U.S. Department of State 95/11/29 Daily Press Briefing
From: Thanos Tsekouras <thanost@MIT.EDU>
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
I N D E X
Wednesday, November 29, 1995
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
DEPARTMENT--Announcements
[...]
Secretary Christopher's Mtg. w/Bosnian PM Silajdzic ...14
FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
Paris Peace Conference ................................2-3
Proximity Peace Talks Agreement
--Signing .............................................3
--Reports of Renegotiation ............................3
--Agreement on Eastern Slavonia .......................4-5
--Arms Control Regime/Disequalibrium in Force Levels ..14-16
NATO Military Forces--Location, Numbers ...............5
Editorial Comment on Deployment of U.S. Forces ........17
NATO
Selection Process for Secretary General Position ......5-8
[...]
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #173
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1995, 12:53 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
[...]
Q That's a pretty complete schedule. But can you push it a
little further? Do you have Paris penciled in yet?
MR. BURNS: We fully expect that the Paris peace conference would
take place probably sometime the following week. We're not yet in a
position to announce a date with the French Government. I believe the
French Government would be the first to announce that.
Q Confirming that date up, because diplomats out of Paris are
saying it's the 14th.
MR. BURNS: We've had a number of discussions with the French
Government. We've just tried to match up our schedule with the French,
and the French have to match up with a lot of other people's schedules
as well.
As you know, we believe, and the French agree, that that meeting
should take place after there has been a conclusion of the Congressional
debate here in the United States. So it's just been an exercise in
trying to match up schedules. As soon as we have a full agreement on a
date, I think the French and the White House will be in a position to
announce that.
Q Is there any disagreement or difference of view about the
scope of what happens in Paris? Is it just a ceremonial signing, or is
it an opportunity to discuss Europe in broader terms, to use Bosnia
perhaps as a pattern for resolving any other conflict?
MR. BURNS: The French are right now discussing with us and with
others the program for the Paris peace conference. There will be some
meetings as well as a formal signing. I think there will also be some
ceremonial lunches or dinners. I'm not quite sure.
When that discussion is completed, the French will announce it. It
will be more than just a signing. There will be some meetings attached
to it, and it will be an importance conference. We congratulate the
French for offering to hold it. We think it's appropriate that this
signing take place in France, considering the sacrifice that the French
and other European countries have made over the last couple of years in
Bosnia.
However, the other day I did get a question on this. I want to
repeat that part of the answer, Barry. The Bosnian Serbs should
understand, and all parties at the Dayton Agreement should understand,
that what was initialed at Dayton on November 21 will be what is signed
in Paris the week after next -- meaning there is no possibility to
renegotiate any aspect of the Dayton Agreement because of any
unhappiness with it.
The Dayton Agreement was worked out over three and a half months,
the last 21 days of which were an intensive series of meetings. It
represents some fundamental compromises that all the parties had to
make. None of us who were there are in a position to renegotiate it.
There is no way we'll renegotiate it. We will not contemplate any
renegotiation.
So what will be signed in Paris will be, to the letter, what was
initialed in Dayton.
Q Nick, who is pushing -- is this a live debate now, the effort
to try to push for some sort of renegotiation on some aspect?
MR. BURNS: It's not a live debate in Washington or Bonn or Paris
or London or Ankara, or anyplace else. It is certainly a debate, that
I've seen in the press, in some of the suburbs of Sarajevo and in Pale
and Mr. Karadzic's remarks yesterday to CNN. They have to understand
that this agreement was signed on their behalf, initialed on their
behalf by President Milosevic. It was then initialed the next day by
Mr. Karadzic. He is not in a position to renegotiate this with us, and
we are not going to engage in any discussions with him to renegotiate.
Q The Russians, the French, none of them are taking up the
cause of the Bosnian Serbs?
MR. BURNS: I have heard no talk whatsoever in any European
capital, much less in Washington, D.C., about any inclination to
renegotiate. We're hearing it from elements of the Bosnian Serb
community.
Q Nick, what's happened to the agreement on Eastern Slavonia?
Has there been some correspondence between the Secretary and the
Croatian President on that?
MR. BURNS: I'm not aware of any correspondence on it, Sid. I'm
not aware of any letters in the last couple of days or since we last saw
President Tudjman in Dayton. I'm not aware of any phone calls on it.
The agreement stands. It's an agreement that was reached on
December 12 -- very important agreement -- and we expect it to be
carried out fully.
Q How long -- what's the implementation period of that
agreement?
MR. BURNS: The implementation period or the transitional period?
Q Either.
MR. BURNS: The agreement will go into effect when the Paris
agreements are signed. As you know, the United Nations has lead
responsibility to look at how to put this agreement into practice.
There needs to be a transitional authority arranged for the region and
some kind of transitional military force that will come in in order to
effect the demilitarization of the area. All of this is spelled out in
the December 12 agreement.
As you know, the transitional period will last for 12 months.
There is an option that any party has to extend that period for an
additional 12 months.
The United Nations has been debating these questions of how to
establish the transitional authority, how to carry it out, which forces
would come in to stand between the opposing forces there. But I don't
believe the United Nations has made any fundamental decisions, and
certainly has not announced anything about the results of their
discussions.
Q That's not part of the NATO peacekeeping mission?
MR. BURNS: No. It's separate. It's separate. The United Nations
will be taking responsibility for looking at the question of the
transitional authority, including its military complement.
The NATO debates right now and the operational plan concern Bosnia
-- how to implement the military annex of the Dayton peace accords.
Q No American troops in Eastern Slavonia is what I'm getting
at.
MR. BURNS: Right now, we have not made any commitments to do that,
no.
Q What about the American troops in other places that we're
reading about?
MR. BURNS: In Macedonia?
Q Well, even Hungary, maybe? By some accounts, at least one in
the Los Angeles Times, that American troops will be -- we know there are
some Americans in Macedonia -- but American troops will be in Croatia.
This is apart from the 20,000. Another 5,000. And maybe even in
Hungary.
Is this related to the agreement in some binding way? You talk
about initialing and not being able to revise. Has the United States
made some ironclad commitment to send troops to several other countries?
MR. BURNS: NATO will be staging some of its forces in some of the
surrounding countries. Those countries, including Hungary, have given
NATO permission to stage, in the preliminary parts of the deployment,
forces there. But I have to refer you to the Pentagon for the numbers
that we're talking about in that respect.
But the great bulk of the NATO force will be stationed in Bosnia
itself. Of course, for support services, you're going to have to have
some forces in the outlying areas and some of the surrounding countries.
Q But 5,000 is a kind of sizable number.
Q On the schedule, is lunch Saturday, in part, an interview for
a Secretary General, the next Secretary General, with Solana?
MR. BURNS: Interview?
Q The Secretary was interviewing people here who were
candidates for the job. Solana has been mentioned as a possible
candidate for Secretary General. The position is still open.
MR. BURNS: The Secretary has a very good relationship with Foreign
Minister Solana. They get along quite well. They've worked closely
together on a lot of U.S.-European issues over the last year or so.
The process of selecting the next NATO Secretary General continues
very intensively. It is taking place in Brussels, at NATO headquarters.
It is a confidential and private process, and we're not in a position to
talk about it in public.
Once the decision has been made by consensus, the smoke will go up
and we'll be in a position to announce it. But I have nothing to
announce today.
Q Is there a language --
MR. BURNS: A language test? I'm not aware of any language test.
Q A proficiency of French, is that --
MR. BURNS: I'm not aware of any language test.
Q From an American standpoint, at least two contenders,
apparently, have come up short of their ability to speak French in a way
satisfactory to Paris?
MR. BURNS: Not from our point of view.
Q I wonder if the Americans had a language test?
MR. BURNS: The United States does not have a language test. There
are two official languages of NATO: English and French. But the United
States doesn't have a language test.
Q Nick, is Solana a candidate? Can you go that far? I don't
know. He's certainly been talked about.
MR. BURNS: I believe right now the only government that has
officially declared a candidate is the Danish Government with former
Minister Ellemann-Jensen. I don't believe that any other government has
publicly put forward a candidate at this time.
There are a number of people being considered. There are a number
of names being discussed. It's being done privately and confidentially.
We certainly don't want to make this public in any way, shape, or form
before a decision is made. We had an unpleasant experience a couple of
weeks back and are not inclined to repeat that experience.
Q Does the United States consider Solana an appropriate
candidate for NATO Secretary General?
MR. BURNS: We have great respect for Minister Solana -- the
highest respect for him.
Q What about Spain's role in NATO -- its unique role in NATO --
and the fact that Solana has been critical of --
MR. BURNS: He has been critically important. He just was in
Barcelona yesterday.
Q (Inaudible) (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: I'm just answering your question, Carol. I'll answer,
and, if you're not satisfied, you can come back --
Q I will.
MR. BURNS: -- and you can even comment on my answer. I was going
to say that Minister Solana has been a critically important figure in
Western discussions on a number of issues. We have the highest respect
for him.
Q But you're not troubled by the fact that Spain is not an
integrated member of the NATO military, and that he has taken issue with
some aspects of U.S. policy?
MR. BURNS: Spain is an important member of NATO, a valued ally,
and I'll just keep it there. Are you satisfied with that response?
Q No. (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: I shouldn't have asked the question.
Q Some members of Congress today have written to the Secretary,
also asking you to reconsider Solana as a candidate, because they oppose
him, and I was just wondering if you had replied to that letter.
MR. BURNS: I have not seen the letter. I'm unaware of the letter.
Q Nick, are you ruling out the possibility of having a NATO
Secretary General whose government is not a member of NATO's military
wing?
MR. BURNS: All I'm going to say on this one -- since this is a
private and confidential process -- is that a number of people are being
considered. It's a very important choice, and I don't want to identify
any of the people who are being considered beyond the person who's been
publicly announced by his government.
Q Are there other candidates besides Solana? Are there other
people being considered privately in this confidential channel besides
Solana?
MR. BURNS: I haven't talked about Minister Solana as a candidate.
You all have done that. Let me just note for the record, for all people
who will read this transcript, that I haven't made that statement. That
was made by one of the questioners.
There are a number of people being considered from a variety of
NATO countries. We certainly would be comfortable with any of the
people being considered -- they're all fine individuals -- from any of
the countries, but I can't confirm who these people are.
Q And these are names beyond Ellemann-Jensen and Lubbers?
MR. BURNS: Yes.
Q Can you say what these names are?
MR. BURNS: No. Good try, however. I can't say it in French
either. I could say it in French, but I won't say it in French.
[...]
Q Why is the Secretary meeting with Haris Silajdzic today?
MR. BURNS: Prime Minister Silajdzic is in town. He's having a
number of discussions with people in the Administration, including the
Secretary. He's also going to be talking to Senators and
Representatives on Capitol Hill about the issue before the Congress, and
that is whether or not the Congress should offer the Administration an
expression of support for the deployment of troops.
The Bosnian Government has felt very strongly that the United
States must be part of the effort to help implement the peace agreement.
The Bosnian Government has requested the United States to participate in
the NATO effort, and I think Prime Minister Silajdzic is here for both
reasons -- to confer with the Administration and confer with the
Congress.
So the Secretary wanted to take advantage of his presence here and
have a short meeting this afternoon. I think he'll be meeting with
Ambassador Albright as well and with others in our European Bureau.
Q Nick, when does the United States begin its processing of
arming the Bosnian military?
MR. BURNS: That is a very important issue that we continue to
discuss with the Bosnian Government, that we continue to consult with
Congress on. As you know -- and the President spoke to this yesterday
afternoon -- there is an important arms control regime that will be put
in place, and we hope that there will be around a 25 percent reduction
in the level of arms available to all the forces in Bosnia. We hope
that that will be done on a voluntary basis.
That was part of the negotiations at Dayton. It's part of the
Dayton peace agreement. If that does take place, I think all of us will
be very pleased, and we'd be glad to help the parties achieve that
figure.
If it cannot take place --- if there is not a voluntary reduction -
- then we would like to try to achieve our goal of an equilibrium of
military forces in another fashion, and that would be to help the
Bosnian Government to increase its military capabilities, to build up
its military equipment capacity, and we have had a lot of discussions
with them and have to have a lot more to determine exactly what the
outlines of that program would be.
I expect that certainly when the Secretary and Secretary Perry and
General Shalikashvili testify on Thursday and Friday, this will be one
of the questions that the Congress will want to talk to them about, and
I'm sure they will be ready to discuss it.
Q You do believe that there is inequity in the force level now
between the Muslims and the Serbs? When the Secretary testified on the
Hill -- I guess it was last month -- he seemed to indicate that you
weren't quite sure about that, and now there's been a lot of water under
the bridge?
MR. BURNS: That testimony was -- what? -- six weeks ago, I think.
Q Yes.
MR. BURNS: What the Secretary said was that we wanted to be sure
about the parameters -- we wanted to be sure about the numbers involved,
and we wanted to get a comprehensive look at the situation to determine
just what the disequilibrium was. We have been working at that since
then. That effort began before that congressional testimony, its
continued through the Dayton peace talks, and the Pentagon now thinks
that it has a rough sense of the disequilibrium that does absolutely
exist. The Bosnian Government does not have an equal -- certainly, by
any stretch of the imagination -- equal military capacity in terms of
equipment or firepower that the Bosnian Serbs and the Croatians and
others do.
So there needs to be an effort to balance the situation, because we
want this agreement to be self-sustaining. We don't want to be in a
position, in our very carefully worked out exit strategy, our very
highly tuned and carefully worked out exit strategy -- we don't want to
be in a position when American and other NATO troops leave, sometime
roughly a year after they're first deployed, where one of the countries
-- in fact, the victim in this war -- is in a disadvantageous situation.
We'd like to achieve that balance by voluntary means. If we can't,
we'll do it by a U.S. assistance program.
Q Can you quantify this disequilibrium?
MR. BURNS: I'm not in a position to do that now. That's really a
question for the Pentagon. I think we also need to have some more
discussions with the Bosnians and the others in the region before we
throw out numbers.
Q Did you say 25 percent?
MR. BURNS: Yes. That's the figure that the President used
yesterday.
Q That must come from somewhere, that number?
MR. BURNS: That comes from part of the study that we've made of
the military balance in the region, yes.
Q And the disarmament would only be on the part of the Bosnian
Serbs?
MR. BURNS: At this point, that is the preferred way to proceed,
certainly; rather than injecting additional arms into a heavily armed
area, we'd certainly like to see a process of disarmament take place.
But if that doesn't happen, the Bosnian Serbs are on notice that we're
not going to allow the Bosnian Government to be left in a situation
where there is a profound disadvantage to the Bosnian Government -- say,
a year or so down the road -- when the NATO forces will be departing.
Q When you look at this equation, you're talking about the
Bosnian forces alone? Not the Bosnian Croat Federation?
MR. BURNS: That's right.
Q And the Croats won't be asked to disarm?
MR. BURNS: It's possible -- they will be in the equation.
Anything is possible. But we just haven't gotten to the point where
we've made specific requests yet. We need to get further into the
discussion before we do that.
Q But has there been any thinking along the lines, if you only
-- you have a Bosnian Croat Federation that seems to be roughly equal to
the Bosnian Serbs -- those two together. If you arm the Bosnian Muslims
so they're equal with the Bosnian Serbs, then the Bosnian Croat
Federation has a distinct advantage over the Bosnian Serbs as far as
weaponry goes.
MR. BURNS: That advantage is in population. That advantage is
also built into some of the constitutional arrangements that were agreed
to as part of the Dayton peace accords. That's life. The fact is the
Bosnian Serbs are in a minority. That's life. It's the way it is.
Q One on Algeria?
MR. BURNS: Let me just note for the record that we were very
pleased to see this morning -- before we leave Bosnia forever today --
some very good editorials from the Washington Times, Baltimore Sun, the
Washington Post on the question of whether or not the United States
should deploy troops. That's two times in two weeks that we've been
pleasantly surprised by the Washington Times. I don't know if the Times
has a reporter here, but I'd just like to congratulate the Times for its
vision and foresight and wisdom on this question of Bosnia.
I've got copies I can pass out in the Press Room afterwards.
Q (Inaudible).
MR. BURNS: I sometimes comment on editorials. Only when they're
good editorials. If they're negative, we usually don't comment on them.
[...]
Thank you very much.
(Press briefing concluded at 1:30 p.m.)
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