, the French, British, and
German Governments -- throughout the talks.
So it's going to be a full day of discussions tomorrow.
The Secretary then will go off to Amman on Saturday morning. He'll
be returning on Monday evening. During that time, Dick Holbrooke and
his diplomatic team will be working through the weekend with all the
members of the Contact Group to prepare for the talks.
On Monday, you all will be given access to Wright-Patterson. The
State Department will be setting up a tour of the facilities for anybody
in the media who is interested in going. Cameras are welcome. This is
your opportunity to take some footage of the conference hall and the
other places where these meetings will take place.
On Tuesday, President Yeltsin has invited Presidents Izetbegovic,
Tudjman, and Milosevic to Moscow for a meeting which we would expect
would last a couple of hours.
The purpose of the meeting, as described by the Russian Government
this morning, is for President Yeltsin to give his very strong personal
support to the talks at Dayton and to the effort to make peace; to
indicate that the United States and Russia are closely engaged together
in this effort; and for President Yeltsin to give some of his personal
views to the three Presidents so that we might enforce some momentum in
the peace process as these talks are convened.
The three leaders will fly from Moscow to Washington on the 31st.
I believe they'll be arriving in Dayton late on the 31st. You'll have
an opportunity -- at least those of you from television -- to view and
film the arrival at the airports.
Then on Wednesday morning, November 1, the Secretary will fly from
Washington to Dayton. He will convene the talks, meaning he will likely
have meetings with the three Presidents -- probably individual meetings.
Then he will convene a group meeting of the three Presidents, their
delegations, and the other delegations -- Russia and the Contact Group
partners who will be present. That is an open media event. All of you
are welcome to be there. There will be public remarks. They'll be
quite extensive remarks, I think, by the Secretary and others.
After that, I know it's the Secretary's strong view, Dick
Holbrooke's strong view, that then the negotiators should retreat into
privacy.
What we would expect is for we in the State Department -- in fact,
specifically me, here -- to keep you apprised on a daily basis of what
is happening inside the military base. I'll be speaking with Dick
Holbrooke many times a day.
From time to time it may be possible for Dick or Secretary
Christopher to make public statements. But I think that these
negotiations will be carried out pretty much in private. The Secretary
intends from time to time to visit Dayton to participate in the talks.
As Dick Holbrooke told you a couple of weeks ago when he was here,
the objective here is to keep the parties there until they produce,
themselves, a peace agreement which would be ready then to be signed at
Paris when the French host the peace conference. Those are the
objectives and some of the things that we're working on.
Q (Inaudible) just ask why it was necessary that they start off
in Moscow? Will the three of them meet Boris Yeltsin together? In
other words, will it be a group of four together in one room?
MR. BURNS: The purpose of these talks, as the Russians intend
them, is to have a group meeting -- President Yeltsin and the three
Presidents. This was an issue that President Clinton and President
Yeltsin discussed at Hyde Park the other day.
President Clinton thought it was an excellent idea when President
Yeltsin raised it with him. President Clinton encouraged President
Izetbegovic and President Tudjman to attend; and last night Dick
Holbrooke had a phone conversation with Mr. Milosevic, and we encouraged
him to attend.
We think it's a positive development because we think it
strengthens the peace process, it strengthens international unity and
resolve on the eve of the Dayton peace talks, and it makes clear to all
the parties involved -- all three of them and their supporters
everywhere -- that the United States and Russia are together; that we
cannot be played off against each other; that we not only have the same
strategy for these diplomatic negotiations, we have the same tactics;
and that Russia fully supports the fact that these proximity peace talks
will be taking place here in the United States, and that Russia will be
an active participant, in fact a co-sponsor of those talks.
So we thought it was actually an important opportunity to grab hold
of when it was suggested to us by the Russian Government.
Q Will this be the first time these three have been together in
a room?
MR. BURNS: I don't know the answer to that question. I can check.
It's an interesting question that we probably ought to be able to
answer. Betsy's shaking her head, but --
Q I don't think so. I think they've met together in Geneva.
It may have been a couple of years.
MR. BURNS: Let us check that and try to tell you the last time
they met, if in fact they did meet.
Q What time on Wednesday is the main event?
MR. BURNS: It hasn't been scheduled yet, but early enough in the
day that everyone will have an opportunity to cover the event and deal
with it in terms of your deadlines. Certainly, we've got that in mind.
Q Nick, is the Secretary considering taking press along with
him on his plane?
MR. BURNS: That's an option that we are looking into. It's
something, in fact, that we'll be making a decision on very shortly, and
we'll let you know as soon as we can on that.
Q And on Wednesday will there be briefings from Dayton or will
the briefings you're referring to be here in Washington?
MR. BURNS: I'm glad you asked the question, because that's an
important aspect of this.
We're not going to be establishing a press center in Dayton. There
will be people on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base -- a few members of my
staff, a few members of the European Bureau, along with some of the
Public Affairs staff from the base -- who will be present on a daily
basis to answer questions.
But we're not going to establish a media center. There will be no
briefings from Dayton. None of the participants will brief. Dick
Holbrooke will not be briefing, and our intention is that I will be
briefing here in Washington through the briefing at one o'clock. I will
have been in touch with Dick Holbrooke, he and I hope a couple of times
during the morning, so that I can give you his best sense of what is
happening in all of its dimensions.
I imagine some days we'll have relatively little to say. Other
days we might have quite a lot to say. All of the heads of state who
will be present and all of the delegation heads from France, Britain,
Germany and Russia have pledged along with us that they will not make
themselves available to the media. This is not to be tight-fisted. It
is simply to try to enhance the prospects that these negotiations will
succeed.
I think all of us agree -- all the participants agree -- that the
chances for the talks going more smoothly are enhanced if there isn't a
requirement for them to posture, frankly, on television or on radio, and
there isn't a requirement for them to think at the end of every meeting,
"Oh, what are we going to say to the press now?"
They're going to be negotiating much as they did at Camp David,
without access to the media. But we understand that it's our obligation
and specifically my obligation to keep you as well informed as we can.
I want to tell you I take that obligation very seriously, and we'll try
our very best. But we really think this is the best way to conduct
these talks.
Q Nick, what about a press center for the day that the talks
open? Will there be some sort of --
MR. BURNS: I think for the day before, when I think a lot of the
networks will be there to film the arrival of these three heads of state
and for the day that Secretary Christopher is there with them, we will
have enough people down there to support you and to help you do your
job. Whether it's a formal media center or whether it's putting enough
people on the job to make sure that everything runs efficiently, we'll
get that job done.
Beyond that, the media center is really right here in the State
Department after that day.
Q We need to know specifics about that for planning purposes.
MR. BURNS: Right. And I've agreed to meet some of your colleagues
at 4:15 this afternoon to talk specifically about the media's
requirements, and any of you in fact are welcome to come up to my office
for that meeting. I'll be meeting with the leadership of the State
Department Correspondents' Association. But, if you have special needs,
you can either come to the meeting or let me know by telephone or after
the briefing what you think they are.
I think we have a pretty good sense of what the network
requirements are, radio and also print. I think we're going to try our
very best to help you cover the story. It's a story that we would like
to see covered, and we will try to provide you, as best we can, in a
very limited way with the information that we have. There won't be
total silence. We'll have something to say every day.
Q "Limited" is the word, right? (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: Some day we'll say they met for three hours and they
wore blue suits, and it was a good meeting; and other days we'll have a
lot more than that to say.
Q Nick, so just to recap the highlights. Monday is a media
tour?
MR. BURNS: Monday is a media tour.
Q Tuesday, access for arrivals of the three principals and any
other delegations?
MR. BURNS: At the airport.
Q At the airport.
MR. BURNS: At the airport, not on the base.
Q At the airport, not at the base?
MR. BURNS: Right. Because they'll be arriving -- they'll be
greeted at the airport by Assistant Secretary Holbrooke.
Q (Multiple questions)
Q It's an Air Force base.
MR. BURNS: Yes, on the landing strip but not inside the facility.
You see, we have essentially taken part of the base for the meeting and
housing for their compound, and their arrival is not at that part of the
base but a different part of the base.
Q And on Wednesday, the big opening.
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q Are there going to be statements or just shooting arrivals on
Tuesday?
MR. BURNS: I don't know yet. I'll get back to you on that.
Q Does the pledge of silence apply to the arrival, in other
words?
MR. BURNS: I don't know if we'll restrict them to that. We'll
just have to see what they're interested in doing.
Q (Inaudible) sizes of the delegations yet?
MR. BURNS: We are negotiating that issue with the delegations.
There are a finite number of rooms available in that very spacious base.
We can't take several thousand participants. We were hoping for about
200 from nine delegations. They will all be housed there. They'll all
have their specific housing areas, which I think is convenient for them.
There are dining facilities. There's a meeting hall. In fact, there
are several meetings places. There's one big meeting hall that we'll
take you through next Monday and show you.
Q These Presidents are going to have to continue to run
countries from Dayton.
MR. BURNS: That's right. And there will be communications
facilities available to them.
Q Are some of them bringing them their own?
MR. BURNS: I assume that some of them will be bringing their own,
yes, but I don't know specifically what that means. I can tell you that
it was pretty clear from President Tudjman after the meeting with
President Clinton yesterday that he will not be participating throughout
the length of this conference; that he will be participating for the
first couple of days, and then I think he intends to go back to Zagreb.
He may or may not come back. His delegation will stay and his Foreign
Minister -- Minister Granic -- will represent the delegation.
This is not surprising -- I think Dick Holbrooke mentioned this a
couple of weeks ago -- because many of the issues, of course, have an
impact on Croatia -- the Eastern Slavonia issue -- but not all of them;
but all of the issues have an impact on Bosnia and Serbia and the
Bosnian Serb representatives. So we would expect that Mr. Milosevic and
Dr. Izetbegovic will be there for the length of these proceedings.
Q Didn't Secretary Christopher last week say something to the
effect that Croatia is the biggest question mark in the whole Yugoslav
conflict now, over in the Senate Foreign Relations?
MR. BURNS: I don't remember that specific comment, but I'll be
glad to maybe take -- if you want to take another tack at it.
Q I don't remember the exact words either, but there was -- he
did make a statement saying that -- sort of focusing on Croatia as being
potentially a problematic player in this process.
MR. BURNS: We very much would encourage Croatia to look upon these
proximity peace talks as the avenue and channel for resolving the
Eastern Slavonia problem. Some of the statements that we saw last week
and even in recent days from the Croatian Government are not at all
encouraging, and we've let them know that personally. President Clinton
raised this personally with Tudjman yesterday, that there is no excuse
for using force to resolve the problem in Eastern Slavonia. I'm not
quoting him. I'm just giving you a figurative sense of what was said --
that there's a negotiating channel for it in these proximity peace
talks, and we think an agreement can be reached.
So we think these statements out of Zagreb are a little bit
discordant, and we are not pleased by them, and we've made that known
directly to the Croatian Government.
Q Nick, doesn't this cast a cloud when Tudjman would say, well,
if it doesn't succeed in Dayton, that we're going to take military
action in Slavonia.
MR. BURNS: I think he ought to try very hard, along with the
Serbs, to make it succeed at Dayton. I don't think it's a cloud. I
think we're hearing a lot of things in the days running up to these
negotiations for public effect. A lot of things are being said that we
don't think really are an accurate description of the private positions
of these countries.
Q (Inaudible)
Q I'm sorry -- give me a chance.
MR. BURNS: I'll be glad to give you a chance.
Q Do you have any comment on the North Korean agent
infiltration of South Korea?
MR. BURNS: North Korean -- excuse me?
Q Agent infiltration of South Korea?
MR. BURNS: Yes. I'm looking for the right -- yes.
Q I think there's a lot more on Bosnia.
MR. BURNS: Well, I would just like to answer this question. This
gentleman has been waiting very patiently. I'll be glad to go back to
your question.
We have seen reports in the press that, following a shoot-out with
South Korean police and soldiers, a man identified as a North Korean
infiltrator has been captured. The circumstances of this incident are
not clear and we are now seeking additional information on it.
The infiltration of agents into the Republic of Korea is a
provocative action not in keeping with North Korea's stated desire to
reduce tensions with the Republic of Korea. That's a fairly clear
statement about our views on this particular incident.
Q (Inaudible) that he seems to have gotten so far south?
MR. BURNS: Excuse me, Betsy. I didn't hear the first part?
Q How concerned are we that this man was able to get so far
south?
MR. BURNS: Well, again, I understand from our Embassy in Seoul
that the circumstances surrounding this man's appearance are not clear
to us, and we are now seeking further information from the South Korean
Government on this incident.
We clearly do not believe this is a -- this kind of act is helpful,
and it is provocative, and we are against it, obviously.
Q Authoritative reports say that the relations between North
and South Korea are deteriorating. Could you comment on that?
MR. BURNS: We are a strong ally of the Republic of Korea, South
Korea. We stand by the Republic of Korea. We have a security
commitment. We have U. S. forces, and we are doing everything we can to
help the tensions be reduced between North and South, and doing
everything we can to keep the agreed framework in place, and it is in
place.
Yes?
Q Nick, can we go to --
MR. BURNS: Yes. Let me just go back here now.
Q A simple one. What is the latest about Mr. Milosevic's entry
visa? Would it be a kind of restricted, so-called Fidel Castro visa, or
a regular entry visa?
MR. BURNS: I'm not sure we are going to have to study this
application quite as seriously as we studied the Castro visa
application, which was quite complicated.
But I understand that President Milosevic has not yet applied for a
visa. I would expect that he will be doing so in the next couple of
days because he has got to travel next Tuesday to the United States.
Once the application has been received, we will issue a visa to
facilitate his travel to Dayton, Ohio. As Secretary Christopher said on
television on Sunday when he made himself available to the American
press corps and to the American people -- and he also made himself
available after that press appearance, by the way, once again to the
wires -- after speaking out to members of the press and sharing views
with them and taking questions, he said that there was only one reason
for President Milosevic to come to the United States, and that was to go
to Dayton, Ohio, to participate in these talks.
So of course we are going to give him a visa. There has been some
talk by some people here in Washington that we shouldn't give him a
visa. Well, the surest way to torpedo the peace process is to not allow
the person who is going to be negotiating on behalf of one of the
parties to come to the United States.
So we have every reason to give him a visa and we will do so, and
we expect that he will go directly to Dayton, Ohio, and stay there until
peace is made.
Q (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
Q Can you and would you restrict the visa to just Dayton or 25
miles around Dayton?
MR. BURNS: I haven't been a Consular Officer in about l2 years and
my consular law is rusty. I don't know if we have the ability to write
in on a tourist visa -- it's not a tourist visa, it's an official
visitor's visa -- you can only go to certain places.
We can for people like Fidel Castro; but in this case, I just don't
know if it's a 25-mile radius around Dayton, Ohio, or whatever it is.
Q (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: Excuse me?
Q There is a large Serb community in Chicago.
MR. BURNS: There is not going to be any time to go to Chicago
because President Milosevic will be in Moscow on the 3lst of October.
He has got to leave Moscow early enough in the day to fly back directly
to Dayton, Ohio. There won't be any time to stop any place else. And
once he gets to Dayton, he will be ensconced in the comfortable confines
of the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Our intention is that he and
the others will stay there until there is a peace agreement.
Q (Inaudible) another issue?
Q I have another issue also. The U. S. apparently has joined
the European Union in complaining to Slovakia. What's the issue with
Slovakia?
MR. BURNS: Well, you know, Ron, just before I came out here, I saw
the same press report, and I thought to myself, what's this all about,
so I guess I had better check into it and get back to you.
Q You still don't know?
MR. BURNS: Well, it is not that I still don't know. I don't know.
(Laughter.)
Q Tomorrow?
MR. BURNS: I'll be sure to know tomorrow. Write this down,
Charity. Charity and I will know tomorrow, right? We'll know tomorrow.
Q Nick, following President Clinton's Executive Order to stop
companies in the U. S. doing business with companies that serve as
fronts for the Cali cartel --
MR. BURNS: Yes.
[...]
(The briefing concluded at 3:15 p.m.)
END
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