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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #39, 97-03-17

U.S. State Department: Daily Press Briefings Directory - Previous Article - Next Article

From: The Department of State Foreign Affairs Network (DOSFAN) at <http://www.state.gov>


449

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Monday, March 17, 1997

Briefer: Nicholas Burns

DEPARTMENT
1  Welcome to Interns from the Foreign Service Institute
1  Secretary General Annan's Announcement of UN Reform
2  El Salvadoran National, Mayoral and Municipal Elections
2-3  Detention and Expulsion of American Citizen in Belarus
3  St. Patrick's Day

ZAIRE 3-6 Fighting Update/Rebel Capture of Kinsangani 5 Update on Situation of Refugees

ALBANIA 6 U.S.-Albanian Diplomatic Dialogue 6-7 Update on Fighting and U.S. Evacuation 7-8 OSCE Assessment Mission to Tirana 8-10 IMF Loans, Pyramid Schemes and Economic Reform

MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS 10-13 Prospects of Success for the Peace Process 11 Visit of King Hussein to Families of Shooting Victims in Israel 11-13 Tomorrow's Scheduled Groundbreaking of Israeli Settlements in Har Homa 18-19 Status of Israeli Troop Withdrawals and a Palestinian Port and Airport

RUSSIA/NATO 13-14, 16 Foreign Minister Primakov's Meetings in Washington, D.C. 14 Proposed Russia-NATO Charter 14-15 Russian Concerns over NATO Enlargement

NORTH KOREA 16 Update on North Korean Defector Hwang

COLOMBIA 17 Resignation of Defense Minister Gonzalez 17 President Samper's Remarks on the Possibility of an Extradition Treaty

TURKEY 17-18 National Politics and Membership in the EU

FORMER YUGOSLAVIA 18 Premature Establishment of Diplomatic Relations Between Belgrade and Pale


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #39

MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1997, 1:39 P. M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. BURNS: Ladies and gentlemen, good afternoon. Welcome to the State Department briefing. I want to welcome interns from the Foreign Service Institute who are here with us today at the briefing. I have a couple of statements to read before we go to questions.

First of all, I think a lot of you saw the announcement this morning from New York by the U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, about his reform plans. He announced a reform program that would essentially cut roughly 1,000 people from the U.N. payroll and save quite a bit of money on an annual basis, well over $100 million.

The United States welcomes very much the reform plans announced by the Secretary General this morning. We're pleased that he's been true to this word. He's kept his promise to present a plan in a timely manner, and we're very eager to study the details of this plan.

Secretary General Annan during his first few months in office has put considerable energy into the efforts to insure greater efficiency and effectiveness within the U.N. system. Along with pushing forward rapidly with reforms that he can authorize, he is also serving as a catalyst for broader reforms throughout the United Nations system.

These latter reforms require the approval of U.N. member states. We're very pleased he's playing this role. We look forward to working with him and other U.N. officials and other member states to see that the United Nations system is prepared to meet the challenges of the 21st century.

In a spirit of bipartisan cooperation, as you know, the Clinton Administration has entered into a dialogue with the United States Congress to reach prompt agreement on how best to promote the shared goal of a reformed and reinvigorated U.N. system that costs less and in which the United States continues to take the lead.

To be able to continue U.S. leadership as further reforms are made within the U.N. system, the United States needs to honor our debts to the United Nations and its affiliated organizations. Secretary General Annan called Secretary Albright yesterday afternoon to alert her to the fact that this plan was ready, that he'd be announcing it, and she was very, very pleased. She had a good conversation with him, and she looks forward to working with him on this issue.

Our Ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, issued a statement this morning, also congratulating Secretary General Annan.

My second statement concerns the elections yesterday in El Salvador. The United States congratulates the government and people of El Salvador for the free and peaceful conduct of elections held yesterday March 16th. These were elections for 84 national legislative assembly seats and 262 mayoral and municipal council posts. These elections mark the second time since the end of the Salvadoran civil war in 1992 that the Salvadoran people have gone to the ballot box in a country at peace.

According to our U.S. Embassy monitors who were present in all 14 Departments as well as the capital, there were no reports of violence, and we're also unaware of any indications of fraud or any irregularities.

The United States has consistently supported the efforts of the people of El Salvador to consolidate their democracy and to implement the provisions of the 1992 peace accord. This latest demonstration of the strength and diversity of El Salvador's democratic expression gives confidence that all parties will work cooperatively in this new assembly and at the municipal level.

Finally, another statement - and I'm issuing all three of these statements today -- they're being posted in the Press Room -- this concerns the unhappy situation in Belarus. You remember on Friday the United States issued a statement expressing great concern at recent developments within Belarus where the government had cracked down on the political opposition and on the media, and in fact had detained and harassed a number of politicians as well as journalists.

Unfortunately, over the weekend the Executive Director of the Soros Foundation, Peter G. Byrne, was prevented from entering Belarus yesterday and was then expelled from Belarus -- he was at the airport - today. He's now in Frankfurt. He had a valid visa to enter Belarus. He had been there in the past. The Soros Foundation had done quite a lot of work there and unexpectedly he was not allowed to enter the country when he arrived at the airport in Minsk; was held without access to the United States Embassy in Minsk; no ability to call on a Consular Officer for assistance; was detained for many hours and then expelled from the country.

We consider the failure of the Belarusian Government to allow immediate access and to assure proper treatment, we consider this to be in violation of the diplomatic and consular conventions in effect between the United States and Belarus. He was held incommunicado for over 12 hours. He was forced to sleep under guard. He was not provided with any food this morning, and despite repeated approaches to senior-level Belarusian Government officials, the United States Embassy was denied access to him until moments before his forced expulsion from Belarus.

This disregard for international law, for diplomatic convention and practice is unacceptable. The United States expects to continue discussing this particular incident with the appropriate officials in Belarus. It is another indication that all is not well in that country; that the rule of law is troubled; that democratic procedures are not being followed by the Government of Belarus, and another reason why the United States has decided to follow a policy of selective engagement with Belarus, meaning we will work with Belarus on those issues where the United States clearly has interests that must be met. But it will be very difficult for us to work with that government in any normal capacity, and that's a decision we've made, reinforced by this unusual episode over the weekend.

Barry.

QUESTION: Happy St. Patrick's Day.

MR. BURNS: And to you, too. I see you're not wearing green, though. Is that a green stripe in that tie?

QUESTION: You're a little closer to St. Patrick than I.

MR. BURNS: Jim Anderson has a green coat on. I'm looking for other green - Tom Lipmann has an extraordinary green tie. Sid has distinguished himself. Andre looking good.

QUESTION: All Irish.

MR. BURNS: I just thought I'd give you a little fashion report in the press today.

QUESTION: All Irish (inaudible) people. (Laughter)

MR. BURNS: Andre, vous (in French).

QUESTION: (In French)

MR. BURNS: (In French) You lived there. (Laughter) Ron Pemstein as well, and James is looking very sharp in the back row.

QUESTION: The situation isn't very -

MR. BURNS: And Laura Logan looks resplendent, Barry - resplendent. In fact, Laura, I think if the cameras could even - (laughter) - do you want to take a bow? I think Laura -- she gets the award this year, Barry.

QUESTION: She's an off-camera person, but she certainly gets our award. The situation in Zaire is terrible, too. Mobutu can't get back, or they say he can't get back because of his health. He's in Monaco. Are there implications for stability in Zaire? His absence - is that good? Is it bad? What's your size-up now of the turmoil?

MR. BURNS: We are extremely concerned about the situation in Zaire. The fall of Kisangani over the weekend is an extremely troubling indicator of instability in Zaire. Obviously, we can confirm that the rebel alliance took Kisangani International Airport and parts of the Eastern Bank. It's the third largest city in the country. The fact that the rebel alliance was able to pierce the defenses of the city so easily I think indicates the strength of that alliance.

We are repeating our calls today on the Government of Zaire and on the rebel alliance of Mr. Laurent Kabila to agree to an immediate cease-fire; to agree to direct dialogue and negotiations aimed at a peaceful resolution of the conflict. The United Nations special negotiator, Mr. Sahnoun, has been in the region. He is working on this plan. We think it's the only logical way to proceed to reinforce the political stability within Zaire, the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Zaire.

We continue to recognize the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Zaire. We continue to maintain diplomatic relations with the government in Kinshasha. Clearly, the current administration in Kinshasha faces a number of serious challenges. They have accepted the peace plan, suggested by the U.N. Secretary General's Special Representative. But, as we said many times before, a key element of any peaceful dialogue will be the discussion of a democratic transition in Zaire.

We continue to believe that Zaire's long-term stability and economic recovery depend on this transition. This does not mean transition from one person to another. It means transition from an essentially autocratic country to one that is governed by the rule of law; where elections have a place in the political system; where people have some right to believe that they'll get to choose the country's leaders.

This is what has troubled us about the situation in Zaire for many years, in these last couple of years, as we've looked at the Mobutu regime. He is in France undergoing medical treatment. Prime Minister Kengo is in charge of the government in Kinshasha, and we are in touch with that government. So we're encouraging a cease-fire, an assumption of political negotiations, and we want the Zairian Government to point the way toward some kind of political process that will give some hope that things might change.

But clearly a very troubled situation. There's no indication to us that the rebel alliance is going to slow down in its military offensive. We appeal to it to do so, to lay down their arms, to stop the fighting, but I have no indication that they will accept that.

QUESTION: The central government is telling panicked people, "Don't leave; we can take hold," and now Mobutu can't get back. He is that one person, for good or for bad. I don't know that you offer advice to people in a situation like that, but can that government take hold? Can there be enough stability so that people don't have to flee or try to flee for their lives?

MR. BURNS: We certainly hope so. We very much would like not to see in Zaire what happened in Albania last week, which is the general panic within the country as instability proceeds. In this case, we think there's every reason to believe that it's possible to have a cease-fire; it's possible to have these political negotiations. But both the government and the rebel alliance need to make the proper decisions to put that into place. Right now the rebels have the advantage militarily. They now occupy a great swath of territory throughout Eastern Zaire.

That has wreaked havoc with the refugee problem, which I can report to you on just a bit this afternoon. As you know, all of the refugee camps in Eastern Zaire that had housed the roughly 200,000 people who had fled in 1994 from Rwanda - all of them were emptied out. Unfortunately, those people fled in different directions and in small groups.

I know that roughly 100,000 of the people who had been in the Tingi Tingi refugee camp have arrived in Ubundu, and the United Nations High Commissioner on Refugees is now making efforts to get relief assistance to them. I also know that 200-300 of the refugees - we don't have the exact number - died while trying to cross a river during a storm over the weekend. We think the refugees are at risk. We think that there is a way to get assistance to them through the United Nations, but they're clearly at risk, and it's up to both the rebels and the government to make provisions to help these people with shelter, with food and with medicine; and to work with the U.N. agencies to make sure that assistance can be given to them.

Further on Zaire, before we leave Zaire.

QUESTION: Nick, have you any evidence that the rebels used Ugandan arms in their push on Kisangani?

MR. BURNS: I've seen the press reports that the -

QUESTION: Do you have any evidence of your own?

MR. BURNS: -- rebels had access to armored vehicles and other weaponry from the Ugandans. That's long been a concern of ours, and you know that Secretary Albright took that up personally with President Museveni more than a month ago. We're still concerned by the flood of reports that there is assistance flowing to the rebels by the government in Uganda and also the governments in Burundi and Rwanda. We're troubled by them.

We've raised this issue repeatedly with those three governments, but I can't say that we're satisfied with what we see happening on the ground. We're also concerned, as you know, by men and arms coming across the Angolan-Zairian border. This is an extremely troubling development - the recent sets of events over the last week, but particularly over the last two to three days that Zaire is threatened on all sides.

The territorial integrity of Zaire, its sovereignty is terribly important for stability throughout Central Africa. You see the consequences of this type of fighting. Who gets hurt? Average people get hurt. Refugees get hurt. People who don't have political benefactors get hurt, and that is a tragedy that the rebels and the government have to assume some responsibility for.

QUESTION: Nick, Mrs. Clinton is due in Kampala in the next couple of days. Do you know if she's going to raise this with Ugandan officials?

MR. BURNS: I can tell you that our Embassy in Kampala has been raising this issue continuously for more than a month; the Secretary of State has. I don't know if Mrs. Clinton's trip is going to take on that kind of political dimension. It's a goodwill tour of Africa. As you know, what she said last week when she was here at the Department, it's primarily directed toward accentuating development and international assistance to people in need. I think that will remain the focus of this trip. I don't want to burden her trip with a whole host of every-day political concerns that our Embassy and others can certainly take care.

QUESTION: Nick, could I ask a question about Albania? Has the United States been in touch or tried to get in touch with President Berisha, and would the U.S. Government prefer that he step down from office and end this anarchy?

MR. BURNS: I know that our Ambassador, Ambassador Lino, has been in touch with Prime Minister Fino several times over the last couple of days, both about the evacuation efforts but also about the political situation. I don't believe that Ambassador Lino has been in touch directly with President Berisha in the last several days; in fact, in the last four or five days. I can check, but I'm not aware that that happened.

As for President Berisha's position itself, that's certainly a question that the United States cannot answer. That's a question for the people of Albania, for politicians in Albania, but not for us.

QUESTION: Could you provide us with an update of what is the latest situation in Albania that you of? Just give us a summary of that?

MR. BURNS: Be glad to do so.

QUESTION: And totals, updating from Saturday.

MR. BURNS: Yes. I think there was some random gunfire around our Embassy last night, but today has been fairly quiet.

There are protests and some unrest that appear to be continuing on a fairly wide-scale basis in the southern part of the country. But the north and the capital are relatively more calm and peaceful than the south.

Ambassador Lino, as I said, is directly in touch with the Albanian Government -- will continue to be -- about the security situation, so that she can make the best decisions about our own Embassy staff that has remained behind.

To date, the United States has evacuated nearly 500 American citizens from Tirana and evacuated - all by air - and evacuated nearly 400 foreign citizens. About 900 people came out via U.S. helicopter.

I can also tell you that we know that approximately 80 to 90 Americans were able to make it out via the Italian helicopter airlift or through the land border with Macedonia. So we're talking here about nearly 100 people - excuse me, 1,000 people who have been able to depart.

Should other Americans decide that they want to leave the country, we will make arrangements for them to leave Albania. They should be in contact with the American Embassy in Tirana which has remained open.

I know that the last helicopter flight that went in this morning actually took more journalists in than people out which gives you some indication that the situation has calmed down in the capital city and, at least, your members of the profession feel it's a story that they can cover safely.

We have made a commitment to the American journalists in Tirana that if they wish to come out, that if they feel threaten, we will help them come out. I think we know where most of the American journalists are. We'll continue, as I said, also to take foreigners out on a space-available basis. I believe of the 400 nationals that we took out of Albania, they were from 34 countries. Most of them were European countries but some were from Asian and South Asian countries.

In addition, the USS Nassau, which, of course, is patrolling the Adriatic and primarily responsible for this evacuation operation, has rescued approximately 85 Albanians from two unseaworthy vessels in the Adriatic, one of which had capsized. I know that they're taking care of these people. I don't know what will happen with the final disposition of those two ships.

As for the politics, what's happening, the United States attended a meeting of the OSCE in Vienna on Saturday where former Chancellor Vranitzky reported back to the OSCE about his trip to Tirana on Friday. The United States welcomes very much the announcement by the European Union that it is sending a high-level assessment group to Tirana to lay the groundwork for a Special Advisory Mission in response to Vranitzky's call. This group contains OSCE, EU, and other country representatives.

The United States is not represented on this mission to Tirana today but it does have our full support.

QUESTION: Do you know what he means yet by a "stabilization force?" Does he mean a military force? Or has the idea sort of slipped away? I guess not.

MR. BURNS: I think it's very clear from what he said on Friday afternoon publicly to members of the press that he did have in mind some kind of military force. Frankly, that was not the view of the European governments or of the United States.

QUESTION: Or of the U.S.?

MR. BURNS: Or of the United States when we met on Saturday morning in Vienna. Frankly, we couldn't see the utility of injecting an outside military force into Albania. We couldn't see what that force could accomplish, and we really felt over the weekend that our primary military mission had to remain the evacuation of the American citizens and the foreigners.

We do welcome this assessment mission. If it's possible for all of us to be helpful politically or even with a team, that, of course, is something that we'll agree to look at very seriously. But I don't think anyone is talking about a military intervention force.

The political imperative, we believe, must remain the necessity of getting these political leaders together, getting them talking - these leaders in the National Reconciliation Government. There is a little bit of organization to the insurrection in the south. There are people with whom one can talk. We believe if that can happen, perhaps the situation could be stabilized a bit to reduce the risk to both Albanians and foreigners who live in Albania.

Sid.

QUESTION: There was a report over the weekend that said this meeting on the ship - the Italian warship - that the American view was that Berisha should step down, and we've made that known in no uncertain terms. You said a few minutes ago, it's not up to us to say. Can you comment on that report?

MR. BURNS: I believe the first meeting was on the warship - that was on Friday. Chancellor Vranitzky's meetings. I believe the other meeting was in Vienna on Saturday. We were represented by a diplomat from our OSCE Mission.

All I can say is that the United States made a number of points in that meeting but I don't want to go into everything that we said because it was a private meeting. Obviously, this is a very sensitive issue. We have our views, but we'll let them simmer for a while as we talk to the Albanian Government privately.

Still on Albania?

QUESTION: Yes. Has there been anymore serious consideration about the economic background of this whole blowup in Albania? Although there was this pyramid scheme which developed, it did develop in terms of trying to implement the usual IMF conditionalities that have been imposed on all east European countries. Sali Berisha, not being a hard-line communist or something, was, indeed, implementing the program. He was known by many as "Sali, the Liberalizer." It was on the basis of this implementation that this whole thing blew up. You have a similar situation in Macedonia which also is towing the line with regard to the reform policies, also a dangerous pyramid scheme which seems to be developing, and perhaps in other countries, combined with the growth of crime.

Isn't there a reconsideration of, if not the basis of the policy, at least the way it's been implemented in many of these cases?

QUESTION: I can tell you this. The United States did not recommend that the government adopt pyramid schemes as a financial initiative. I don't believe the IMF and World Bank would have either. So I don't believe you ought - that any blame should be pinned on the West for this.

The fact is that this current political crisis was produced by the fact that pyramid schemes were widespread in Albania and that a great number of people had their life savings and investments tied up in them. The government simply has to deal with that political crisis. There's no question that President Berisha has become the focus of a lot of the animosity that you see being expressed in the streets.

But for a country the size of Albania and an economy the size of Albania, these are gross estimates. But the estimates are that a great percentage of the private capital in that country was tied up in these pyramid schemes and Ponzi schemes. I think you've got to lay that at the door of the investors who put those together. There's just no question that that was the initial stimulus for the riots that broke out in the south and the continuing political turmoil. That question sooner or later has to be addressed.

I wouldn't blame it on overly stringent advice from the West because the West does not advise any country to adopt pyramid schemes as the basis of their financial policy.

QUESTION: A follow-up, Nick. I'm not saying that the IMF caused the crisis. What's I'm saying is -

MR. BURNS: That's good, because the IMF certainly didn't. The IMF is waiting to go back in to try to help fix a system that's been crippled.

QUESTION: What I'm saying is that in implementing the so-called reform policy, the possibility of these things occurring was opened up wide open. In many of these countries, for many years during the socialist period, capitalism was equated with crime. Many of these people who thought that when they became capitalists, they would become criminals. This is your phenomenon you have in Russia today, to a great extent.

But when you see this occurring, this kind of social revolt and unsteady economic situation happening in many of these countries, and today there's major demonstrations in Hungary, which has been relatively stable, where the demonstrators are attacking the IMF and the World Bank, when you see these kind of things happening, doesn't this give you pause to rethink perhaps some of the assumptions one took for granted for so many years?

MR. BURNS: No, it doesn't at all, because I don't agree with the premise of your question, for two reasons. For every Albania that you can point to, you can point to an Estonia, or Czech Republic, or Poland, or Hungary, or Slovenia or Russia -- governments that are making the right decisions on economic reform.

The second is, if we've learned anything since 1989 about economic reform in central Europe, it's this. Those who go fastest with short-term pain, which might be quite high, but those who go fastest develop the most. Those who fastest achieve the highest rates of economic growth and the highest standards of living for their population. Witness: Estonia, Czech Republic, Russia.

You take other countries like Ukraine, that have essentially waffled on economic reform for a number of years, that have made some advances and stepped back, those countries have seen a continuation of some of the major systemic problems that arose after the collapse of communism. So I just don't agree at all with the question or the observation.

QUESTION: Speaking of Russia -

QUESTION: If this were the case, would it not be the fact that the populations would be very happy with how successful they are, but what we see is mass demonstrations -

MR. BURNS: You walk down the streets of Tallinn or Prague or Slovenia or most streets in Russia, a great percentage of the people are certainly better off than they were in 1989 or 1990 or 1991. There has been tremendous economic hardship, but the fact that these economies have turned around is because of the dedication to liberal economics. So I very much disagree.

I think the IMF has done an outstanding job over the last six or seven years.

QUESTION: Another Albanian question. I understand the 85 Albanians are still on the USS Nassau. Do you know where they go from here?

MR. BURNS: Those are the Albanians that I think were picked up in the two vessels that were not making it across the Adriatic. I don't believe the military has made a final decision, or we have, about where these people should end up. We'll have to consult with the Italian Government, I'm sure, before that happens. I assume they are making their way to Brindisi.

Tom.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) a question on Albania?

MR. BURNS: Anymore on Albania. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: There seems to be a sort of looming train wreck sense hanging over Israel and the Palestinians this week. What, if anything, is the United States doing to try to head it off?

MR. BURNS: Actually, Tom, I wouldn't agree with that characterization of the problem. I think, certainly, the peace negotiations are troubled. You and I can point to a lot of different events over the last couple of weeks that have been extremely disquieting to the United States and to others.

But, essentially, what we saw over the weekend was a profound humanitarian gesture by King Hussein to visit the seven Israeli families who lost 13- year old daughters.

QUESTION: from Netanyahu.

MR. BURNS: No. King Hussein was accompanied by Prime Minister Netanyahu to all of these meetings. Then we had a meeting between King Hussein and Prime Minister Netanyahu. There are now rumors, at least in the press, of a possible meeting between the Prime Minister - Prime Minister Netanyahu - and Chairman Arafat. Sometimes it takes very tragic events to produce at least some positive movement forward in the peace negotiations. I don't know if we're seeing that. But at least we saw over the weekend a courageous decision by the King of Jordan to reach out to Israeli families and to say and do the right things to them in their period of grief.

We've now seen renewed contacts between Israel and the Jordanians and renewed contacts between the Palestinians and the Israelis. We measure progress sometimes one baby step at a time. I'm not talking about giant leaps forward, but the fact that they were not talking a week or - any of them - and that they're now talking is a small step forward.

What we think has to happen, especially in the wake of a Gaza meeting on Saturday, is for the Israelis and Palestinians to go back and actually have some political discussions, negotiations on the issues that separate them.

The Gaza meeting we felt was an important meeting because it gave the Palestinians an opportunity to express themselves to a number of governments. But it did not result in any kind of a resolution or any kind of an agreement on the way forward. So that has to happen between the Palestinians and Israelis. I don't think a train wreck has to be the result of what's happened over the last couple of weeks. In fact, we hope the reverse, that these small steps forward might lead to larger steps in the next weeks or months.

QUESTION: We're also looking forward to tomorrow, I suppose, when Tom worries about a train wreck. Netanyahu says he will go ahead and break ground on that housing project. With all due respect, I don't think you can easily blur - and you're not really doing it entirely - the Jordanian and Israeli situation and the Israel-Palestinian situation. They're very different. Israel and Jordan have peace. It's a warm peace. King Hussein has had a relationship with Israel that is incomparable to the Palestinian relationship.

It's on the Palestinian track that there's a big event tomorrow. I wonder if the U.S. had any words on that prospect of ground-breaking?

MR. BURNS: Clearly, as I said in the initial part of my response to Tom's question, the situation is troubled and has been troubled for many weeks. I don't minimize the difficulties here at all. I'm talking about the very small, perhaps even imperceptible to some people, change which sometimes helps move a situation forward. We've been through this many times in the Israeli-Palestinian talks: Tragedies, violence, people being killed. You have to overcome that. You have to move beyond it. The first step is talking to each other, and that's what happened over the weekend.

The United States has not changed its position on the Israeli construction proposal at Har Homa or Jabal Abu Ghneim - what the Arabs call Jabal Abu Ghneim. We didn't think it was a good idea when it was raised. The President made that very clear as did Secretary Albright, and that's still our view.

It appears that the Israeli Government is determined to move forward. We've seen that decision by the Cabinet. We just hope that in working out the obvious differences on this issue between the Israelis and Palestinians, two things happen. First, it's that any difference of opinion on this be pursued in a non-violent way. There's no justification for anyone on other side to take to the street or to take up violence as a political method.

Second, we hope that Israelis and Palestinians will continue to talk together, sit down politically and try to negotiate their differences. That's the only way forward.

QUESTION: So I take it, like the shooting in Jordan, like so many other events, some bloody, some not bloody, but highly controversial, the U.S. feels that the peace process can survive. It can survive the ground- breaking, it can survive - you know, all the way back to the Palestinians blowing up Ma'Alot and killing a bunch of Israeli school children, and the Israeli who went nuts and killed a lot of people in a mosque, and all that.

Tomorrow's event can be absorbed, much as you don't like it?

MR. BURNS: You know, there's nothing inevitable about progress. There's nothing inevitable about success in the peace negotiations. We've said all along that success can only be achieved if they actually sit down together and if they do one other thing, Barry. See in the other person, or other group of people across the table, a negotiating partner; try to anticipate the political needs and sensitivities of that partner and try to account for them. Because compromise is the basis of any outcome between the Palestinians and Israelis. That's what we felt was missing in the Israeli decision at Har Homa. We made that very clear.

Both the Israelis and Palestinians have an obligation to make sure that they are taking into account the political needs of the other person across the table. The peace negotiations won't succeed unless there's that kind of spirit across the table.

The Israelis have said they're going ahead no matter what. So all of us need to work to try to make sure that the negotiations continue; that there's a forum for these differences to be worked out and that people are not so hopeless that they take their troubles to the streets. There's no justification for that. There can be no justification whatsoever for anyone firing a gun or setting off a bomb or mounting a violent protest.

There is now a forum for the Israelis and Palestinians to work their problems out. I think that has to be the most basic advice that Americans can give Arabs and Israelis.

QUESTION: Nick, new subject?

QUESTION: Has the United States Government been in touch with the Israeli Government in the last couple of days asking them not to go ahead with the actual ground-breaking?

MR. BURNS: I know that there were some high-level phone calls last week and high-level letters that made very clear the position of the United States, that we did not think this decision ought to be taken and we didn't think that this construction ought to go forward. We made our position known, but the Israeli Government is going forward.

QUESTION: In the past two or three days, have there been such appeals?

MR. BURNS: I don't know if, in the past - over the weekend, you mean? I'm not aware of any high-level contacts over the weekend. I can check. I know that there were some "mid" last week.

QUESTION: Is there anything that you can tell us about Minister Primakov and Secretary Albright's meeting early this afternoon?

MR. BURNS: I waited. I stood by the phone all weekend waiting for the reporters to call. I'm just kidding.

QUESTION: There was a meeting today; not Saturday.

MR. BURNS: I appreciate your forbearance over the weekend and for understanding that we didn't want to come out and have press conferences because the negotiations are underway.

Let me just tell you what's happened over the last couple of days. Secretary Albright has had a very intensive round of discussions with Minister Primakov. As you know, they met Saturday afternoon. He was her guest, or the guest of some enterprising reporters at the Gridiron Dinner on Saturday night. I understand he enjoyed himself immensely at that dinner.

They met yesterday afternoon for a couple of hours. They met here at the Department at around noon for a little over an hour. In between the Secretary's meetings with Primakov, the experts have been meeting on European security issues, on arms issues, on foreign policy issues. There's literally been an around-the-clock set of meetings over the last three days. Primakov was also over at the Pentagon late yesterday afternoon for meetings with Secretary Cohen.

I understand he will be seeing the President in just over an hour at the White House. At the end of that meeting, there will be a press briefing, probably by my friend and colleague, Mike McCurry, over at the White House. He'll be very glad to answer your questions about the meeting with the President. Then, tomorrow, we expect Secretary Albright and Sandy Berger, the National Security Advisor, to hold another press conference -- two in 24 hours for you guys - where they'll make statements summing up the visit, looking forward to Helsinki, and answering questions about anything that is on your mind. So that's the way we intend to proceed.

QUESTION: They working off a text, Nick?

MR. BURNS: Excuse me?

QUESTION: They working off a text?

MR. BURNS: Is who working off a text?

QUESTION: The United States and the Russians?

MR. BURNS: We are working on a variety of things. We're talking through -

QUESTION: Solana is the lead man; he remains the lead man?

MR. BURNS: Solana is definitely the lead person.

QUESTION: He was working on a text. Are they working on Solana's text?

MR. BURNS: Solana has had several meetings with Primakov where they're trying to work out a charter. Of course, the charter is going to have to be written down. The understanding between the two will be written down. So we're working off some of the same language that Solana has been working on because we're keying off what he has been doing.

We have been talking, in some detail, about the proposed charter between the United States and Russia. I would describe the discussions over the weekend as intensive and cooperative and, in some cases, productive. But it's really hard to predict where we're going to end up. The President hasn't had his meeting with Primakov. Probably more importantly, he hasn't had his meeting with Boris Yeltsin yet. And then the process goes on beyond Helsinki. So it's always hard to know where you are in time. I'm sure when you see Secretary Albright tomorrow, you'll talk about that and many other issues.

Still on Primakov?

QUESTION: The Russian Ambassador to the Czech Republic said that if the Czech Republic will become a member of NATO, Russia might reconsider economic deals with the Czech Republic. Do you think this is just a part of Russian concessions again, or this is something that not just the Czech Republic or the United States should consider?

MR. BURNS: You've seen a very stiff response to that from the Czech Foreign Minister this morning, as it should have been a stiff response. There's no place in the new Europe for those kinds of public threats of retaliation. What's implicit in Partnership for Peace - and both Russia and the Czech Republic are members of Partnership for Peace - is that countries will deal with each other on a fair basis. Certainly, any country that's a member of the Partnership for Peace has a right to stand up and say it wants to become a member of NATO. We've not excluded Russia, theoretically, as a member of NATO in the future, and we've certainly not excluded the Czech Republic as a member of NATO.

Any country has a right to try to seek association with NATO without being threatened from another country. So I think that just goes without saying.

QUESTION: That's your answer to their statement about the Balkans?

MR. BURNS: Excuse me?

QUESTION: Is that your answer? Does that stand as an answer to the Russians -

MR. BURNS: The Baltic countries are members of the Partnership for Peace, and we have not excluded anyone from being a member of NATO in the future.

QUESTION: They're talking about - you know, rightly or wrongly, they're talking about countries that were part of the Soviet Union -

MR. BURNS: And you know the policy of the United States, which has not changed.

QUESTION: I know, but for many years those states were incorporated in the Soviet Union, and they're saying - they consider it, obviously, more of a poke in the eye to look at Estonia as a potential member than to look at Poland.

MR. BURNS: Our position hasn't changed, on the Baltics or any other country in Central Europe. We have a relationship with the Baltics that's quite good. We are helping them to build a Baltic battalion, a military structure, and in fact that battalion is participating in Bosnia with us. So we have quite good relations with the Baltic states.

QUESTION: And yet you talk about Belarus before - you know, the talk at the other end, that if you want to expand, the Russian Federal can form new alliances, and Belarus would be a logical partner. Is that something that would make you nervous?

MR. BURNS: We're looking forward to a positive relationship with the Russian Federation, and I think we're heading down the right road. We have agreed in NATO to enlarge NATO at Madrid in July. We've also agreed that we very much want to have a charter to define NATO-Russia military relations and political cooperation in Europe. We have made some progress on that, but we are a long way from concluding those talks or from being anywhere near an agreement. We need to keep working on it. That's one of the reasons for Minister Primakov's visit, and certainly one of the reasons for the President's trip to Helsinki.

QUESTION: Nick, the mechanics of these meetings sometime tell more than anything else. Why as early as a few hours ago the Secretary was supposed to speak publicly about her meetings with Primakov, and now it's Mike McCurry answering questions, if we'd like. What's the problem?

MR. BURNS: I understand it's simply a matter of schedule. It's better for their respective schedules to do it tomorrow, rather than do it today, and there are two purposes for this press briefing, by the way - not only to give you a briefing on what happened with Minister Primakov over the last three days but to look ahead to Helsinki, and they will do both tomorrow. But knowing that the Primakov visit ends today, Mike and I decided that we had to have a way to get you a briefing on what happened in the President's meeting, and that's going to happen. Mike's going to give that. Mike will attend the meeting, and he will give you a readout on that. I think we're trying to serve both objectives here.

QUESTION: The President's spending, what, 45 minutes with him, and this building has spent three days and the Pentagon three days with him. It seems like you all would have a little something more to say than in some case it's productive and intensive and cooperative.

MR. BURNS: You will understand that in the meeting with the President all the most important issues will be raised there; that all the work done over the last three days will be condensed into that meeting. So I think you can be assured that the briefing you get from Mike on that meeting is going to be a fairly good summary of what's happened over the last three days and where we think we are heading into Helsinki.

Laura.

QUESTION: I'd like to change the subject. There were reports over the weekend that the Philippines had agreed to be a transit country for the North Korean defector. Do you have any update on his status? There were also some reports today that the process may already be taking place; that he will be going to Philippines.

MR. BURNS: I'd just have to refer you to the Government of China and perhaps the Government of the Republic of Korea. We saw some statements from the Philippine Foreign Minister, as did you. We certainly want this incident to be resolved in a peaceful way to the satisfaction of the Republic of Korea and China, and it appears that the situation is heading in that direction, which is good, but we're not a part of that. So we would just simply welcome any result that would have this incident end peacefully and that would respect the wishes of Mr. Hwang, who has clearly said that he does not wish to return to North Korea.

QUESTION: Colombia.

MR. BURNS: Yes, certainly.

QUESTION: During the weekend, the Colombian Defense Minister resigned because of accusations he'll receive money from the Cali or the leaders of the cartel - narco-traffic cartel from Colombia. Does the State Department have any comments about this?

MR. BURNS: The United States is pleased with the fact that Minister Gonzalez decided to give his resignation. Government officials cannot serve effectively or honorably, they cannot carry out their duties responsibly, when they are indebted to drug cartels. This has been a long running problem in the Colombian Government, particularly the government of President Samper.

You know about the allegations of his own involvement with the drug dealers in his own Presidential campaign. Virtually all of our United States counter-narcotics assistance goes to the Ministry of Defense, and there are a lot of good people, honest people in that ministry and in the Colombian defense establishment who want to curtail the flow of drugs from Colombia to other countries. We believe that with this resignation, all of our efforts, our combined efforts to fight the drug runners, will be enhanced.

QUESTION: On Colombia also. President Samper said in an interview published today that he might consider now presenting extradition to Congress because of the fight that international pressure could make it very difficult for Congress to pass extradition. Are you aware of those remarks?

MR. BURNS: I'm not aware of the remarks. They're not entirely surprising. We think that extradition is important. It's a very important way of fighting and winning the drug war and making sure that everyone's accountable in that war. So we would very much encourage the Samper Government to agree to extradition in cases where that is appropriate.

QUESTION: But what is the international pressure that he is saying is actually not going to facilitate the process?

MR. BURNS: I don't believe that international pressure is the problem. The problem is the ineffectiveness of the Colombian President and other parts of the Colombian Government in fighting the drug cartels in Colombia. There are some very good people - the Attorney General and many people in the Ministry of Defense - who are fighting the problem. They need good, solid, stable leadership.

QUESTION: Over the weekend, the first or one of the first meetings concluded of this group of eight countries who were pulled together by Erbakan, which inlcudes Iran as well as Pakistan, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Turkey. They had a certain amount of division of labor with regard to the economic functions, and they seemed to be intent on continuing creating some kind of economic cooperation. Do you have any comments on the fact that this is going ahead in spite of warnings?

MR. BURNS: I don't have a particular comment, except to say that the United States assumes that the secular foundation of Turkey will continue to be the foundation of Turkey. There was another important meeting over the weekend. The EU Foreign Ministers met in Apeldoorn in the Netherlands to address the question of Turkey's relationship to the European Union, and we have heard that the Ministers reconfirmed that Turkey has a European vocation; that its membership application ought to be judged according to the same criteria as other countries; and, if that is so, that's a very good result.

That accords with our own expressed hope that there is a place for Turkey in Europe. Having said that, let me just go a couple of countries away to Serbia, because no one has raised it, and just say that there are press reports that Belgrade and Pale have made an agreement about their special parallel relations.

It is premature for the government in Belgrade, Serbia, to enter into a formal agreement with one of the entities of Bosnia-Herzegovina before full diplomatic relations have been opened between Belgrade and Sarajevo. We've made that clear many times to Mr. Milosevic. In this regard, we expect Belgrade to take prompt action to implement the agreement he made some time ago - many months ago - with President Izetbegovic to establish full diplomatic relations.

In order for an agreement between Belgrade and Pale to take effect, it must be ratified by the Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia-Herzegovina. I wanted to make sure that we talked about that today, because it's a very important issue, and frankly we want to fire that little shot across Mr. Milosevic's bow.

QUESTION: Thank you.

MR. BURNS: Yes, one more.

QUESTION: Nick, do you have any reaction to the Israeli Justice Minister's very heavy and provocative warning that he would send Arafat out on the world again if there was any violence? And, secondly, negotiations are proceeding on the airport. What about the port and what about the withdrawal? Are there negotiations going forward on that as far as withdrawal? I know your attitude on withdrawal. That's Article 10 of the Oslo II agreement which specifically says that negotiations should be undertaken by Israel and the Palestinians with regard to withdrawal to the specified military locations. I have no explanation for your policy on this, but - and it may have been the reason for all of the events of the last three weeks. But in any case, would you comment on the Justice Minister?

MR. BURNS: On the first question, the United States certainly does not agree with the comments by the Minister of Justice. They are inflammatory and unacceptable, because Chairman Arafat has a place, and that place is in Gaza and the West Bank, and that place should be secure from these kinds of threats. When there are political disagreements, people ought to negotiate them seriously and privately and peacefully and not resort to these types of outlandish threats.

Secondly, we hope that the negotiations on the airport, on the port, on ID's in Jerusalem - a lot of the issues that have been vexing the peace negotiations - we hope they can move forward, all of them. The United States is pushing on both sides to make progress on all those issues.

Thanks very much.

(The briefing concluded at 2:27 p.m.)

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