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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #70, 97-05-08

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>


1806

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Thursday, May 8, 1997

Briefer: Nicholas Burns

ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-2		Introduction of Foreign Service National Award Recipients
2		Foreign Service Day on Friday, May 9
2		Foreign Policy Town Mtg. in Memphis on Thurs., May 15
2		Statement on Behalf of Monitoring Group
24-25		Secretary Albright's Travel to Denver

ZAIRE 3-4,-6-7 President Mobutu/Kabila and Rebel Alliance/Prospects for Second Mtg. 3-5 Ambassador Richardson in Paris/Return to U.S. 3,8 Refugees 4-5 Fighting/Involvement of Surrounding Countries 5-11 Peaceful Transition/Elections 5 Role of South African Government 5-6 President Mobutu's Financial Assets 6 Reports of Departure of Gov't. Officials 6 Ambassador Simpson Mtgs. w/Senior Zaire Officials

GREECE 11-12 U.S. Support for Discussions between Greece and Turkey 12 Carey Cavanaugh in Region

CYPRUS 11-12 U.S. Visit of Cypriot FM on June 6

NORTH KOREA 12,16-18,19-21 U.S. Food Assistance --Not Tied to Four-Party Peace Talks/ World Food Program 13 Arrival of First Food Shipment 13-16 Missile Proliferation Talks-U.S. Proposal for Alternative Dates 19-20 Cooperation on MIAs/The Agreed Framework

JAPAN 13 Trilateral Mtg.-U.S., ROK, Japan 20-21 --Cases of Missing Japanese Allegedly Kidnapped

PAKISTAN 21-22,31 Detention of Mr. Ayyaz Baluch

RUSSIA 22-24 Discussions on NATO-Russia Relationship

CHINA 25-29 Senior Tebetan Monk Sentenced to Prison/Panchen Lama / Religious Freedom/HR

TURKEY 29 Press Reports on U.S. Terrorism Report/Terrorism

MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS 29 Dennis Ross' Discussions in Region

COLOMBIA 30 Congress' Postponement of Action on Extradition/Status of Mr. Perafan


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #70

THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1997 1: 18 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. BURNS: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Today is a special day at the State Department. Every year we honor the Foreign Service Nationals who are the people who are, in many ways, responsible for the success of our embassies and consulates abroad. Those who have served in our embassies and consulates understand that we couldn't survive without Foreign Service Nationals.

So today I'd like to introduce to you the people who have all been honored by being invited to come to Washington, D.C. They have been voted by the Department to be the outstanding Foreign Service Nationals in 1996.

I'd like to start with the Foreign Service National of the Year, Maria Josefa Bastos Dos Santos, from Angola. The citation for her award reads, for your dedication, sound judgment and personal courage in tenaciously promoting American commercial interests in Angola, helping American firms generate substantial new revenues, creating thousands of American jobs, saving the United States Government large sums of money by ensuring that our programs are run smoothly, and strengthening bilateral relations with our second largest trading partner in sub-Saharan Africa. Congratulations.

I'd also like to recognize the runners-up for Foreign Service National of the Year. I'd like to begin with Mr. Enrique Alarcon from Bolivia. In recognition of his superb and dedicated service as a valued colleague of the U.S. Mission in Bolivia, and especially for his consistently stellar performance during numerous high level visits under extreme and often arduous circumstances, congratulations, Mr. Alarcon.

Next is Mr. Hee Kwang Kim from our Embassy in Seoul. Mr. Kim, in recognition of outstanding achievement in financial management throughout 27 years of service to the United States Government, and in particular for significant contributions to the implementation of the International Cooperative Administrative Support Services Program, congratulations.

Next is Miss Irina Vozianova from Kiev, in Ukraine. Since the opening of Embassy Kiev in 1992, Irina Vozianova has served as a key link between the United States Embassy and Ukrainian officials at all levels. She has consistently been a source of accurate and timely information on political developments in Ukraine. This knowledge, combined with her intuitive understanding of diplomacy and her remarkable interpretive skills, have made her indispensable to the Ambassador, Bill Miller, and they've had a direct bearing on the success of Ukrainian-American relations. Congratulations.

We have two more gentlemen that we'd like to honor today. Mohamed Aouar of Algeria, from our American Embassy in Algiers. To Mr. Aouar, in recognition of uncommon dedication to duty in a very dangerous environment, extraordinary professionalism, unfailing good humor, and grace under pressure in managing the local security guard force at our Embassy in Algiers; congratulations, sir.

Finally, Mr. Venkitaraman Suresh from the American Embassy in New Delhi, in India. In recognition of his outstanding management of the Mission housing program, his conservation of financial resources amounting to millions of dollars, and his exemplary performance in both the housing and travel offices at New Delhi, he is the runner-up for Foreign Service National of the Year, but is the nominee for the Bureau of South Asian Affairs. Congratulations to you.

I just want to say a word of thanks for all of us here in the United States to all of you who have done so much to distinguish yourselves and your countries, and have done so much to help the United States over many, many years. Congratulations, and I think all of the journalists will join me in a round of applause for you.

(Applause.)

You don't have to sit through the entire briefing if you don't want to. It's not part of being an award recipient. But you are most welcome.

Tomorrow is Foreign Service Day. Annually we honor the Foreign Service Officers, current and retired, in special events here in Washington. All of the events are open to the press corps.

I think that John Dinger issued a press release a couple of days ago with the schedule of events. If you want to attend any of the events, they begin at 10:00 a.m. tomorrow morning with presentations in the Dean Acheson Auditorium, a speech by Under Secretary Tim Wirth, seminars in the afternoon, concluding in the afternoon with seminars on the Balkans, on diplomacy in the Information Age, on Department resources for the 21st Century, the future of NATO, and on the importance of public diplomacy. You are all welcome to attend.

We have a Foreign Policy Town Meeting scheduled for Memphis, Tennessee, on Thursday, May 15th. This is co-sponsored by the Fogelman Executive Center at the University of Memphis. That is May 15th. Ambassador Jeff Davidow, our Assistant Secretary for Inter-American Affairs will deliver remarks on the President's trip to Mexico and Central America, and the Caribbean. He will be joined by Ambassador Al Larson, our Assistant Secretary for Economic Affairs, and by Maria Ionata of the Policy Planning Staff, who will discuss environmental affairs.

Finally, we have a statement today that we are issuing on behalf of the Monitoring Group regarding complaints filed to the Monitoring Group of incidents that occurred on May 5th, and these complaints were filed by Israel and by Lebanon. I would refer you to that if you have any questions. Barry.

QUESTION: Zaire, if you would, please. Is Mobutu coming back, do you suppose? Does the U.S. have any late word on any possible negotiations over transition?

MR. BURNS: We don't know if President Mobutu will be returning to Kinshasa after his visit to Gabon. We know he has met there with President Bongo and other leaders from nearby African states.

This is a decision that he alone can make.

You know that Ambassador Richardson was in Paris today briefing the French Government on the results of his diplomatic mission.

Ambassador Richardson is now returning to the United States.

The United States' objectives, as we watch this transition taking place, are to first of all, end the fighting, achieve a cease-fire; second, to ensure respect for human rights, the human rights of the citizens of Zaire; and third, to try to promote, along with South Africa and the United Nations and others, a peaceful transition.

There is no question that that transition is underway with the continued march towards Kinshasa of the rebel alliance. That alliance military victory seems likely in the coming days. But the future of Zaire is at risk. Ambassador Richardson spoke to this today in Paris. The citizens of Zaire, the international community and the United States are going to judge the alliance and Mr. Kabila on the way they comport themselves in this endgame.

As you know, we have had many concerns about the treatment of refugees in and around Kisangani. We have made those clear to Mr. Kabila, and we have now received assurances from him that those refugees will be well treated and that they will be allowed to leave through the assistance of the United Nations.

But the test here is to make sure that the actions, as well as the words of the rebel alliance, meet a basic international standard.

We would submit a standard that the Zairian people would also want to have for their own government. That test is, will the rebel alliance proceed in a democratic fashion? We hope it will, and that is where your attentions are directed. Will it respect the human rights of the citizens of the country? And will the rebel alliance work cooperatively with President Mobutu and with others in Kinshasa to avoid a bloodbath, to avoid bloodshed, and to make sure that the end, the victory of this military alliance, which is undoubtedly going to happen, that that takes place in a peaceful way.

QUESTION: Do you have any word on whether Mobutu or the people he left behind are now willing to take U.S. advice and enter negotiations for their -- obviously, for their demise with the advancing rebels?

MR. BURNS: We do not know, Barry, what President Mobutu intends to do now that the Libreville meetings have concluded.

His spokesman says that he'll be returning to Kinshasa tomorrow.

We don't know if that will take place or not. We'll have to wait and see, along with the rest of you, how that happens.

We do hope that President Mobutu and Mr. Kabila might be able to meet. As you know, the South Africans and the UN are talking about a possible meeting next week. Before that happens, we hope that their seconds, their advisers, could be in close touch so that the fighting might cease - and there is terrible fighting today, 150 kilometers from the capital - and that the transition that is clearly underway can proceed in a non-violent way so that the citizens of Kinshasa are not subjected to war on their streets.

QUESTION: Two questions - despite all the efforts, Richardson's efforts and what not, you still have not - correct me if I'm wrong, it sounds like you still have not gotten a reliable commitment from Kabila that there will not be a bloodbath in Kinshasa; is that correct?

MR. BURNS: Well, I would just say that I think Ambassador Richardson's trip was very successful because he helped along - obviously, under the leadership of the South Africans and the UN - to put together the meeting they had. There is now the promise of a second meeting. I refer you to Mr. Kabila's public comments.

He said that he'd be willing, as you remember, to have a period of time to allow for a transition.

Now, unfortunately, I don't know who started the fighting first in Kenge, but there has been fighting, and very severe fighting and many hundreds of people have died. Who is at fault; who started the fighting? We can't say. We just know that both sides - the government and the rebels - ought to be responsible for putting together a cease-fire.

QUESTION: That wasn't the question, though. Let me try it again. Do you feel you have a commitment from Kabila to do what you want him to do, which is to say not have a bloodbath when his forces come into Kinshasa? Do you have that commitment?

MR. BURNS: I think we understand from our conversations with Mr. Kabila that he'd very much like to avoid that. He, however, says also that he is determined to take the capital. Our view is that he and others need to be mindful of their own actions, which are a test of their credibility. There is no reason for bloodshed in Kinshasa. There ought to be a way to develop a peaceful transition in the coming days.

Now, we are encouraged by the statements by the South Africans and the UN today that there might be a meeting next week. Obviously, Mr. Kabila, as well as President Mobutu ought to put their efforts into peaceful meetings, dialogue, rather than storming a capital city with many hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of innocent people in it.

QUESTION: So the answer is no, there is no commitment.

MR. BURNS: Whether it's a commitment or not, we're going to have to judge Mr. Kabila, as well as others in the region, on their actions. We'll be watching the actions closely.

QUESTION: The other question is, how - also given the groundwork that Richardson has supposedly laid -- how much cooperation are you getting from Angola and Museveni and others who are in a position to put pressure on Kabila to do what you want him to do, which is no bloodbath, democracy and all that?

MR. BURNS: Yes, much of what Ambassador Richardson did this week, as you know, was to travel to neighboring countries to reaffirm the view of the United States as well as the United Nations that there ought to be peaceful transitions, and that neighboring countries ought not to contribute to continued warfare, but ought to contribute to a peaceful ending in Zaire. We will have to judge some of those countries by their actions, as well, as you know, because there have been widespread reports obviously of some of these countries - not necessarily the ones you named -- but some surrounding countries have been involved in the fighting, in running guns to one side or another. We just think that all efforts in Africa, Central Africa, these days ought to be turned towards a peaceful ending, a soft landing, for the current government and for the transition.

QUESTION: So despite all of Richardson's efforts, despite the U.S. holding up Museveni and others in the region as progressive, new African leaders, it sounds, again, as if you have no real commitment from them. Or you see no real evidence from them that they are encouraging Kabila to do what you want him to do.

MR. BURNS: Well, I think the government that we would praise in Africa is the South African Government, which has acted in the interest of preserving -- of trying to re-instill peace, and to protect innocent civilians. Millions of people are caught up in this civil war. The South African Government has been true to its word and has really been the world leader on this crisis.

We have tried to support the role of the South African Government.

I think other governments will have to live with what they are doing. We will judge them, obviously. I think others will, as well, the United Nations, on how they comport themselves. We don't think this is a time to stimulate further fighting. We think this is the time to stimulate peace and a peaceful transition.

QUESTION: Nick, have you all begun to focus on the issue of Mobutu's assets and what should happen as he leaves, if he leaves? What should happen to his assets in the United States; his assets perhaps in Switzerland, which denied yesterday they had any?

MR. BURNS: I'm sure that's a question for Mr. Mobutu to ponder, as well as for those who are going to be involved in the transition. I'm not sure that the United States ought to have, or does have, any kind of direct responsibility for that particular issue.

QUESTION: Do you know if he has assets here?

MR. BURNS: I do not know personally if President Mobutu has financial assets or real estate in the United States. But you know, we have laws in this country the govern the actions of any citizen or any foreigner who has financial assets here.

I'm sure our laws will be upheld. But I am just not aware that the United States Government sees itself as the primary actor responsible for adjudicating that issue.

QUESTION: Are you looking into it?

MR. BURNS: Are we looking into that issue? I think really it is an issue for Mr. Mobutu and for the Zairian Government.

It is obviously a very serious issue in Zaire itself, given the extent of the financial empire of the Mobutu family. But it is not something, I think, that the United States would publicly want to position itself on right now.

I am sure that American diplomats have given this some thought, and I am sure we have our views on this. I am sure we have talked to others about our views. But I don't think it is appropriate for us to surface those publicly.

QUESTION: Nick, why is Bill Richardson calling for a second summit between Mobutu and Mr. Laurent Kabila? Did they fail to make a deal in the first meeting on this transition of power and the safety of Kinshasa?

MR. BURNS: As you know, President Mandela announced, after the first meeting on the South African naval vessel, that there ought to be and he hoped that there would be a second meeting.

We believe that in meeting, the two leaders might be able to agree on a transition that would avoid bloodshed in Kinshasa and save people's lives, and make sure that a transition preserves at least what Zaire has now physically and in their people, rather than subject the population any further to civil war. That is a very compelling reason to seek a second meeting.

QUESTION: No such arrangement was made, then, in the first meeting on the ship?

MR. BURNS: I would just draw you attention to President Mandela's public comments, and Deputy President Mbeki's public comments at the time, and Ambassador Richardson's.

QUESTION: Nick, there has been reporting that there are large numbers of Zairians who are getting ferries and planes out of Kinshasa these days. Do we know the degree to which Mobutu's backers, families, government officials may be leaving the country?

MR. BURNS: There have been widespread reports that a number of government officials have left or are considering leaving Kinshasa by a variety of means. I don't think it's our responsibility or, frankly, our position to report on who those people are and what they're doing. It's not our - we don't want to get in the way of anyone's personal security.

QUESTION: Are there people there to pick up the phone when the U.S. Embassy calls the government of Mobutu?

MR. BURNS: Yes, I can tell you that Ambassador Simpson, in recent days, has had high-level meetings with the most senior officials in the Zairian Government, and even since President Mobutu departed for Gabon. So there are people answering the phones. The government is working. It's not working very well, obviously, under the circumstances. It hasn't worked well for a number of years. But under the current circumstances, the government is obviously stretched thin. We do want this transition to take place peacefully and in an orderly way and, again, because that helps the people of Zaire.

QUESTION: Do you think that there will be a second meeting if, as you predict, Kabila's troops take Kinshasa? What would be the point of him meeting with a dictator who's obviously powerless?

MR. BURNS: Well, I think we all have to face reality here.

As John said yesterday, we have to face reality, and the reality is the rebel alliance is on the verge of a total military victory in Zaire. That's the reality. But there is going to be a transition.

Now, how that transition proceeds is now the key question. Rather than a continued military march on the capital city, with the attendant loss of life and bloodshed, we would like to see a transitional period worked out by meetings between either President Mobutu and Mr. Kabila, or their advisers. If the South Africans can engineer such a meeting that would avoid a military barrage of Kinshasa, that would be something the United States would strongly favor and support.

QUESTION: But, as you and others have pointed out, this government of Mobutu is, in effect, history. What role would he play in a transition, since he has no power? He has no --

MR. BURNS: I think Mr. Kabila has set the terms publicly.

He has said, Kabila has said if President Mobutu is not willing to leave, there will be a fight for Kinshasa. If he is willing to leave, there's a possibility of a peaceful transition. Therefore, meetings at this point - diplomatic meetings - ought to be the order of the day -- the wisest and most rational way for everybody to proceed. A way has to be worked out between the current government and the alliance to make a transition of political power and economic power and governance. That ought to be done in a meeting, peacefully, rather than through a fight.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) - just if he doesn't go back?

MR. BURNS: Pardon?

QUESTION: Would there be a transition - because it almost sounds as if - I'm a little confused --

MR. BURNS: Whether President Mobutu remains in Gabon or travels elsewhere or goes back to Kinshasa, there has to be some kind of discussion to work out a peaceful transition of power.

If there isn't that kind of discussion, then we assume that the war will continue and that more people will die. That can't be in anyone's interest.

QUESTION: With or without Mobutu in Kinshasa?

MR. BURNS: That's correct, because Mobutu's government is in power in Kinshasa.

QUESTION: What happens if it leads to bloodshed? What will be the consequences for Kabila and his government if there is bloodshed?

MR. BURNS: I don't want to assume there is going to be one. I don't want to answer a hypothetical question based on that. I would draw you back, Carol, to one of the first things that I said and something that was said much more eloquently by Ambassador Richardson today; and that is that there's a lot at stake for the people of Zaire, and the rebel alliance will be judged on how they comport themselves in the days ahead and the weeks ahead.

QUESTION: But if you are so vague how - I mean, how can you possibly expect these kinds of words to have resonance there if you are just so vague?

MR. BURNS: Because we have not been vague in private, where it counts, in meetings with Mr. Kabila. I think he understands what is at stake here. There have been a lot of questions about what happened in Kisangani. Fortunately, the United Nations is now doing a superb job - the UN High Commissioner for Refugees - a superb job of bringing those refugees out of Zaire.

Mr. Kabila understands what is at stake for him and his reputation.

He now needs to think about being a responsible person who can lead a government. In anticipation of that, he needs to think about ways to preserve life.

QUESTION: But we --

MR. BURNS: I should say, I think to be fair, the people who remain in Kinshasa, who have not left and who are currently officials of the Zairian Government, they also have the same responsibility.

They need to act in such a way that they preserve human life, preserve order and peace, as much as that can be preserved in this transitional period.

QUESTION: But didn't you state that the American and international companies in Zaire and its mineral resources, I mean, if Kabila takes power in a way that is, you know, you consider inappropriate, I mean, is the United States going to be able to block, you know, World Bank loans and other kinds of investment in the country? Will you deny aid to reconstruct Zaire? I mean, it's important.

MR. BURNS: But, Carol, you are asking me to answer a hypothetical question, a worst-case hypothetical, and I can't do that. It is not in my interest to do that. Why would I want to answer a question like that? We have to see what Mr. Kabila does first.

What we hope is that he is going to act in a democratic fashion, in a civilized fashion, with due regard for human life and for peace. That is the standard that needs to be met here. If he meets that standard, we will tell you. If he doesn't meet that standard, we can have this discussion. But I don't want to anticipate negative behavior on his part or by the rebel alliance. We hope that they have learned some lessons and are ready to act in a decent way.

QUESTION: Nick, but the long and short of it is, you are willing to accept Mr. Kabila as the leader of Zaire, a rebel leader who has taken - overthrown the government by force of arms?

MR. BURNS: Sid, that is not our choice here. The United States does not have a vote, last time I checked, in Zaire. We are not going to determine who winds up as the leader of Zaire. I don't know who it is going to be, who will emerge from a transitional period as the leader of Zaire after the era of Mobutuism has finally ended.

That is not for us to decide. But we have enough interest in Zaire, political and economic and historic and others, to assert a strong U.S. presence throughout this period in our Embassy, and to assert a strong U.S. interest in seeing Zaire get back on its feet.

We would like to see elections. We would like the see the people of Zaire be given a choice for once. They have never been given a choice in the history of the country as to who is going to lead them. We think that there ought to be a free and fair election, and the best person should win that election, obviously.

We hope it is a democrat. We hope it is someone who will want to take Zaire to where South Africa is. That is a very tall test, but it is not one that is unachievable. It can be met.

QUESTION: But there are ways to express yourself other than at that ballot box, such as at the United Nations with sanctions, as you have done against Burma and Serbia and so forth. Apparently Kabila's activities have not met your threshold for distaste.

MR. BURNS: How could we possibly vote for UN or international sanctions on a rebel movement that is in the bush? It is not yet a government. It doesn't have a track record as a government, and you are asking me to say the United States Government in July or August of 1997 will take the following measures. I have never done that as spokesman. I'm not going to do it now. You are asking me to answer a question that is unanswerable -- what is going to happen in Kinshasa? We don't know. So what I prefer to do is tell you what we hope will happen, and it's a public encouragement to those leaders from the United States.

QUESTION: But there are sanctions on the Sprska Republic, which is not a nation. I mean, it's not unprecedented.

MR. BURNS: The Serbs - the Bosnian Serbs - have been for better or worse, and almost always worse, the governing authority of the poor people who have to live under its jurisdiction. They are - they have their hand out for international aid, and we've not given them most of that aid because of their reprehensible behavior. But they are a governing authority. The rebel alliance has been mostly concerned with military tactics in a guerrilla war. It's not a governing authority that anybody - any political scientist - would recognize. Now, it may be in a week or two or three, or somebody else may constitute that. We'll have to wait and see what happens in the transition, who occupies the seat of power. We hope it's a democrat - somebody devoted to elections, to cooperation with other countries, to devote him or herself to the welfare of the people of Zaire, which has been pretty much ignored for a long time.

QUESTION: It does, in fact, govern about two-thirds of Zaire right now.

MR. BURNS: I think govern is probably too strong a word to use. I mean, it is a military force that occupies cities.

I think it intends to turn itself into a governing force, but I'm not sure we give it that distinction yet.

QUESTION: Nick, would this government ask Mr. Kabila to have a cease-fire to stand in place while these negotiations, the second --

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: -- second negotiations are made?

MR. BURNS: Yes, yes, that is our position/

QUESTION: That is your position?

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: And you would, I presume, prefer if, in fact, he is going to take Kinshasa, he will walk in without bloodshed, rather than fight his way in; is that your preference?

MR. BURNS: That's right. Bill, you've done it; you've summarized the entire conversation.

(Laughter.)

Now we can move on to a much more productive discussion. Bill, congratulations; it's good to see you back here. I'm so glad to be back in this briefing room, talking about all these issues.

(Laughter.)

I missed all of you during our trip to Guatemala and Mexico and Russia.

QUESTION: Did Richardson or the U.S. - maybe I missed it - did they ask Kabila to avoid bloodshed if and when he gets into Kinshasa?

MR. BURNS: Absolutely.

QUESTION: Thank you. I'm better off quoting you than --

MR. BURNS: To avoid bloodshed, yes, that's our main message.

QUESTION: And what was the answer?

MR. BURNS: Well, I mean, I can't quote back to you - Bill Richardson had hours of conversation with him, and I can't quote back all the conversation. We're going to have to judge Mr. Kabila - and we will judge the others - by their actions.

QUESTION: You didn't get a yes.

MR. BURNS: Pardon?

QUESTION: If you got a clear yes, you wouldn't have to lay down these admonitions, would you?

MR. BURNS: I think about two hours ago, at the beginning of this conversation, I tried to answer that question by saying Mr. Kabila very publicly said that he'd be willing to have a transition period as long as President Mobutu stepped down. If President Mobutu did not step down, then Mr. Kabila predicted a military offensive against Kinshasa. We're in favor of a peaceful transition.

QUESTION: I heard that from Bill.

MR. BURNS: You mean our deputy government spokesman here.

QUESTION: Yeah, but I think you wouldn't quarrel then with the U.S. asked Kabila not to use force - in fact, not even to try to get into Kinshasa; to try to put his fate in negotiations with Mobutu next week, under South African supervision, and you got an inconclusive answer. Is that fair enough?

MR. BURNS: No, I don't want to agree to that characterization --

QUESTION: All right.

MR. BURNS: -- because I don't want to characterize Mr. Kabila's position. I don't think that would be fair of me.

QUESTION: It wasn't yes or no, though, was it?

MR. BURNS: Well, it's a complicated situation, Barry, and what we hope is that Mr. Kabila's forces and the government's forces will comport themselves in a civilized way.

QUESTION: Yeah, I know what you'd like.

MR. BURNS: Dimitris.

QUESTION: Nick, we have an announcement yesterday in Athens about discussions between Greece and Turkey, the committees of the wise men, as they said; and also an announcement of a visit by a Cypriot Foreign Minister here to meet Secretary Albright on June 6th.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Do you have comment on either of these developments?

MR. BURNS: Yes, I can comment on both. First of all, the United States does encourage Greece and Turkey to meet to discuss the many proposals that have been made over a very long period of time to try to reduce tensions between them. When Secretary Albright was Ambassador Albright, she visited the Eastern Mediterranean, in July of 1996, and she put forward some proposals for reduced tensions between Greece and Turkey. We hope those and other proposals can be taken up.

Secondly, Secretary Albright will be very pleased to see the Cypriot foreign minister -- Foreign Minister Kasoulides -- on June 6th.

They will discuss the current situation in Cyprus, the latest UN mediation efforts - which we strongly support, by the way.

They will also discuss ways by which the United States can make a positive difference in resolving the problems of Cyprus. I know that Secretary Albright is looking forward to this, because she's intensely interested in the Eastern Mediterranean. She wants to do whatever we can to help Greece and Turkey reduce their tensions, and also to find a solution to the Cyprus problem.

QUESTION: Can you say something on the mission by Carey Cavanaugh in Athens - any readout on what's happened there?

MR. BURNS: Carey Cavanaugh is a fine diplomat. He's currently in the region, in the Eastern Mediterranean, as one of his periodic trips to try to see if the United States can be helpful to the parties.

QUESTION: Nick, new subject.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: There's a Reuter's story out of Tokyo, quoting Japanese officials saying that the United States is now tying the issue of humanitarian food aid to North Korea's willingness to join the four-party talks. Is there such a --

MR. BURNS: I've not seen the Reuter's story, and with all due respect to Reuters, which is a terrific news organization, has a wonderful correspondent here in the State Department -- having said all that as pretext to an answer, I can tell you the United States is not tying food assistance to North Korea to the hope that the North Koreans might join the four-party peace talks.

I would remind you that the United States is the lead contributor to the current appeal by the World Food Program. We've said many times that if there are future appeals by the World Food Program, we will take them very seriously; and we mean that. We are not tying food aid in any way whatsoever.

Now, there's been a lot of commentary out of Tokyo because there was a very important trilateral meeting yesterday among the United States, the Republic of Korea and Japan. Chuck Kartman, our Acting Assistant Secretary represented the United States. They did discuss the worsening food situation in North Korea in all of its dimensions.

The United States did not indicate at that meeting a change in policy on this question of food aid. In fact, I know that the first ship, the Galveston Bay, arrived at the port of Nampo yesterday.

It is currently off-loading many thousands of tons of corn and corn-soy blend. The second ship will be arriving in just a couple of days. That is from the first tranche of assistance that we pledged in February.

The second tranche of assistance, those ships will be underway soon, and a total of $25 million in food aid will be delivered.

So we're going to continue with our commitments.

QUESTION: Nick, on Korea.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Has the U.S. proposed alternative dates for the missile talks?

MR. BURNS: Well, that's what we plan to do. We plan to propose alternative dates now that the North Koreans have said that the dates of May 12th and 13th are inconvenient for technical reasons, whatever that is. I can't explain that. Perhaps the North Koreans or someone else could explain what technical reasons are. But we hope these talks can be rescheduled. We want to have them because we're concerned about the issue of missile proliferation.

QUESTION: You said you can't explain what technical reasons are. Do you think this is a serious impediment, or do you have a sense the North Koreans will come to the table in a few weeks?

MR. BURNS: Well, in the words of my former boss, Secretary Christopher, the North Koreans are sometimes, perhaps most of the time, opaque. So rather than try to give you a detailed answer as to why they've chosen to postpone these talks, I think you should refer - perhaps if you tried to tap into the website, the North Korean website, you could pose and e-mail question to my counterpart, the North Korean Foreign Ministry Spokesman in Pyongyang, and ask him what technical reasons are.

But we do hope that the North Koreans will accept our proposal to schedule and to show up at missile proliferation talks, as well as to seriously reflect upon the serious offer made by the United States and South Korea for four-party talks. There's a lot on the table.

QUESTION: That's a much gloomier analysis, it seems to me, than what was offered from that podium two days ago.

MR. BURNS: This podium?

QUESTION: Yes.

MR. BURNS: No --

QUESTION: Not by you.

MR. BURNS: John and I have no - there's no difference in whether we're gloomy or sunny. I think we almost always see eye to eye on these affairs.

QUESTION: Nick, how about --

MR. BURNS: I think maybe we're opaque on this. But in responding to an opaque situation, sometimes the best thing is just to be straightforward.

QUESTION: Two days ago, it was put in terms of, hey, it's a technical reason, we'll set another date.

QUESTION: And it will happen. And you're --

MR. BURNS: I completely agree with that brilliant statement by Mr. Dinger.

QUESTION: Okay. Two days later now, the U.S. doesn't see any real hang- up, nor does it understand what North Korea means by technical reasons; is that correct?

MR. BURNS: I'm just saying I prefer not to tell you exactly why the North Koreans chose to postpone the meeting because I'm not sure we know. They cite technical reasons. All we know is that we want to have the meeting. We think they ought to sit down with us because missile proliferation is a very big issue of concern to us. But I thought John did a brilliant job when I was away, yes, and I would gladly associate myself with the way he described it two days ago.

QUESTION: Well, that's going off on a tangent. If you want to see --

MR. BURNS: I don't want to go off on a tangent.

QUESTION: If the U.S. wants to make sure they come to talk, one rather obvious way is to propose new dates. Why can't you settle on new dates?

MR. BURNS: John, have we actually proposed new dates?

QUESTION: No, no.

MR. BURNS: We have. John says we have.

QUESTION: You haven't?

MR. BURNS: We have.

QUESTION: You have.

MR. DINGER: We proposed dates. We're working on it. We have proposed dates.

MR. BURNS: We have proposed them. The North Koreans have not come back and said we agree or disagree, right? We're in that stage of these --

QUESTION: You remember the word soon, two days ago? You proposed that they meet soon; is that correct?

MR. DINGER: Within a few weeks hence.

QUESTION: Within a few weeks.

MR. BURNS: Within a few weeks hence.

QUESTION: Well, backwards would be impossible.

MR. BURNS: See, we're being - you never can say that the United States is opaque; we're transparent.

QUESTION: Within a few weeks hence. Hence is unnecessary.

Within a few weeks would be good.

MR. BURNS: We're very transparent people and government.

QUESTION: All right.

MR. BURNS: We believe in transparency.

QUESTION: So in the meantime, have you kept an eye on what North Korea may be doing in the way of proliferating? That could be a technical reason - they've got a few jobs to finish off, a few packages to pack.

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: The Washington Times is liable to find it out tomorrow, and you'll have to deal with it anyhow, so -

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: God help us.

QUESTION: Have you been keeping tabs on their proliferation?

MR. BURNS: Barry, you're in a very suspicious --

QUESTION: Of North Korea? A little, yeah.

MR. BURNS: -- mood today.

QUESTION: A little suspicious.

MR. BURNS: Let me just tell you --

QUESTION: The U.S. Government thinks they're the world's number-one proliferator. They've called off talks where you were going to have difficult talks with them that you were going to call to their attention your concerns about their proliferation.

You have no new date set. You don't know why they called off the talks. So I wonder if you're keeping an eye on them and have picked up anything disturbing.

MR. BURNS: We're keeping an eye on them --

QUESTION: Have you picked up anything disturbing?

MR. BURNS: -- as you would expect us to do, because we do find very serious allegations about North Korea's missile program, obviously, and some of its activities. That's why we want to have talks. We do have the ability to monitor the activities of the North Koreans, and of course we do that regularly and consistently because it's in our national interest to do that. We hope, as John said, that the North Koreans will agree to the resumption of the talks, to specific dates, and they will show up for the talks. But I can't tell you the talks have been rescheduled until the North Koreans agree to that.

QUESTION: Can I ask about the food thing?

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: And in a non-prejuritive way. Nobody --

MR. BURNS: You mean your question or my answer?

QUESTION: Well, I am not - no matter how this question is interpreted.

MR. BURNS: Okay.

QUESTION: Is there any intention here to suggest the United States would be so heartless as to condition delivery of food to starving people to the political moves taken by their government?

Okay, so that's not the question. I distinctly remember --

MR. BURNS: I was about to answer that question.

QUESTION: Well, because you had said, we don't do that.

We are humanitarians.

MR. BURNS: It's true. We don't do that.

QUESTION: All right. Now, back in Korea, Secretary Albright said quite - -

MR. BURNS: In February.

QUESTION: In February, when it seemed quite logical, that, indeed, the political situation in Korea is likely to have a bearing on the food situation. And I took that to mean, fairly obviously, that if North Korea behaved better, there would be more of an inclination in the - they would do better financially; economic conditions would ease. They would have more money to buy food. They might get more food that way. Isn't that what this is all about - without using the word tying? Isn't it true that North Korea's political behavior has a lot to do with how much food they will receive?

MR. BURNS: Well, I do remember Secretary Albright's comment.

I remember where it was made in the --

QUESTION: Yes.

MR. BURNS: -- right after lunch with the South Korean Foreign Minister. That is not what Secretary Albright meant, and I have talked to her about it a couple of times.

QUESTION: All right.

MR. BURNS: It's not what she meant at all.

QUESTION: Her pejorative. You understand.

MR. BURNS: No. I understand that. It's not what she meant. Let me tell you just where I come from this morning. I just got back from Mexico last night. I turned on NPR this morning. There was a very good report from Tokyo by the very good correspondent there who said, essentially, the United States has shifted gears and is now tying food aid to the four- party talks.

I made inquiries this morning - John and I together - and we understand in very clear terms that is not the case. Unfortunately, he's a very good correspondent. I don't know what that correspondent heard from other government officials, not U.S. but other governments.

But the United States is not tying food aid. We think we ought to respond on a humanitarian basis.

Let me just give you the obvious evidence for that. We have not succeeded yet in convincing the North Koreans to show up at four-party talks. We haven't even succeeded in convincing them to show up at missile proliferation talks. So we are not happy. We think they should have showed up to both talks by now, and we hope they will in the future.

But we have not taken that unhappiness and changed our policy to deny them food aid. We continue with the food aid. The Galveston Bay arrived yesterday. There will be at least three more shipments arriving, totaling $25 million. We remain open to further contributions should the World Food Program say that that is necessary, even in the near future.

So I think we have made clear by our own actions that we are not tying food aid - or any other word you want to use, Barry.

We are not linking it. We are not associating it, because there is a humanitarian imperative here.

QUESTION: Nick, this discussion is a little bit misleading.

MR. BURNS: Well, not from my part, Carol. I'm sorry to just be very quick to say that.

QUESTION: All right, that's not being critical of you.

I'm just - it's sort of by omission, really. On the one hand, the United States does say it will proceed with its own humanitarian deliveries, and it has. As you say, when the World Food Program asks, the United States has responded. But it is also true that U.S. officials have said that there will be no effort to - I mean, the amount of emergency food aid that has gone to North Korea is very small compared to what the need is assessed to be. And what U.S. officials have said is that there will no large- scale effort, no systematic effort to deal with the food crisis in North Korea until North Korea comes to the peace talks.

I mean, there have been a number of public comments that once North Korea sits down at the peace table, then all things can be on the table. And so there is a distinction here between the emergency food aid and the long- term, larger effort, whatever that might be, to try to deal with this issue.

MR. BURNS: Well, let's see if I can be helpful in clarifying --

QUESTION: I think that is what is confusing me.

MR. BURNS: -- in clarifying you - because I think you have asked a very good question, and you have probably drawn it the way it should be drawn.

We do not favor the current economic system of North Korea, which is a communist system, which has clearly failed the people. President Clinton mentioned this a couple of weeks ago. We would like to see that system changed because it's that system that has failed the North Korean people and has led to the starvation and to the deprivation that millions of North Koreans are now experiencing.

So are we going to put into North Korea billions of dollars of American, or Western, or Asian money - either bilaterally or multilaterally to subsidize a communist economic system? No way. We're not going to do that. But that's not the question that we've been asked by the United Nation's World Food Program. The World Food Program came forward with a limited appeal -- limited because it's not $5 billion, it's several hundred million. Excuse me, no, it's not several hundred million, excuse me. Let's check the figure. But it's a limited amount.

QUESTION: (Inaudible)

MR. BURNS: Let's check the figure, but it's a limited amount.

QUESTION: (Inaudible).

MR. BURNS: I think that was the figure and that rings true. We have done, if you look at our $25 million contribution, the most of any country around the world, and I think the World Food Program is satisfied by the level of our assistance. So, we're going to respond on an emergency humanitarian basis to try to get food to people who need it in a failing system, but we are not going to spend billions of dollars of American money to prop up a decrepit, ancient, oxymoron, which is communist economics.

There is the distinction that I think we can all draw for you.

Unfortunately, I think Barry's first question pertained to some of the press reports coming out of Tokyo that we've decided even to hold up the limited food assistance of that type of assistance, and that's what I heard this morning in the press reports and I can tell you that's not the case. So, I'd like to draw that distinction which I think is pretty clear.

QUESTION: Have American officials said to the North Koreans that if you come to the four-party talks and if there is progress, et cetera, there might be some assistance down the road?

MR. BURNS: What I think we've said, without betraying the confidentiality of those negotiations, is that if you come to the four-party talks, many things are possible in the relationship.

But I wouldn't just center on food aid. But I'd center on the future. We'd like to eventually at some point have a more normal relationship with North Korea. Now, that objective will really depend and be a function of North Korea's ability to change and to adapt and to act in a way that is consistent with international principles economically and politically. It's a longer term objective.

QUESTION: Even if it were still communist North Korea?

MR. BURNS: We're going to continue to cooperate with North Korea on MIAs. In fact, the talks are underway this week here in Washington headed by DOD on that issue, on the Agreed Framework, on the four-party talks and on the question of food.

There are possibilities, obviously, for cooperation that would emanate from any kind of political normalization, but these are objectives that are far in the future and that are going to be very difficult to achieve.

Yes? Still on North Korea?

QUESTION: I know that DOD has the lead in this issue, but can you report on the progress on the MIA talks?

MR. BURNS: DOD has the lead, Mr. Wold, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, is the lead on MIA issues. We have a State Department representative there. I think I would prefer to let DOD characterize how the talks are going. There are more than 81,009 cases of MIA from the Korean War. There is an attempt to try to bring the families, some of the American families together with a North Korean delegation this week here in Washington and we hope that 50 years after the war - excuse me - 40-odd years after the war, that might be possible to bring them together so that the North Koreans can hear directly from American - New York - thank you - the North Koreans can hear directly from American families what their personal concerns are.

Thank you, Sid, for correcting me on that.

QUESTION: Does the United States have a voice on the World Food Program?

MR. BURNS: It's an agency of the United Nations. So, there are Americans who work for it and since we're the largest financial contributor, yes, we have a voice; but it is an agency of the UN and we work very well with it.

QUESTION: But the United States has input into the - has a voice on the organization that determines how much is, in fact, an emergency ration of food for the North Koreans.

MR. BURNS: Those decisions are made by the experts, by Ms. Bertini and the experts on the World Food Program staff, so they are not in any way dictated to by the United States or any other member country. We have a voice in that Americans are in the organization, itself. In the annual review of these organizations we can assess country by country whether we are pleased by the performance of the organization. I don't want to insinuate that somehow we're calling the shots of an independent UN agency. We have a great respect for it because it has a very good track record.

QUESTION: More on North Korea?

MR. BURNS: Still on Korea? Yes.

QUESTION: I understand that there are cases of missing Japanese citizens allegedly kidnapped by North Korea. Did this issue come up in the trilat talk in Tokyo? And is the U.S. willing to take some role in this issue, perhaps, telling the North Koreans to take positive steps in this?

MR. BURNS: Well, that issue has come up in previous talks.

I know that Minister Ikeda raised it with Secretary Albright in Tokyo in February when we were there. We have heard it many times from the Japanese Government -- a description of this terrible problem that concerns many people in Japan. It is an issue that the Japanese must work out, of course, with the North Koreans and we would hope that the North Koreans would be forthcoming in working with Japan.

If there is any way the United States could be helpful, I'm sure we would, but I don't know if we have been asked to be a intermediary.

I don't believe we have. We very much hope that these very serious allegations about young women being kidnapped could be put to rest or the North Koreans could give some good answers to the Japanese Government about what may or may not have happened. That is an issue clearly between those two countries, but we are an ally of Japan and if we can be helpful, of course, we would be. But that would be at the request of the Japanese Government.

QUESTION: Just briefly. Nick, is it the policy of the United States in a situation of famine in North Korea to intervene in a way to prevent desperation on the part of that government or that populace, especially the military in order to preserve peace on the Peninsula?

MR. BURNS: I'm not sure I understand the question, with all due respect. (Laughter.) No, with all due respect.

QUESTION: It means, is it our policy really to, with food and everything, to intervene, to keep people from becoming so desperate and the military from becoming desperate -- as they are also starving -- that they might be driven to take some kind of action against the South? That's the question.

MR. BURNS: Our policy is very simple and straightforward.

It is to try to help feed starving people. That is our policy.

QUESTION: Mr. Burns?

MR. BURNS: Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Mr. Burns, there has been a report in the Washington Times by your good friend, Bill Gertz the other day --

MR. BURNS: Well, I probably would quibble with the relationship that you described.

QUESTION: -- saying that --

MR. BURNS: I would quibble with it.

QUESTION: -- the arrest of a local DEA official in Islamabad amounted to hostage taking. He was, of course, quoting the usual officials --

MR. BURNS: Right. The usual unnamed suspects.

QUESTION: -- who cannot be identified.

MR. BURNS: Right. Exactly.

QUESTION: And he said that this is going to affect this --

MR. BURNS: You mean they are so confident of their views that they can't be identified.

QUESTION: So, he said the report said this was retaliation by the Pakistanis against the arrest of an Air Force officer in New York on a drug sting charge. And he also said this is going to affect - jeopardize, in fact, the U.S.-Pakistan relations.

I was wondering if you have something on this?

QUESTION: On this, he quoted a State Department official.

QUESTION: A usual State Department official.

MR. BURNS: The usual suspects. They round up the usual suspects, yes. I would refer you to the government of Pakistan for information on the detention in Islamabad of Mr. Ayyaz Baluch.

He is a Pakistani national employed by the Drug Enforcement Agency in Pakistan. The United States has expressed its concern for Mr. Baluch at senior levels of the government of Pakistan and we are following this case very closely. Pakistan has provided assurances to us that Mr. Baluch's case will be handled in accordance with Pakistani law. I think it is a very delicate, sensitive issue, the status of Mr. Baluch, and we will continue to discuss this privately with the Government of Pakistan.

QUESTION: Let's get into an easy question. The Russian views on NATO expansion.

MR. BURNS: Thanks, Barry.

QUESTION: Sometimes they get almost agreeable with the U.S. and sometimes they get very disagreeable and very worrisome if they don't like what you're doing. That seems to be the bottom line. But do you want to attach a figure to how much of the charter has been completed and match notes with Mr. Yeltsin, or what?

MR. BURNS: Well, let me just say, I note the United States is very pleased by the very constructive discussions that Minister Primikov and Secretary General Solana had in Luxembourg the other day. There is a next meeting scheduled for May 13th. We have a lot of hope that more progress can be made in that meeting.

Secretary Albright and Deputy Secretary Talbott are very, very much concerned by this issue, following it very closely, talking to both the Russians and to NATO officials about these negotiations.

We hope very much that it will be possible to work out an agreement between NATO and Russia so that that agreement can be signed on May 27th in Paris. If that is the case, that will be a considerable achievement along the road that we are traveling, which is to set up a new relationship between NATO and Russia.

Sometimes, whether we are 80 percent there, or 90 percent, or as President Yeltsin said today, 95 percent of the way there, sometimes the last few percentage points are the most difficult to negotiate. I think we are involved in very difficult, very tough sensitive negotiations. I know that Secretary Albright felt that she made progress last week in Moscow. I think we understand that Secretary General Solana made further progress. We have great respect for Mr. Primakov, as a negotiator. He is negotiating in a very cooperative, good faith, constructive way. We want to work this agreement out if we can, and that remains, I guess, the bottom line of the American view right now, Barry.

QUESTION: Can you answer these questions, please (inaudible)

MR. BURNS: I'm going to answer. But let me just stay on Russia, if we could.

QUESTION: I'm so sorry.

QUESTION: Is the May --

MR. BURNS: But I thought it was a brilliant answer.

QUESTION: Sorry.

QUESTION: Is the May 13th meeting a make-or-break meeting?

MR. BURNS: I wouldn't say it's make or break because we understand that we need to work out an agreement before May 27th if there is going to be a signing.

QUESTION: Right.

MR. BURNS: If people are going to get on airplanes and fly to Paris, you have to leave before the 27th of May. I don't think we want to build up the May 13th meeting and put that level of expectations on it.

We have made a lot of progress. I think the Helsinki meeting between President Clinton and President Yeltsin was a break-through meeting back in March because it clearly indicated that both presidents truly wanted a deal and were willing to negotiate on that basis, a basis of good faith. Secretary Albright's travel to Moscow last week was a very important trip. It was well worth it, excellent discussions with Minister Primakov. Although they didn't agree on all the issues, the tone was very good. So we are hopeful, but we are not there yet. We need to keep our eyes focused on the objective.

QUESTION: Speaking of the Helsinki meeting and the last meeting between Albright and Primakov, I noticed none of the tension that might be attendant with the 1962 Missile Crisis, Cuban Missile Crisis. And Yeltsin is reported from Moscow today as having said this whole issue - the NATO- Russia confrontation - was the most serious dispute between the two countries since then, since that crisis. Was that hyperbole for a domestic audience? Or is there something more going on that we don't know about?

MR. BURNS: I don't wish to respond because I personally have not seen that statement. I saw the other, more positive statements that were made by President Yeltsin saying, we are 95 percent of the way there. So I can't respond to that.

But I can say, Steve, I have been involved in U.S.-Russian relations for seven years, and the tone is excellent. The cooperation between Minister Primakov and Secretary Albright is about as good as it can be, given the relationship between our two countries, which is a very good relationship.

There is no question on our part that the Russians are negotiating in good faith, that this is a very difficult issue for them - given Russian history in this century, given Russia's own conception of its national security interests. The stakes are very high because what we are essentially doing here is trying to reorient, secure the architecture of Europe in the next century. It's a big, big issue, with considerable ramifications for all the NATO countries, Russia, and all the countries in between, the Central European countries.

I think that's why maybe sometimes you see statements and rhetoric that have this sense of history attached to them. But we remain positive that a deal is desirable, and it is possible, although we are not there yet. It is absolutely true that very difficult, tough work needs to be done to complete these negotiations. Yes, sir, all the way back.

QUESTION: Thank you. On G-8, apparently the community in Denver is not entirely enthusiastic about having this going on and the McVeigh Trial going on at the same time. I'm wondering if that is in whole or in part the reason for the Secretary's visit there next week. And if so, what she hopes to do to try to generate some additional enthusiasm.

MR. BURNS: Right. I don't think we have told everybody else about that visit. Maybe now is a good time to do that. Secretary Albright intends to travel to Denver, next Tuesday, where she will meet with the mayor, other community leaders, organizers of the G-8, the Group of Eight Summit, in Denver, and also make a public appearance and talk to some of the citizens of Denver.

As you know, that is her home town, here in the United States.

That is where she spent the most time as a kid. It's where she went to high school. It's where her father taught at the University of Denver. So she has an attachment to the city and to the State of Colorado. So she is looking forward to going back.

She does want to just take stock of how the preparations are proceeding for the Denver Summit. It's a very, very important summit. Russia is going to play a role at that summit that is elevated. That, I think, speaks to the important relationship that all of us have in the West with Russia. She wants to discuss specifically any way that we can further the preparations for Denver. She is very much looking forward to the visit. I thought that tomorrow I'd have more to say about this, and I will have more to say about it.

QUESTION: No, it was out there already, I'm sorry.

QUESTION: It's been in both the --

MR. BURNS: Excuse me?

QUESTION: It's been in both the papers out there already.

MR. BURNS: No, it's fine. It's just --

QUESTION: Not through anything --

MR. BURNS: Listen, no problem. I just - no problem. Today is as good as tomorrow. But she is looking forward to the trip.

QUESTION: Nick, can you address the question embedded in there about concerns on the McVeigh Trial going on at the same time as the G-8? Is that going to have --

MR. BURNS: When the decision was made last year - more than a year ago, I believe - by the President and others and by Governor Romer and others - to have the summit in Denver, I don't believe at that time - in fact, I'm sure at that time that the judge had not made the decision to hold the McVeigh Trial in Denver.

So we have to live with the McVeigh Trial. It's a very important trial for the American people.

The summit can go on and the trial can go on simultaneously and effectively and productively. We don't believe the trial is going to upset in any way the planning for the summit or the implementation, the meetings that are going to be held on the 21st and 22nd of June.

QUESTION: A senior Tibetan monk convicted. The Dalai Lama was here. You talked to the Chinese for the umpteenth time about human rights. I know we have a multi-faceted foreign policy.

But would you say that your pleas on behalf of Tibetan culture are succeeding?

MR. BURNS: Well, we have obviously seen the report that a senior Tibetan monk, Mr. Chadrel Rinpoche has been sentenced to six years in prison. The United States is deeply disturbed by this decision. We would note that Mr. Rinpoche has been detained for nearly two years, apparently, we think, in violation of Chinese law - and detained before his conviction.

Under the provisions of the Revised Criminal Procedure Law which went into effect on January 1st of this year, such a lengthy detention period of two years would have required action by the National People's Congress Standing Committee upon a request by the Supreme People's Procurator. That didn't happen. He was held without being brought to trial for more than two years, and that, to us, apparently is a violation of Chinese law.

We would also note that his trial was held in secret, without due process safeguards, which, of course, does not meet international standards - any notion of international standards. We were surprised to hear of the conviction, frankly, because the events in question for which he was tried took place many years ago.

We urge China to ensure full exercise of religious freedom, as set forth in its own constitution. We urge China to release all people imprisoned in China simply because they have expressed divergent religious or political views from the Chinese Government.

We urge China to preserve Tibet's unique cultural, linguistic, and religious heritage.

We also reiterate our call to the Chinese Government to address the continuing concerns of the international community regarding the boy designated by the Dalai Lama as the Panchen Lama, and we urge China to do so that the boy and his family can receive visitors, if he and his family wish to do so, and that this boy might be able to return to his home in Tibet as a free person, and his family as a free family. That has not happened. So we do have very deep-seated concerns about that is happening in Tibet to people who simply want to practice their religion. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Yes.

QUESTION: Okay.

QUESTION: Follow-up.

MR. BURNS: I think Sid wants to follow up just for a moment.

Yes.

QUESTION: Do you think the Tibetans should have the right to pick their own religious leaders? Or do you agree that this arrangement between the Chinese and the Tibetans on selecting the Panchen Lama is appropriate?

MR. BURNS: We have long believed that the mechanism for formally recognizing or identifying a reincarnated Lama is a religious matter. It's a religious matter. For that reason, we have not taken a specific position on what should be the specific steps taken in identifying or recognizing a reincarnated Lama. That we think is for the Tibetan Buddhists and others to work out.

We have not taken a position on that.

But we clearly feel that since the Dalai Lama has recognized a reincarnated Lama, a young boy and his family, that that young boy and his family have been taken away from a normal practice of Tibetan Buddhism, that that boy should be returned to Tibet and allowed to practice his religion, along with his family's religion, freely. But we haven't said we think this person or that person should occupy that position.

QUESTION: But you know that the practice is that the Chinese pick --

MR. BURNS: Yes, we are very well aware of that.

QUESTION: -- for the Tibetans, their religious leaders.

MR. BURNS: Yes, and the Dalai Lama objects to that, and what we have said is that we think this problem, a very obvious problem, ought to be worked out, and the steps to recognize a reincarnated Lama ought to be worked out between the Tibetan Buddhists and the Chinese Government. We have not identified an individual who we would recognize. We think the process has not been followed very well because this young boy, identified by the Dalai Lama himself, has been spirited away from Tibet and is not able to receive visitors.

QUESTION: Not to belabor it, but why should the Chinese have any say at all in who the Tibetans pick as their religious leaders? And why should you say that they should have say?

MR. BURNS: Sid, I think I would prefer to make a different point, with all due respect. You have asked a good a question.

It's a difficult one for someone like me to answer. This is a very sensitive religious issue which has now political overtones, given the problems in Tibet.

We don't believe that anyone's cause is going to be served if we become part of the argument. We prefer to support the principle of religious freedom, and support the right of a young boy to return to Tibet and practice his religion freely. But we prefer not to inject ourselves into the religious and political debate by preferring one person or another.

QUESTION: How does the U.S. rate its performance? I mean, you've made your compromises. You compromise on this. You compromise by making these declarations about Tibet's cultural rights, but being careful to say within China, and you have the sentencing here. I mean, of course, nobody knows how many other people would have been sentenced under different conditions. Would you say the U.S. is making headway in human rights in China? All the political opposition is in prison; what else is there?

MR. BURNS: I disagree with the way you've phrased your question and I take issue with the premises of your question.

QUESTION: Well, there is a compromise here.

MR. BURNS: You name one country in the world, one country, any country, Europe, North America, Latin American, Africa, Middle East, Asia, Australia, name any country that has spoken out more boldly, more clearly and more consistently for human rights in China. Name one country.

QUESTION: Name one country that has more leverage than the United States, and chooses not to use it entirely.

MR. BURNS: And I would also reverse in my own view, reverse the way you've asked the final question --

QUESTION: I mean, you know --

MR. BURNS: -- judge China.

QUESTION: Venezuela can't do anything to force China to change its human rights policy.

MR. BURNS: -- judge the responsible governing authorities in Beijing about whether people are free in China or not. It is not the responsibility of the United States that there are no political dissidents in China, that thousands of people are in jail.

QUESTION: Of course not.

MR. BURNS: It is our responsibility to speak to up for those people and we do that.

QUESTION: I'm just saying how do you rate the success or lack of success of the U.S.' carefully compromised policy?

MR. BURNS: It is very clear that China has a failed record.

China has a failed record on human rights. The United States is the major defender of the human rights of the Chinese people and I'm not going to submit to your question that somehow the United States is at fault, which is implied, for the current situation.

QUESTION: I just - how are you doing?

MR. BURNS: How are we doing or how are the Chinese doing?

QUESTION: I'm just asking you. Do you think you're bending them? Do you think you are getting them to --

MR. BURNS: The Chinese know that this issue will remain a central part of our relationship, and it will continue to be a discussion at every opportunity with the Chinese. We stand up for human rights around the world, Barry, quite consistently.

QUESTION: I know you do.

QUESTION: I'm a little confused by your answer to the question.

MR. BURNS: On the Panchen Lama?

QUESTION: Yeah, if the selection of a Lama is a religious issue, why shouldn't it be left to religious leaders?

MR. BURNS: Judd, I don't know any other spokesman around the world, frankly, or government or ministry of foreign affairs that even comments on this issue besides us. We comment because it is an important issue of religious freedom. You have to make a tactical choice.

Does the United States want to inject itself as an actor in these individual questions of human rights and say we agree with this decision, we don't agree with that decision, we agree with this person and not that person. It is clearly a religious dispute and a political dispute between China and the Tibetan Buddhists.

We have enunciated a very clear principle of support for religious freedom. But we chose not to say that we are going to back this religious leader versus that religious leader - very clear.

QUESTION: Some of Turkish press claim that your terrorism report described the PKK leader, Abdullah Ocalan as a frank, sincere and trustworthy personality.

MR. BURNS: I don't remember that characterization on the human rights report, frankly. I would think that that is not a fair characterization of our report.

QUESTION: Okay.

MR. BURNS: He has not been on our dance card, as far as I can tell.

QUESTION: Okay, on the same report, some news items carry on that the United States give the green light for the Turkey - have a dialogue with the PKK. Do you have any --

MR. BURNS: You know, the United States has not given a green light in Turkey just as we didn't give one in Israel for the Palestinians. We don't give green lights. We think that terrorists ought to be hunted down and apprehended for what they do to innocent civilians, whether it is in Turkey or whether it is in Israel. We condemn the bombing of the Tel Aviv Caf&eacute;.

We condemn terrorists acts in Turkey perpetrated by the PKK.

We have a common policy against terrorists around the world.

QUESTION: Nick, before we break up can you tell us about Dennis jaunting around?

MR. BURNS: We have a couple of other questions. I'm not sure he's jaunting around today. He's in very serious discussions.

He's met with the Prime Minister of Israel. He has met with Chairman Arafat. He is going to have additional meetings with both of them. He spoke publicly today and said that his goal is to try to re-instill some confidence between them and to get their talks going again. We are going to keep at it until that is accomplished.

I think he feels things have gone okay so far, but, of course, he is not at the end of his trip.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: Yesterday a Senate committee failed to pass legislation to reinstate extradition in Colombia. Do you have anything on that ?

MR. BURNS: We're very disappointed that the Colombian Congress has apparently postponed further action on extradition, since the United States believes that extradition would aid Colombia in its efforts to deal with its narco-trafficking problem. We're very concerned that before the Congress goes out of session, there be sufficient time for the government, which does support extradition, the Colombian Government, to take this issue back and to see if that 8-to-8 vote can be broken.

Extradition is important to fight the narco-traffickers. We want to work cooperatively with the Colombian people and the Colombian Government. Extradition would allow us to do so in a very meaningful way. We call upon the Colombian Congress to do the right thing and to allow the Colombian Government which wants to take this step to proceed in cooperation with us. Yes.

QUESTION: If the extradition doesn't pass in Congress, is it going to jeopardize the possibility for Colombia to be re-certified this year?

MR. BURNS: Well, certification of Colombia or decertification will be made on the basis of the actions of the Colombian Government itself. The Colombian Government, in this particular instance, is doing the right thing. It is the right policy and we look forward to working with the Colombian Government on this issue.

The Colombian Congress now needs to agree and that is a parliamentary process and we hope very much will agree to extradition.

I can't forecast for you what our decision is going to be made on certification.

QUESTION: But is it that important? I mean, how important is extradition in the certification - in the conditions for Colombia?

MR. BURNS: It is one of many issues that will make up, that will determine our decision on the certification issue.

QUESTION: I want to ask you about Perafan, the drug dealer that is still captured in Venezuela. You have asked for his extradition.

Can you confirm that the U.S. has agreed not to give him a sentence beyond 30 years or a life sentence?

MR. BURNS: I would find that very hard to believe since the courts in the United States are independent of the government, and the government - I find that very hard to believe. Maybe what we should do is take the question of Mr. Perafan and see what we can say about him, what we can and cannot say. I think we say very little because extradition, of course, is a process upon which we have very little to say. Yes, sir?

QUESTION: Mr. Burns, as I stated earlier, this was described as hostage taking by the Pakistanis in retaliation against the arrest of the officer in New York, and also that it will jeopardize U.S.-Pakistan relations. Do you agree with that?

MR. BURNS: This is a very serious issue between the United States and Pakistan, and we are going to keep our discussions private. I'm not going to engage in any kind of negotiations in public on this issue.

Thank you.

(The briefing concluded at 2:27 P.M.)

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