U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #38, 97-03-14
From: The Department of State Foreign Affairs Network (DOSFAN) at <http://www.state.gov>
845
U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing
I N D E X
Friday, March 14, 1997
Briefer: Nicholas Burns
DEPARTMENT
1,14-16 Farewell to Deputy Spokesman Glyn Davies
1-2 Secretary Albright's Visit to Watkins Primary School
3-4 Secretary Albright's Meeting with Swiss Foreign Minister Cotti
4-7 Visit of Foreign Minister Primakov
ZAIRE
2 Situation Update/Mediation Efforts of UN Special
Representative/U.S. Support for Humanitarian Relief Operations
BELARUS
3 Human Rights Violations/U.S. Relationship with
Government/Influence of Russia
HELMS-BURTON
7-11,12 Wal-Mart/Canada Decision to Sell Clothing Made in Cuba/Letters
to Sherritt Corporation
MEXICO
11 Narcotics Cooperation with U.S.
CROATIA
11-12 U.S. Abstention on IMF Loan Vote
ALBANIA
12-13 Consultations with Government
CHINA
13-14 Alleged Interference in U.S. Elections
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #38
FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1997, 1:47 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
MR. BURNS: Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the State Department. This
is a very difficult day for all of us here.
It's Glyn Davies' last day as Deputy Spokesman, Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State for Public Affairs.
At the end of the briefing, after you've exhausted all your questions, I
want to say a few words about Glyn and then ask him to come up here and say
a few words about you - what he really thinks of you after a year and a
half. He deserves this opportunity, Barry.
QUESTION: Will this be at the end of the briefing?
MR. BURNS: We are reinstituting the old rules. No one can leave this
room until the end of the briefing. I'm not going to say anything
interesting, no news, because Glyn is going to take the floor. Fair
enough.
I do have -
QUESTION: (Inaudible).
MR. BURNS: I've been available to the wires all morning.
I have a couple of things just to go over before we go to questions.
The first is to say that Secretary Albright visited the Watkins Primary
School Cluster on Capitol Hill this morning. This was to be part of the
President's program of Outreach to the Washington, D.C. community. She
read this book to the first and second graders of the Watkins School. The
title is Girls Can Be Anything which she thought was the right kind of
book for her to read to first and second graders from the D.C. system.
That was open to the press. You might have been there, Barry.
QUESTION: Is this a public school?
MR. BURNS: This is a public school in Washington, D.C.
The Secretary had five or six books to choose from, and she saw this title
and she chose that book to read because of who she is and because of the
message she wants to send, particularly, to young girls in our society.
The message to young boys is, you better watch out because girls are better
than boys. That is true. As a father of three girls, it is definitely my
scientifically-based observation that girls are much more well behaved -
much better behaved than boys.
QUESTION: (Inaudible) that a girl has an equal chance to rise to be
Secretary of State as a boy does?
MR. BURNS: She smashed the glass ceiling, so I think she set the
precedent. I think she set the precedent. From hereon in, we hope that
women have as much opportunity as men to be Secretary of State. Absolutely.
QUESTION: But she doesn't think we're at that point yet, does she?
MR. BURNS: Pardon?
QUESTION: Does she think we're at that point?
MR. BURNS: It's going to be interesting to see the effect of her tenure
on this building and the role of women in this building and the role of
women in our government, in general.
QUESTION: (Inaudible).
MR. BURNS: Let's not talk about my appointment, or lack thereof. Anyway,
here we go. We have a couple of things to do.
First of all, the United States remains gravely concerned by the situation
today in Zaire. Continued fighting has prolonged the suffering of Zairians
and refugees in the eastern provinces. The United States, again, urges all
parties to the conflict to cease hostilities immediately and pursue a
political dialogue to resolve this crisis peacefully.
To this end, we call on all parties to cooperate fully in the mediation
efforts of the United Nations Special Representative who is also the OAU's
Special Representative, Representative Mohammed Shanoun, who is currently
in Zaire.
We understand that the international humanitarian agencies plan to expand
their assistance efforts in eastern Zaire in the coming days. The United
States stands ready to support these efforts.
In addition to our current assistance to the U.N. relief agencies, we are
dispatching a civilian disaster assistance response team from the U.S.
Agency for International Development to eastern Zaire. We remain concerned
with the fact that humanitarian supplies need to get through to the refugee
camps in the Ubundu area and to the several hundred thousand refugees who
have been affected.
I'm issuing a statement on this today. If you have any questions, I'd be
glad to follow up.
Similarly, I'm issuing a statement on the situation in Belarus.
This is a very serious turn for the worse.
The United States remains seriously concerned about human rights violations
in Belarus, particularly in the past several weeks.
We call on the Government of Belarus to exercise restraint during the
political demonstrations which mark "Constitution Day," which is this
evening and tomorrow. We call on the government to observe the international
human rights agreements to which it is a party.
The Belarus Government issued a decree on March 5 imposing severe
restrictions on freedom of speech and assembly and stiff penalty for
violations. Various political party headquarters have recently, in the
last few weeks, been searched by the Belarusian police.
Peaceful protests earlier this week in Minsk ended in the reported arrest
or detention of more than 100 individuals, some of whom were reportedly
followed and picked up well after the event and far from the scene of these
political rallies.
Among those still under detention is a leader of the Belarusian Popular
Front, Yuri Khadyka, who we understand is being held on charges of
disobeying the police.
The United States recently re-evaluated its relationship with Belarus. We
have adopted a new policy of selective engagement, reflecting the limited
possibilities for engagement that we presently see because of Belarus'
human rights problems and its failure to implement political and economic
reforms.
As we have pointed out, how Belarus conducts itself, how it treats its own
people will have an indelible effect on the U.S. relationship with
Belarus.
The Government of Belarus claims that it tolerates dissent. It's time for
a clear demonstration of that pledge.
QUESTION: Does Russia have any influence there? When Mr. Primakov is
here, will the U.S. make an effort to ask Russia to weigh in on the side of
human rights, their closest former republic?
MR. BURNS: President Lukashenko has said many times that he has great
respect for Russia. He's talked about a closer economic relationship. So
perhaps Russia can have some influence there, and that would be good.
The Russian Government, of course, is a completely different government.
It does have a reform orientation. It does respect civil liberties and
press freedoms in a way that the Belarusian Government does not.
I have a couple more things. I just want to point you to a meeting that
the Secretary is having at 4:45 this afternoon with the Swiss Foreign
Minister, Minister Cotti. They're going to be signing the Instruments of
Ratification of a new U.S.-Swiss Extradition Treaty. They'll also be
discussing the issue of "Nazi Gold," the recent decision by the Swiss
Government to create a memorial fund for Holocaust victims, and a variety
of other issues.
If you're interested, I can give you a report on two meetings the Secretary
had yesterday; one with the Polish Foreign Minister, Minister Rosati, and
the other meeting with President Ratsiraka of Madagascar.
I have one more thing here. Yes. I just want to alert you to the weekend
schedule. We understand that Foreign Minister Primakov will be arriving at
Andrews Air Force Base at roughly 1:30 p.m. tomorrow afternoon. He'll be
met by Deputy Secretary Strobe Talbott and Ambassador Jim Collins at
Andrews. He'll then come into the Department of State where he's going to
have a private lunch with Secretary Albright and Strobe Talbott and Jim
Collins. That will begin at roughly 2:15.
From roughly 2:15 until approximately 6:00, there will be a lunch and then
a series of meetings on the major issues in our relationship with Russia -
on arms issues, on European security issues, on bilateral issues.
Tomorrow night, Minister Primakov will be the guest of the Secretary of
State at the Gridiron dinner, the annual Gridiron dinner. This is a
departure from normal protocol, and the Secretary has chosen to invite him
because Minister Primakov was very kind to her during her visit to Moscow.
He rolled out the Red Carpet for her. He gave her a wonderful dinner at
the Russian Foreign Ministry Guest House. She wanted to reciprocate in a
way that would help to build on this relationship that they are developing.
So she has invited him to the Gridiron dinner, and I understand he's going
to be seated at the head table at the Gridiron dinner.
QUESTION: She's not a member of Gridiron -
MR. BURNS: Pardon?
QUESTION: She's not a member of -
QUESTION: She can't invite people to Gridiron.
MR. BURNS: You'd be surprised what the Secretary of State can do, even
with members of the press corps.
QUESTION: I'll never be surprised.
MR. BURNS: The Secretary was invited to the Gridiron and special
arrangements were made with key correspondents, who cannot now be revealed
but will be revealed perhaps at a later date, who agreed to this invitation.
The Secretary suggested that Minister Primakov be a guest, and he will be
an honored guest at the Gridiron dinner. It should be a wonderful
affair.
On Sunday, March 16, I understand that Minister Primakov will be going over
to the Pentagon in the afternoon for meetings with Secretary Cohen. On
Monday - well, we'll see what happens on Monday.
On Monday, there will be further meetings with Minister Primakov.
We'll have to consult the White House to see exactly what type of meetings
those will be.
Now, press coverage. We have decided to make the very wise decision to
only have a camera spray, no questions - absolutely no questions - at the
top of the lunch tomorrow at 2:15 p.m. here at the State Department. That
camera spray will be up in the Secretary's office on the Seventh Floor.
There will be no questions because - there are three days of meetings -
Saturday, Sunday, and Monday - and we want to make sure that the speaking
part comes on Monday.
Secretary Albright will be giving an On-the-Record press conference at the
White House briefing room on Monday afternoon, I believe with the National
Security Advisor, Sandy Berger, to talk about the series of Primakov
meetings over the three days and to preview the Helsinki summit meetings.
That's Monday. I'll give you the time for that once we've nailed it down
with the White House.
Primakov will not be there, no. This is an American press conference.
So that's the way we've decided to do the press here for the weekend. You
understand the reasons for that.
QUESTION: That means we get nothing. That means the networks get
nothing.
MR. BURNS: No. The networks get pictures. That's more than the others
get.
QUESTION: No, we don't.
MR. BURNS: Why not?
QUESTION: If there is not an editorial person present, the networks do
not send in cameras. We don't go to camera and stills.
MR. BURNS: Betsy, it's a camera spray, so the cameras are welcome.
Anyone is welcome to show up at a camera spray.
I've always said that; I've always said that. It's a camera spray. There
are no questions. So cameras are welcome to come.
QUESTION: You said it's a "wise decision." What's wise about it?
MR. BURNS: I think what's wise about it is that Minister Primakov is
arriving -
QUESTION: Cynical, but it isn't particularly wise. (Laughter)
MR. BURNS: You know, Barry, the great thing about our relationship is,
we get to set these rules. You have a perfect right to sound off, as
you've just done.
QUESTION: This is not a private affair.
MR. BURNS: What's wise about it is, he will have just arrived. The
Secretary of State won't have had a chance to talk to him. She meets with
him on Saturday, but there are important meetings on Sunday and Monday. We
won't know until Monday, probably, the substantive results of this meeting.
You'll get a chance to ask the Secretary on Monday.
That completes my announcements, and I'm glad to go to your questions.
QUESTION: Nick, will you be doing any kind of briefing later in the
day?
MR. BURNS: Today.
QUESTION: Saturday.
MR. BURNS: No, I'm not going to do any briefing tomorrow.
No briefing whatsoever. I'll be glad to take phone calls. I'll have very
little to say. I can say they met; they met for "X" number of hours; they
discussed all the issues that you would expect them to discuss. It's not
going to be a substantive readout.
QUESTION: (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: I have not yet completely decided.
QUESTION: It sounds like you're pretty pessimistic about what's going to
happen tomorrow. To shut down quite so firmly always, to me, suggests sort
of an ominous -
MR. BURNS: Oh, I wouldn't read that into it, Carol. I think you would
not be on point if you deduced that or if you wrote that in the story. It
just wouldn't be accurate. The fact is, we're trying to be careful here.
He's just arriving. We have three days of talks. So we're going to have a
press conference. You're going to have a chance to ask all the questions
you want to ask when those talks are completed.
If the talks were ending tomorrow night, we'd have a press conference
tomorrow night, but they're ending Monday. So that's when we've chosen to
have a press conference.
QUESTION: Nick, is the decision to close it off have anything to do with
President Yeltsin's comments this morning, his apparent hardening of a
position on NATO expansion?
MR. BURNS: This decision was made two days ago - 48 hours ago. It had
nothing to do with anything said today.
QUESTION: Do you have any comments on what he said today?
MR. BURNS: I did not see the comments. I did not see President
Yeltsin's comments.
QUESTION: Will you take a look at them and get back to us with an answer
because it's rather -
MR. BURNS: Have we seen comments by President Yeltsin this morning? I
haven't seen anything today. Just haven't. I'd be glad to look. If we
have something to say, I'll let you know.
QUESTION: Is Primakov expected to appear with the Secretary at some point
on Monday, to the press?
MR. BURNS: No, I don't think so. I think that she is going to be with
Sandy Berger at the White House.
QUESTION: But it will be at the White House, presumably?
MR. BURNS: Yes. We'll have to see what happens with the White House
schedule on Monday. That's a question for the White House to answer.
QUESTION: But the plan is for some sort of press photo op or something at
the White House -
MR. BURNS: If there is a meeting, yes. That's right.
QUESTION: Yes, with the President.
MR. BURNS: That's right.
Okay, we'll go to Glyn. Any more questions? Any questions on issues?
QUESTION: On Helms-Burton, I don't know if - you're probably aware that
Wal-Mart/Canada has decided to resume selling pajamas made in Cuba, and
this is making a lot of noise in Canada. But I'm wondering in light of
that, what does this controversy say about the problems that are in Helms-
Burton, and what about your reaction to the decision of Wal-Mart/Canada,
and are you going to do, if anything, something about it?
MR. BURNS: Yes, we're well aware of the Pajama affair, and I can tell
you that U.S. subsidiaries are subject to the Cuban assets control
regulations that bar those subsidiaries - for instance, Wal-Mart/Canada -
from trading with Cuba. This has nothing to do with Helms-Burton,
actually. It has everything to do with the Cuban Democracy Act and with
the long-standing United States economic embargo on Cuba, which prohibits
financial transactions that benefit Cuba.
We understand that the Treasury Department has this case under review, and
we're aware that Treasury has been in contact with Wal-Mart officials to
discuss it. Treasury needs to make a
ruling here, and I am sure that Treasury is working hard on this and will
have something to say soon - probably next week. But that's where the
decision-making lies in the U.S. Government.
QUESTION: You know about the controversy, the two laws that are just
contradictory. What about what it says for a company like -
MR. BURNS: Oh, we think it makes sense. We very much think it makes
sense to follow this policy. This has been the policy of the United States
since President Kennedy's era, and we still think it makes sense for the
American people and the United States to maintain our own laws and to
prevent U.S. -- subsidiaries of American corporations from trading with
Cuba and to make money in that totalitarian state.
We understand that Canada has passed a countervailing law, and we
understand the complications for Wal-Mart, but Wal-Mart is a corporation
that's based, the last time I checked, in the United States of America with
subsidiaries beyond the United States.
So the Treasury Department is looking into this very seriously.
Henry.
QUESTION: Keeping in mind that these remarks of yours are often viewed in
Canada and you do want to help with the sense of this situation, and I know
you're a law-abiding citizen, so you haven't been recently to Cuba. But
many Canadians have, and they buy Coca-Cola in Cuba. They buy Marlboro
cigarettes in Cuba.
They buy hundreds of American products in Cuba. Why is it that there is
no reaction on the part of the State Department verbally about those
arrangements and by the Treasury Department perhaps criminally about those
arrangements?
MR. BURNS: Henry, I'm glad you asked. I mean, we can have a pajama
scandal, and we can have a Coke scandal, and we can do all sorts of things
here. The fact is that Treasury does have a - we have a law that we have
to fulfill, and Treasury is responsible for contacting American companies
or their subsidiaries when we think there's been a violation of a
law.
I think the reason why Wal-Mart is in - Wal-Mart is in the news now. It
just happens to be the flavor of the month, I guess, and there have been
lots of newspaper articles written on it, so that's the one we're focusing
on. If you'd like us to focus on other specific issues, I can do
that.
QUESTION: Let me ask you how that determination is made, because Coca-
Cola has been sold in Cuba for 35 years.
MR. BURNS: I would gladly refer you to the Treasury Department.
The State Department does not administer the law or deal with the
companies on a day-to-day basis who are subject to the law but Treasury
does. I'd be glad to refer you to the Treasury Department on that.
QUESTION: Perhaps you could explain the hypocrisy of this.
I mean, keep in mind that Canadians -
MR. BURNS: What hypocrisy are we talking about here?
QUESTION: Well, the hypocrisy of the American Government, prosecuting -
MR. BURNS: I don't agree with the premise of the question, with all due
respect.
QUESTION: Well, let me help you with the premise of the question then.
The pajamas, 80,000 pairs of which are retailed at $9.00 apiece, even by
retail sales, far fall short of the kind of trade that American companies
are doing in Cuba. How is this determination made that pajamas sold in a
Winnipeg Wal-Mart store become more important than the sale of American
products in Havana?
MR. BURNS: I don't agree with the premise of your question that the
United States has a policy towards Cuba based on hypocrisy.
We have a policy towards Cuba which is resolutely opposed to a totalitarian
dictatorship. Some people may want to conveniently disregard the fact that
there are gross violations of human rights in Cuba, but we don't, and we
remember, and we do have an obligation to support the democrats in
Cuba.
By the way, we'll be sending out four more notification letters to the
Sherritt Corporation today, and these notification letters will in essence
inform four executives of that corporation that they will no longer, 45
days after the receipt of the letters, be welcome in the United States.
The reason for that is that Sherritt is in possession of a nickel mining
operation which was stolen from an American corporation - the Moa Bay
Mining Corporation, currently known as the Freeport-MacMoren Company of New
Orleans, Louisiana.
This was a company, an American company, that had its assets nationalized
by Castro in the early 1960s. The nationalized industry was then sold or
given at some low market value to the Sherritt Corporation.
Sherritt now makes money off an American investment that was stolen by the
Cuban Government. The Cuban Government never compensated the Moa Bay
Corporation or its successor, the Freeport-MacMoren Corporation of New
Orleans, for the many, many millions of dollars put into that investment.
So I don't know whose hypocrisy we're talking about here. Here we have a
Cuban Government that steals financial assets, plants from private
corporations, and then we have other companies that waltz in and take over
those assets with no regard to the American company that walked out.
That's one of the reasons why Helms-Burton was passed, because frankly
Republicans and Democrats in the Congress had had enough of this. Five
thousand nine hundred and eleven individuals and corporations have had
their assets stolen by the Cuban Government - I use that word advisedly -
and no one's repaid them.
So if we're talking about hypocrisy, then let's direct it to the companies
that waltzed in and take over stolen goods.
QUESTION: You raised the issue of the expulsions, if I can use that in a
reverse term, of these four executives -
MR. BURNS: No, they're not being expelled from any place.
They're just not going to be able to come to the United States under the
terms of Title IV of the Helms-Burton Act.
QUESTION: But if, in regard to that, the Trade Minister of Canada, Arthur
Eggleton, has said that if there was any further action by the United
States under Helms-Burton that curtailed the travel of Canadian nationals
into the United States as it applies to that law, that Canada would take
steps to bring this before an advisory panel of NAFTA. Has the State
Department been told that indeed that action is imminent, and what can you
tell us about the State Department's reaction to that kind of initiative,
should it happen?
MR. BURNS: I don't know if we've been advised by the Canadian Government
that that action is imminent, although we would respectfully argue with the
Canadian Government that NAFTA does not apply here.
QUESTION: I don't suppose you can give us the names of the four?
MR. BURNS: No, I'm not able to do that for the usual reasons.
QUESTION: Can you say why these four were not mailed last year when other
Sherritt executives were -
MR. BURNS: Yes, because we were not aware that they were on the board.
They may be either new members of the board, or they may have taken the
place of other people who have left the board.
QUESTION: Can you say how many people in that corporation have now been
sent these letters?
MR. BURNS: We can get that. I don't recall exactly how many. It's four
plus X, and I'm sure that Lee McClenny can get that for you.
QUESTION: (Inaudible)
MR. BURNS: Pardon?
QUESTION: And what's the criterion?
MR. BURNS: The criterion is that Title IV of Helms-Burton essentially
states - I'm not quoting from the law - that the principal shareholders of
corporations that have taken over assets that have been stolen from
American firms are subject to the penalties of Title IV; and that is that
they will not be able to enter the United States lawfully, nor will their
family members, their spouses and minor children be allowed to enter the
United States. It's one of the more controversial aspects of the Helms-
Burton law.
It is the law of the land. The State Department has a responsibility to
implement U.S. law.
Bill.
QUESTION: Nick, if we could go across the straits of Yucatan to the
Republic of Mexico and talk about an interesting hearing - it was more of a
conference - on Wednesday in Senator Coverdell's subcommittee and with
Diane Feinstein being one of the principals.
Nick, coming out of this, a number of drug experts in this government came
pretty much to the same conclusion that the fight against drugs in Mexico
by the Mexican Government is being lost. I would ask the State Department
if perhaps what was suggested there, a new approach, a new policy,
something that would bring us together and then to join with the Mexicans
in this drug fight; something that is not status quo, is not a loser, as
was expressed.
MR. BURNS: Bill, we have a good policy towards Mexico.
I see no reason for us to revise that policy substantially, and the
President and Secretary both issued statements yesterday about our
narcotics cooperation with Mexico following the House vote, and it's full
steam ahead. The President and Secretary will be in Mexico in just about a
month.
Yes, Tom.
QUESTION: Nick, why did the United States abstain from the IMF vote on a
loan to Croatia this week?
MR. BURNS: The United States has watched the behavior of the Croatian
Government very closely. We've watched the behavior of the Croatian
Government on its application of the commitments that it made in the Dayton
agreement to arrest indicted war criminals.
There are a number of indicted war criminals who live in Croatia who have
not been turned over to the War Crimes Tribunal by the Croatian Government,
and there are certain individuals that we're watching very closely. We've
told the Croatian Government we know who these people are. They've been
named by the Tribunal as indicted war criminals. We know where they live.
You need to go in an arrest them and turn them over to the Tribunal.
The Croatian Government has failed to do that.
To express our displeasure with the Croatian Government, to send a shot
across their bow that we do want them and expect them to implement the
Dayton accords, we abstained in the vote earlier this week at the IMF. We
did so to send a message. We hope it's heard, because Croatia has an
obligation, just as Bosnia-Herzegovina, just as Serbia does.
QUESTION: What are the details of the IMF transaction?
MR. BURNS: I don't have the details with me, unfortunately, but I can
tell you it was a vote on an IMF loan to Croatia. The United States
representative to the IMF was instructed to abstain, and that we hope has
sent a message that the Government of Croatia will understand. The
Croatian Government performance stands in stark contrast to the Bosnian
Government's cooperation. This week there were three Moslems and a Bosnian
Croat on trial in The Hague for war crimes. They were turned over to the
Tribunal by the Government of Bosnia-Herzegovina, which among the
three governments has by far done the most to comply with the War
Crimes provisions of the Dayton accords.
QUESTION: Does this suggest that you're going to crack down more broadly
on this issue?
MR. BURNS: As you know, we've been looking at this issue quite
intensively over the last several months trying to find a way that would
reinforce the Tribunal itself and enhance the prospects that people
actually wind up in The Hague on trial.
We've been looking at a variety of ways to do that. This was obviously a
symbolic gesture. We did not vote against the loan.
It was symbolic, but sometimes symbolism, coupled with stronger measures
down the road if compliance is not met, get the attention of governments
like the government in Zagreb.
QUESTION: The Foreign Assistance Act actually advises the United States
not just to abstain but to oppose applications from governments that
knowingly harbor war criminals. The World Bank is coming up with several
hundred - there's a project worth more than $100 million coming up for
World Bank approval in May.
If there's no action between now and then, will the United States take an
additional step and actually vote against that project?
MR. BURNS: I'm aware of the provisions of the law, and I think that the
Croatian Government is on notice that our concern is rising, and that our
frustration has been elevated because of their failure to comply with the
most elementary aspects of the Dayton accords. We've said many times in
addition to peace, justice is important. Justice has been elusive. Very
few people have been extradited, much less tried at the Tribunal and
The Hague, and all of us need to do better - all of us - in trying
to give the support that the Tribunal needs.
Just a fact: Sherritt, I believe, now with the four letters today, added
to seven before, there are 11 members of the Sherritt board that will not
be permitted to enter the United States.
QUESTION: And how many minors, Mr. Burns? Have we calculated that?
MR. BURNS: I have not calculated the number of minor children who will
not be allowed to cross the border into the United States.
That's what the law says. Congress makes the laws. Administrations
implement them. We will implement the law.
Laura.
QUESTION: Since you last briefed, Mr. Vranitzky has met with reporters or
done an interview with reporters, indicating in his consultation with
representatives of the Albanian Government they have declared that they are
unable to get control over what is happening in that country. Have you had
any consultation with him since this meeting adjourned? Do you have
anything more?
MR. BURNS: We have not. We have seen the brief press statement that you
have. We have a young Foreign Service Officer, Elizabeth Bonkowsky, who's
with him. She's from our OSCE mission in Vienna. I'm not aware that we've
heard from her, just because of the communications. So we'll have to talk
to Mr. Vranitzky before we can comment, really, on the suggestion that he
appears to have made. We need to have formal discussions first.
QUESTION: Is he spending the night on the ship, or is he back in -
MR. BURNS: No, I believe he's gone to Italy, to Brindisi.
QUESTION: New subject?
MR. BURNS: Yes.
QUESTION: I believe Turkey and Albania has a security agreement. Do you
know any Turkish officials attended this meeting in the U.S. ships?
MR. BURNS: The meeting was on an Italian ship today; that Mr. Vranitzky
met with some of the government leaders from Albania on that ship. I don't
know if the Government of Turkey was represented.
Yes, Yasmine.
QUESTION: The German Parliament (inaudible) their ruling that requires
for 800,000 children in that country to get visas, even if they were born
to legal foreign workers. Does the U.S. have any position on that?
MR. BURNS: Does this concern the Bosnian refugees?
QUESTION: No, that concerns Turkish children, Tunisian children, former
Yugoslav Republic people.
MR. BURNS: I'm not aware that we have a position. We may. I'll have to
check into that for you, Yasmine.
QUESTION: New subject. China. Nick, Janet Reno said yesterday that she
personally called Anthony Lake last July, I believe, to warn of the
credibility of the evidence of Chinese Government interference in our
election, and she was unable to get Anthony Lake, so the FBI agents were
sent to brief the NSC people.
Nick, if Janet Reno thought it was important enough to call Anthony Lake,
isn't it possible that the State Department would want to talk to the
Chinese about this matter, or have we talked to the Chinese or even
demarched them about attempting to interfere with our politics?
MR. BURNS: Bill, I think you know that Secretary Albright had a brief
conversation in Beijing a couple of weeks back. She reported that publicly,
and I have nothing further to add to that statement.
Now, I'd like to just say a few words about the departing Mr. Davies.
Today is a very sad day for all of us in the Public Affairs Bureau. Glyn
is going to leave our humble Department for the lofty position of Executive
Secretary of the National Security Council. It's a real tribute to him
that the President and Sandy Berger have asked him to take on that job,
which is a very important job, a very tough job.
Glyn's a true son of the Foreign Service. He was born in Kabul, Afghanistan.
I'm not sure how many people know that. He lived in Calcutta. He spent
some time in Warsaw when his father was American Ambassador in Warsaw, and
as a Foreign Service Officer he served in Melbourne, Kinshasa and Paris.
He's been Special Assistant to George Shultz. He has run the Operations
Center. He's been a Political Officer in our NATO office, and most
recently he has been our indispensable man in the Public Affairs Bureau as
our Spokesman and our Deputy Assistant Secretary of State.
He is exceedingly well-liked by everybody in our Bureau, most especially by
the women -- I'm told -- by the women in our Bureau. In fact, I've made a
comprehensive survey of all the women in the Public Affairs Bureau just
this past week, which has produced the following startling results.
It was generally agreed - this is true; I have this on recommendation from
several women in our office - generally agreed that Glyn bears a striking
resemblance to the late, great James Dean. Think about it; think about it.
I'm not making any of this up. I was even told that he is known to some of
his secret female admirers in our bureau as "Mr. Cool." Two of our female
colleagues even went so far as to say that he reminds them of Robin of
"Batman and Robin" fame, which was my personal favorite.
Those are the views of the women in our bureau. I'd just like to add to
those, seriously, by saying that Glyn has been absolutely the best partner
and the best friend that I could have had through all of the different
things that the press subjects us to on a daily basis.
Glyn is the best at many things. He's the best manager and motivator of
people that I have worked with in 14 years in my career. He thinks up the
best sound bites. He's the best Spokesman at giving short rather than long
briefings. I'm glad someone has a sense of humor about this. He's been a
great friend.
Glyn, I think you've really distinguished yourself in this job. I remember,
particularly, Glyn had to handle the aftermath of the crash of Ron Brown's
plane. Glyn handled the Iraqi crisis in late August 1996. I remember a
lot of people were amazed by Glyn's encyclopedic memory of the geography of
eastern Zaire during the refugee crisis of December.
I know that he's been particularly well-liked by a lot of you in the press
corps for his openness and his accessibility; the fact that he returns
phone calls, and that he's been an excellent Spokesman. So I hope you'll
join us after this at 2:30 to 4:00, in Room 6800 for a party in Glyn's
honor where he's going to be given the State Department Superior Honor
Award for his distinguished service as Spokesman. He's going to be roasted
with the Top 10 List. The Top 10 List category is the top ten things that
Glyn Davies wanted to say but never did at the briefing. So I can't wait
for that.
Glyn, it's all yours.
MR. DAVIES: I'll be quick because I know that there's real news today,
and this is not real news. I obviously wouldn't come here without my
guidance, so I brought guidance. It's only a page. It's not six
pages.
I want to, first off, thank you, Nick, very, very much for the opportunity
over the past year and a half to speak for the Department from this podium.
You were right, it is like playing "Super Jeopardy" everyday, with a
crucial difference, which is, when you play "Super Jeopardy," if you win,
you get a check. If you lose, you get to go home. If you lose here, you
keep coming back everyday.
Thanks also for everything you've taught me. Because if this "Super
Jeopardy," you are a grand champion. I've learned a lot just by watching
you and working with you.
Above all, Nick, thanks very much for your friendship. It has meant a
great to me. I appreciate that. Also, I've already told him, but I want
to repeat here just a word about the marvelous 95 people who work in the
Bureau of Public Affairs of the State Department. They are not just the
people who bring you this briefing everyday but they're the people who
bring you our Web site on the Worldwide Web, the people who write the
history of American foreign policy, who answer the questions of American
citizens, and who set up our Town Meetings around the country. They are
consummate professionals whose imagination and drive makes so much
happen.
Finally, and in many ways most importantly, a quick word of thanks to you,
members of the press. This is a heck of a day to do it on, but I'll do it
anyway. The biggest lesson I've learned in a year and a half doing this
job, and it's a lesson that may set your teeth a little bit on edge, is how
much alike you and the press and we in government really are at the end of
the day. We are both, after all, in a forum of public service.
This is a similarity that kind of sets up a struggle sometimes between us,
if not an occasional clash between our two estates. But it's a struggle
and a clash that I think is of great benefit to our fellow citizens.
Representing the Secretary and the State Department has been a privilege.
Working with so many excellent people in the State Department and in
government has been a pleasure. Getting to know the many fine journalists
who cover our work here as been both a privilege and a pleasure. Thanks
for giving me these couple of minutes and for giving me a year and a half
in this job. I hope we all stay in touch.
Thank you very much.
(Applause)
(Press briefing concluded at 2:25 p.m.)
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