U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #116, 98-10-26
From: The Department of State Foreign Affairs Network (DOSFAN) at <http://www.state.gov>
1137
U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing
I N D E X
Monday, October 26, 1998
Briefer: James P. Rubin
STATEMENTS
1 A/S for African Affairs Susan Rice Travel to Africa
SERBIA (Kosovo)
1 North Atlantic Council Ambassadors to Meet Tomorrow
1,2,4,6 Assessment of Compliance by President Milosevic/NATO Action
1,4 Pledges for Verification/Monitoring Missions
1 Number of Internally Displaced Persons returning Home
1-2,3 Numbers of Police in Kosovo
2,3 Advice to Americans and Others on the Ground in Kosovo
4-5 Shooting During Funeral in Kosovo
5-6 Activities/Purpose of Observers
8 Secretary Albright's Calls to Several Foreign Ministers re
Kosovo
MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS
7-8,11-12 Permanent Status Talks/Wye Memorandum/Timeline
8 Violence in the Region
9-10 US View Regarding Unilateral Actions
12-14 Security Issues/CIA Role
14-15 The Issue of and the Publication of A Map
18-19 Costs Associated with the Wye Conference
TURKEY
15 Turkish Government Request for Extradition of PKK Leader
LIBYA
15-17 Secretary Albright's Meeting with the Pan Am 103 Families
CASPIAN SEA
17 Caspian Pipeline Consortium / USG Meetings / Negotiations /
Concerns
17 Ambassador Morningstar's Visit to Ankara
CHILE/SPAIN
17-18 Documentation Requests Regarding General Pinochet
CUBA
18 Visit to US by Orlando Hernandez Family
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING
DPB #116
MONDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1998, 12:45 P.M.
(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)
MR. RUBIN: Greetings. Welcome to the State Department briefing. Today is
Monday.
I have one statement on Susan Rice's trip to Africa-that is Assistant
Secretary Susan Rice -- that we will post after the briefing. With that
let's us go to your questions.
QUESTION: Jamie, the Kosovo deadline -- can you address that situation?
MR. RUBIN: Yes, as I understand what is going on now is that the North
Atlantic Council ambassadors have been meeting today; I expect them to be
meeting tomorrow. Clearly, the credibility of NATO's threat to use force
and its preparedness to do so continues. As a result of meetings yesterday
with General Clark and others from NATO--General Naumann--we've made quite
clear what is required. We're looking to see a clear intention and very
substantial compliance by President Milosevic.
There has been a lot of movement on the ground -- some in the right
direction. But given the nature of the deployments and the difficulty of
giving you a precise snapshot, all I can say is that we are going to be
watching this extremely closely. It's an extremely import and urgent matter,
and in the next 24 hours or so we will know what the conclusion of NATO is
on is subject. So we are going to monitor it as closely as we can with the
addition now of a combination of air verification and ground verification
that is gradually getting up to speed.
In that regard, let me tell you that there are now pledges for 1,500
persons for the verification mission on the ground. The monitoring missions
there now have received full and unfettered access to internally displaced
persons. The humanitarian workers continue to be able to do their job.
There continues to be a trickle, and we hope will grow, of internally
displaced persons returning to their homes. What has been the focus in
recent days is the police. There were police in Kosovo, and we don't expect
all police to leave Kosovo but what we can have -that is, there were
police in Kosovo prior to this crisis. What we can't have is the police
there performing in the way they performed during the worst periods, where
their very presence and their specific actions make it unwise in the
extreme for people to return to their homes. So we are trying to focus on
that issue which is the way to ensure that this humanitarian crisis does
not materialize into a catastrophe.
As far as what NATO will do, General Clark has the authority to act and all
I can say as to whether he will act is that we are going to be watching
this very, very carefully in the next 24 hours.
QUESTION: This business about the police what you say is to be the
critical issue at the moment? Are you insisting on numerical precision --
that they get back to the precise number of police? Is there some leeway?
And in a larger sense, how much do you factor in - frankly, I've got to say,
at this late date - it's been a long time since he talked to Holbrooke --
the logistics of on the ground, of moving people? Is this part of the
problem? Have we passed the point where you can really just count heads
and say, that's it and you fallen short?
MR. RUBIN: Let me answer the first and let's go back at the second,
because it escaped me ever so slightly.
On the first question, what we're looking for is to have those police that
were not in Kosovo prior to this crisis leave; and those that are there not
be marauding across Kosovo, shooting and killing and maiming innocent
people and creating an environment that is impossible for the people to
return to their homes or certainly unwise in the extreme to do so.
That is what the Security Council resolution lays down in a more general
way of speaking about this.
With respect to your second question, maybe you could try it again.
QUESTION: Sure. How much of a factor - is it negligible now - is
logistical difficulty? If you appraise their part - the Serb's part - are
you appraising their compliance or non-compliance?
MR. RUBIN: I don't think it will turn out to be a question of logistics.
It's going to turn out to be a question of intent and action, not
logistics.
NATO will be reviewing very carefully this subject in the next coming hours
today and throughout tomorrow to make clear that we are ready to act, we're
prepared to act and that General Clark has the authority to act, and be
evaluating and reviewing the information we get from this combination of
air verification, ground verification and our own assessments and the
discussions that President Milosevic had with the two generals yesterday.
QUESTION: Are you asking American citizens to stay out of Kosovo for the
time being?
MR. RUBIN: Our standing action, as I understand it, is we've drawn down
the embassy; we have a standing order about the dangers of going there and
that hasn't been revoked. But there's no new order.
QUESTION: The humanitarian workers you're encouraging to stay there I
take it.
MR. RUBIN: Well, they are making their own decisions. They are being able
to do their work better in recent days. As I indicated, it's our understanding
that the humanitarian workers did have unimpeded access to the displaced
persons they're trying to help. We want them to be able to do that.
QUESTION: Obviously there's a danger that in a couple weeks or a month
down the road, some of these police units that are pulling out or that do
pull out could come back. How long - is there a limit to the effects that
this strategy of possible use of force, threatened use of force can have? I
mean, at some point is it no longer an effective way to conduct diplomacy
with Milosevic?
MR. RUBIN: On the contrary, we believe that it was the very real prospect
of force being used against President Milosevic that led him to make an
unprecedented set of concessions on Kosovo.
Remember what we're dealing with, now. We're dealing with a place that
President Milosevic used to say was his own province, his own problem, his
own issue and everyone else should just stay out. Now we're in a situation
where thousands of people are in there on the ground, there are humanitarian
capacity and diplomatic observers. Planes and un-manned vehicles are flying
over that territory regularly, and major concessions were made on the
political front where he accepted the idea of greater self-government
for the people of Kosovo, including their own police force.
These are the steps that President Milosevic took under the pressure of the
very real possibility of force being used. It is our intention to keep the
pressure on, because we don't want to be in a position where the movements
become show movements and then they're returned; or the change in practices
of the police are for show or to get past a certain deadline. We have a lot
of experience with this man; we know how he tries to maneuver; and we are
going to keep the pressure on.
QUESTION: But doesn't it get more difficult each time?
MR. RUBIN: No.
QUESTION: Given that you may have an extra 1,500 or 2,000 observers on
the ground, just as one example.
MR. RUBIN: I've heard this argument, and some of your colleagues., and I
have talked about it here in the briefing room; and I expect that we will
continue to do so. But our view of it is that we are very concerned about
the security of the humanitarian workers as well as the safety of
diplomatic observers.
I don't want to prejudge what we're going to do tomorrow or what might
follow. Let me just say we keep American and other officials advised on
safety factors. We issue travel warnings; we update them frequently. The
safety of these official and non-official Americans is of paramount
interest to the United States. But it's not going to hinder us if the
decision is made that President Milosevic is not in compliance. We are
going to operate with the knowledge of what transpired in Bosnia and the
attempts made to use international officials as hostages. We are going to
do our level best to avoid that situation.
QUESTION: Of the 1,500 pledges that you received, does that include
Americans?
MR. RUBIN: I would think so, yes.
QUESTION: And how many of those are Americans?
MR. RUBIN: I will see whether I could get you a number; but I think it's
a significant number. As I understand it, the American Ambassador Walker
has been accepted as the head of the mission. Americans will be a
significant part of this operation.
QUESTION: Jamie, are you willing to say whether a percentage for their
compliance to date - 60 percent, 70 percent, 50 percent?
MR. RUBIN: Right, what I think I'd prefer to do - given the difficulty of
making such a snapshot - is say that there's a lot of dust in the air.
There's a lot of movement, and we're going to wait until it settles and
make a judgment tomorrow.
QUESTION: On that same point, you mentioned earlier that there were show
movements and you were alert to that occurring.
MR. RUBIN: The pattern and the history exists.
QUESTION: And to what extent would you say the movement of the last ten
days - up until, let's say, this weekend - have been show movements?
MR. RUBIN: Well, I don't want to decide what each particular movement has
been. But I can certainly say the trend had been in the right direction -
that forces did leave. We identified specific units that did leave, that
left Kosovo. That wasn't show; that was real. We identified the fact that
the Serb authorities are continuing to maintain, relatively speaking, a
cease-fire. We talked about the change in the willingness of internally
displaced persons to go back to their homes, which is partially a
function of the behavior of the police.
So there was real compliance, and it was significant enough to extend the
Activation Order until tomorrow night. As far as what will happen today as
a result of the meeting that General Clark had and General Naumann had and
what this movement of the last 24 hours is, I don't want to make a judgment
as to whether it's for show or for real until others are prepared to do so
tomorrow - make that judgment.
QUESTION: On the issue of the cease-fire, I wonder if you could address
the event yesterday that was very widely reported, where a family was
burying a child that had been killed the day before and the US observer
refused to shield the family when they came under attack - both the attack
itself and also the behavior of the US person.
MR. RUBIN: Well, the attack is obviously condemnable. Shooting people
during a funeral is outrageous in the extreme.
With respect to the activities of the observers, let me first say that
these are unarmed people and they are taking great risk on their own for
being in these places to try to advance the interests of the West, the
United States, as well as the people of Kosovo. So they're not armed
observers; they are unarmed observers. So let's make that the first
point.
With respect to what did and didn't happen on the ground at that particular
event, I know there are people in the field who are authorized to talk to
you or your colleagues about the specific incident, and I would prefer to
leave the details of that to them, because I do not know the details other
than what I read in the newspaper.
QUESTION: Can we establish that observers are not there to protect
people? And could you consider the notion that distraught and - well, more
than distraught - (inaudible) - people would look to outsiders for help?
Might they make a mistake and think those observers are there to help
them?
MR. RUBIN: Well, the verifiers are there to help them in the following
way. Clearly, the presence of the international community there helps deter
violations by the Serbs of the agreements that they've laid down; and so
that is for their help. The more deterred the Serbs are by the presence of
these verifiers, the less danger the people of Kosovo are going to be
in.
But with respect to the specific mission of these people, I certainly
wanted to point out that they are unarmed. Obviously, they are there to
verify and observe on what's going on. But I'd rather have the people on
the ground who have the information that can draw generalizations from this
incident make those in the field.
QUESTION: There are some policy implications there, one of which is the
whole appearance which occurred in Bosnia all the time of standing by and
watching atrocities. Then there's the second, which is, how do they follow
up? Is there some instruction that's gone out from here or that will go out
from here on how to deal with cases like this, which are going to happen --
MR. RUBIN: Yes, the observers on the ground are in touch with their
respective governments. The respective governments are going to be working
through several channels to try to develop credible information about what
transpires on the ground, to what extent it's a violation and to what
extent that violation requires action through the means specified.
With respect to your point, I think one could just as easily flip it around
- that is, to the extent that the UNPROFOR soldiers were there to protect,
they found themselves in positions to be held hostage.
QUESTION: Jamie, is that what you're saying could happen to these
observers as well?
MR. RUBIN: I'm just - we're into a debate here. You're using references
into the past to make certain points. I would just say the obverse is
equally as true.
QUESTION: But the broader question is how do you avoid them coming into
this situation, and how do you avoid --
MR. RUBIN: Who's them?
QUESTION: The observers, because now you're going to have thousands of
them. And how do you actually arrange that this doesn't happen?
MR. RUBIN: Well, first of all, we are not in a position to dictate that
every event that happens on the ground doesn't happen. We are not all-
powerful, all omnipresent or omniscient.
QUESTION: Just a clarification - as you say, General Clark has the
authority, up until midnight tomorrow to act. But are you nevertheless
saying that the decision on whether Milosevic has complied is the Council's
to make or is it his alone to make or how will he make that judgment?
MR. RUBIN: He has the authority to act, unless the Council changes that
authority. So in the real world - I understand the motivation of the
question, and it's a good one. In the practical world, what will happen is
tomorrow Council members - that is the North Atlantic Council members -
will be reviewing and evaluating information they get.
If they don't change his instructions, he's in a position to act. So what I
would expect to happen is them to be discussing whether the political
authority provided to him will be adjusted depending on events as existent
at the time they make that decision.
In any case, our view is that the military pressure has worked to create
unprecedented concessions on the part of Milosevic in terms of allowing
international observers, internationalization and new guidelines to his
negotiators on Kosovo.
This is a man who said Kosovo is his own province to do whatever he wants
with, and now it has been internationalized in the clearest sense of the
term, including with people on the ground, people in the air and this very
real prospect of the use of force, as well as the concessions he's made on
the political side.
But regardless of what happens on compliance, this crisis is not over. This
crisis is a political crisis, generated by the repression Milosevic has
caused in the region for the last ten years - in this region of Kosovo -
and will only be resolved in the long term so that each of the problems
that are identified, whether it's civil strife, whether it's shootings by
policemen, whether it's sniper fire, all of these issues can only be
resolved in the long term politically.
QUESTION: On the political issue, though, you were earlier mentioning
that Milosevic has made a major concession toward greater self-government.
But you did not use the word "autonomy" and certainly not "enhanced
autonomy." I'm just wondering, what is the - there's a spectrum there and
it seems he's coming on the lower end of the spectrum.
MR. RUBIN: I wouldn't see it that way.
QUESTION: Well, maybe you could explain - what is the --
MR. RUBIN: I'll try to get you the official legal distinctions between
greater self-government and autonomy. Those are two words that don't
necessarily have a different meaning; they intersect.
QUESTION: Well, are you saying, then, that he has authorized the return
to the autonomy that he lifted --
MR. RUBIN: I don't have any new words to offer you on this issue. I'm
describing the statements that he made about greater self-government for
the people of Kosovo and the police that were announced a week ago. I'm
merely including them in the list of reasons why we think, in response to
the question, that military pressure has helped advance the West's
interests and the interests of the people of Kosovo in this area.
With respect to your question of what the outcome will be -- how much
greater self-government the people of Kosovo will get -- that's what will
be discussed at the negotiating table.
QUESTION: Did you already discuss the reports of compliance of the
progress?
MR. RUBIN: Yes, we did all that that.
QUESTION: We did all that already - confirmed that some of that has been
done?
MR. RUBIN: I did the best I could on that.
QUESTION: I yield to Charlie.
MR. RUBIN: Thank you.
QUESTION: Jamie, on a subject we haven't touched on in at least 30
minutes -- the Middle East peace talks -- can you talk about final status
talks and where and when they might begin and which US representative might
be there, if any?
MR. RUBIN: Yes, on the subject of the permanent status talks, with Friday
being day one -- day zero -- they are scheduled to begin ten days from that
pursuant to the memorandum, which I know you all studied very carefully
this weekend. So my expectation is that these will be at a lower level.
That will be up to the parties to decide.
Our involvement will be only pursuant to the desire of the parties to have
Americans involved. We do expect to be involved - including, in particular,
the President's involvement in getting leaders together as indicated by
statements that he made, I believe, at the signing ceremony; and the
Secretary will surely be involved in this. But in the initial stage we
would expect it to be at a lower level and then at the appropriate time,
others brought forward to try to assist.
QUESTION: Will the medium-level American be involved with the lower-level
job?
MR. RUBIN: I wouldn't think that would be necessary the first time
out.
QUESTION: Do you know where this will be?
MR. RUBIN: I'll try to get that for you, but since the goal is for it to
be their bilateral discussion without the United States necessarily
involved, I may not be able to be the first to tell you where it will
happen.
QUESTION: In anybody's mind -- the US or Israel's, I guess most likely --
is this the start of this conditional on any action on the ground pursuant
to the Wye agreements?
MR. RUBIN: Well the Wye agreements spell out a very clear time line; and
I can certainly point to that time line for you, which I know well.
Upon entry in to force, the committee on the third further redeployment
starts; the Palestinian security work plan is shared with the United
States; full bilateral security cooperation occurs; trilateral security
cooperation occurs; the interim committees resume an accelerated permanent
status negotiations start. Those are all things that have to happen prior
to a week two.
QUESTION: All right. Now, of course, the situation on the ground today --
a couple of people have gotten killed already. Mr. Netanyahu is having his
hands full. Do you have any observations on either of those situations?
MR. RUBIN: With respect to the killings, let me say the United States
condemns this kind of extremist violence in the strongest possible terms.
As the President and the Secretary have indicated, the extremists will
always try to take the opportunity to destroy the process that has been
created, and will try to make it harder for the leaders to go forward with
the tough decisions that they have now made and implement those tough
decisions.
With respect to Prime Minister Netanyahu, I would be reluctant to make too
many comments about his domestic political situation; other to say that
Secretary Albright has been on the phone with him over the weekend.
Just let me throw in for the last subject just what I can remember - I know
she spoke to several foreign ministers over the weekend on Kosovo,
including Foreign Minister Cook, Foreign Minister Vedrine -- I'll get you
the rest of the names. But there are least those two - and I believe there
were four or five called.
We have confidence that Prime Minister Netanyahu, having taken the tough
and courageous decisions that he has taken, will be able to secure
agreement from his cabinet and his government for this important step
forward for all the peoples in the Middle East.
QUESTION: Are you comfortable going down this road - the road is charted
already - with the Netanyahu Government?
MR. RUBIN: Sorry?
QUESTION: Are you comfortable going down the rest of the road or as far
as you can go before the road detours with the Netanyahu Government?
MR. RUBIN: You could work as one of our speechwriters when you use the
road metaphor a lot.
QUESTION: You'll notice I didn't say, the window is closing or something.
MR. RUBIN: We have been working very closely with Prime Minister
Netanyahu's Government. And as we had hoped and has become clear, he has
shown the courage and the skill and the effectiveness to put forward an
agreement and to sign that agreement. We're going to continue to work with
the Israeli Government, and we look forward to continuing to work with him
to implement the agreement that we negotiated so painstakingly during those
many, many hours, days and nights at the Wye River Conference Center.
QUESTION: Jamie, there's a clause on discouraging unilateral actions.
Does that include a time-out on settlements?
MR. RUBIN: With respect to that issue, let me try to handle it in two
ways. First, as regards the possibility of a unilateral declaration of
statehood or other unilateral actions by either party outside the
negotiating process that prejudge or predetermine the outcome of those
negotiations, the US opposes and will oppose any such unilateral actions.
Indeed, the US has maintained for many years that an acceptable solution to
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict can only be found through negotiations,
not through unilateral actions. As we look to the future, that will remain
our policy. For the present, we are doing all we can to promote permanent
status negotiations on an accelerated basis, and we are stressing that
those who believe that they can declare unilateral positions or take
unilateral acts when the interim period ends are courting disaster.
QUESTION: Specifically, do the further expansion or new settlements come
under the heading of unilateral actions?
MR. RUBIN: I think we've stated quite clearly there are unilateral
actions in the area you've described that we have expressed concern about,
and concern that they will disrupt and harm the prospects for implementing
this agreement, the environment under which this agreement has been
negotiated, as well as the prospects for permanent status talks. That is
our view on these various issues that you've been asking me about for many
months. That has not changed.
QUESTION: (Inaudible.)
MR. RUBIN: Let me finish, please. More broadly - and not with respect to
your specific question, but with respect to unilateral actions in general
as well as the actions that Barry asked me about - let me make the
following point. One of the reasons why any unilateral action, any
unilateral statement by either side was so dangerous was because there was
a complete and utter breakdown in confidence and trust between the parties
for 18 months.
We believe that at a minimum what has occurred at the Wye River negotiating
session is there has been greater trust and confidence created - so much
trust and confidence that the two leaders came to the White House, signed
an agreement and intend to work together to try, as partners in their own
words, to try to advance the interests of both of their peoples.
The point being that we can certainly hope that with this new found trust,
this new found confidence, that some of the relatively small issues that
could blow up into full-scale explosions that would destroy the peace
process may not do so and may be able to be overcome as a result of the new
trust and confidence that has been created.
That is a general point and not designed to reflect specifically on the
subject you raised. It's designed to reflect on the subject Barry raised
and the subject that you raised.
QUESTION: In the document that was signed by Netanyahu and Arafat, is it
understood - as far as the United States is concerned, is it understood by
the signatories that unilateral actions include expansion or building of
new settlements?
MR. RUBIN: With respect to that issue, I think both sides are fully
familiar with the positions of the United States throughout the last years.
That issue you mentioned has been part of our view on the subject of
unilateral actions. They are fully familiar with our view on it, and they
don't have any reason to think we have changed our view on it.
QUESTION: But in signing it, do they accept the US view?
MR. RUBIN: All I can tell you is what our view is. They will have to
speak to what their intentions are in that regard. I've stated quite
clearly our view on unilateral declarations of statehood or other
unilateral actions by either party.
QUESTION: Can I try and change the pace? Could you shed any light, if you
can, on the situation of El Duque - the Hernandez family?
MR. RUBIN: Let's stay on this for a minute.
QUESTION: There was a problem after Camp David - I hate to make another
historical reference. But the issue of settlements came up immediately, and
President Carter did not engage in an immediate way to prevent it from
happening. How do you hope to avoid that same thing recurring now, when you
know that you're in the final status talks and this really matters?
MR. RUBIN: The view that I stated - and I just stated it very carefully,
and I would look at the language that I used - is a view that both parties
understand. It is a view that we hold both publicly and privately. We will
act on that view, just as we will act on our view with respect to the third
phase of the further redeployment or any other subject.
QUESTION: When you say you will act on that view, can you elaborate?
MR. RUBIN: No - that we will talk to the parties to try to encourage and
explain the dangers of one course of action and talk to the parties about
the benefits and advantages of a different course of action. That's where
we are.
QUESTION: Would you inform a party that it is in violation, then, of that
Article V publicly or how do you --
MR. RUBIN: Well, I think I would urge you to read Article V very
carefully. What it says is something that I suspect others will interpret
in different ways. But it is our view that we want to create the most
positive possible environment for the implementation of this agreement and
the negotiation of the permanent status talks.
QUESTION: But you're speaking; that's not what it says.
MR. RUBIN: Right. I mean, I think what it says is pretty clear.
QUESTION: (Inaudible.)
QUESTION: As I understand what you're saying now on the third further
redeployment, those talks in a subcommittee or a committee will begin also
in ten days and it will be parallel and simultaneous with the final status
talks; is that right?
MR. RUBIN: Yes. Let me state very clearly, what the agreement states is
there would be a committee to - let me get the words just right, because
obviously it's important to both sides that the words are just right on
something like this. It says with regard to the terms of the interim
agreement and of Secretary Christopher's letter to the two sides relating
to the further redeployment process, there will be a committee to address
this question. The United States will be briefed regularly.
According to the time line, the third further redeployment committee will
start during the initial phase after entry into force. But remember, the
agreement doesn't go into force immediately; there's a delay about the
agreement going into force. I believe it's two weeks. I will check my
document on that.
Let me please finish. But on the third further redeployment, during the
discussions leading to this agreement, the US made clear to both parties
that it will not adopt any position or express any view about the size or
the content of the third phase of Israel's further redeployments, which is
an Israeli responsibility to implement rather than negotiate.
Under the terms of the memorandum, and Israeli-Palestinian committee is
being established. Nonetheless, we urge the parties not to be distracted
from the urgent task of negotiating permanent status arrangements, which
are at the heart of the matter and which will determine the future of the
area. Our own efforts have been and will continue to be dedicated to that
vital task.
QUESTION: You will be briefed -- the US will not be, hopefully, offering
their own notion of - you're reading Oslo, really, back to us. But it
didn't stop you all from telling Israel precisely how much land you wanted
them to give --
MR. RUBIN: I thought you might ask me that question, so I prepared an
answer.
QUESTION: No, I know quite a bit about this, fortunately or unfortunately.
Israel won that argument: you're not in the committee; you're being briefed
by the committee. You read Oslo to us just now. I want to know how soon --
MR. RUBIN: Can I answer the question? I didn't just read Oslo.
QUESTION: -- how soon Dennis Ross and Martin Indyk will jump in and tell
Israel how much land to give up. Will they never participate in the talks?
It's a serious question.
MR. RUBIN: It is a serious question, so I'm going to try to answer it;
and I hope you'll listen to my answer.
We made recommendations and suggestions about the second further redeployment
at the suggestion of both parties. Both parties, including the Israelis,
asked the United States to come up with a way to bridge the gap between the
Israeli and Palestinian positions on the question of the further redeployment
and several other questions. That was at the request of both parties,
including the Israelis.
What I am telling you is what our intentions are, very clearly, with
respect to the third further redeployment. So I think that answer, I hope,
answers your question.
QUESTION: It does.
QUESTION: And on the trilateral security issues that were debated
yesterday by Madeleine Albright --
MR. RUBIN: Can you make sure to get the "it does" in the transcript,
please? Thank you.
QUESTION: What Senator Shelby had to say, what Madeleine Albright had to
say - when will details be available? And can you now at this point answer
the issues of the security of, say, CIA personnel that might be involved
and be in the middle of monitoring this peace treaty?
MR. RUBIN: Let me address that very briefly. Toward the end of the
conference, I was authorized to tell you about the presence of George Tenet
at Wye and the fact that --
QUESTION: He was there?
MR. RUBIN: (Laughter) -- the presence of George Tenet at the Wye River
Middle East Peace Conference, and the special role the Central Intelligence
Committee was playing building on the very roles they played in the past -
whether it was with respect to the Sharm al-Sheik meeting to fight
terrorism, the withdrawal supervised during the 1973 period and before. The
Central Intelligence Committee, through its professionals, has assisted in
clarifying facts and providing information.
I think there's been a tendency to overstate the role, with respect to
political judgments. That is not what the Central Intelligence Agency or
its professionals have been doing here. They are facilitating the
professionals from the Israeli and the Palestinian side to combat terrorism,
which is a very important foreign policy objective of the United States.
With respect to the monitoring of this agreement, they will also be
providing facts. But it is for the political leadership of the United
States -- led by the Secretary in the case of this accord with, obviously,
the President's leadership over that -- to make judgments about compliance.
That is a very different thing than I think has tended to come out.
But with respect to their safety and their work and how they will conduct
it, I would urge you to contact their very able public affairs office, who
will provide you with, hopefully, the most effective and authoritative
answers to those questions.
QUESTION: Do you think that Senator Shelby and other skeptics or critics -
we all know and he knows, I'm sure, that the CIA has had a role in
intelligence sharing and other things. Has the role of the CIA been
changed? Does this give the CIA a larger role - political or otherwise?
MR. RUBIN: I understand the question, but to protect the - I think they
have to decide how to define the change in their role if any. What I can
say is that we, as the Secretary said yesterday, that I would expect the
issue to be discussed by Congress and answers provided by CIA Director
George Tenet and his able professionals.
From our perspective, what's important about this is to get the facilitation
of the fight against terrorism. That's what this is about. People shouldn't
confuse this into something that it's not. It's how best to get the
Palestinians and the Israelis together to fight terrorism so that the
extremists are put in their place and have the least chance possible to
disrupt this important process.
QUESTION: One more. Just looking at the tasks lying ahead, it's a huge
job. First question, do you seriously expect it to be finished by May 5,
1999?
MR. RUBIN: We've said - and the Secretary, I believe, said this on Friday
night in her press briefing, we know how hard this is. It was certainly a
lengthy and painstaking process to get this agreement signed; and we have
no illusions about the difficulty in insuring its implementation. We are
going to be monitoring it very carefully and trying to be helpful where we
can. The clock is clearly ticking here.
What we want to see is a good-faith effort by both parties to try to get as
much work as possible. But as far as what happens if they are not able to
work, I'd rather not speculate about that date many months from now; other
than to say we are looking for a good-faith effort, we know how hard it is
going to be.
QUESTION: Do we have anything on the Hernandez family?
QUESTION: Jamie, one of the important aspects of this agreement is
obviously the hand-over of territory. Is there a map?
MR. RUBIN: Sorry?
QUESTION: Is there a map?
MR. RUBIN: I believe pursuant to the agreement, it specifies that the
areas to be turned over will be shared with the Palestinians.
QUESTION: Right, and do you have a map?
MR. RUBIN: I'll have to check. I don't know that we are going to get into
a situation where I am going to respond to every question you have about
every document.
QUESTION: Is it available?
MR. RUBIN: There is nothing available for you.
QUESTION: Is there a reason for not making it available?
MR. RUBIN: We make the decision as what's in the best interest of the
peace process.
QUESTION: Isn't it to monitor, in fact, what each side is doing in this?
And a map is such a central issue --
MR. RUBIN: Right, we think we will have the information we will need to
do our job.
QUESTION: So that you have decided not put out a map?
MR. RUBIN: I didn't say that.
QUESTION: Can you put it in a positive sense, then? What have you decided
to do with regard to the map that must go along with this agreement?
MR. RUBIN: We've decided to do what is necessary to make sure that we are
in a position to monitor the agreement.
QUESTION: According to a wire report, PKK terror organization leader --
(inaudible) -- settled in Russia and the Turkish Government has already
officially asked for extradition. In fighting against terrorism, the US
usually plays a leader role. Did you urge the Russian side to help them
with this extradition business?
MR. RUBIN: You've presented the question in such a way I guess you're
hoping for a certain answer about our leadership role. I think there is no
question to anybody in the world about the leadership role the United
States has played in the fight against terrorism, and there is no question
about that.
With respect to your question, however, let me say Ocalan is the leader of
the PKK, a group the Secretary publicly identified as a foreign terrorist
organization back in 1997. It's not our practice to discuss publicly what
we talk about privately with foreign governments, nor to confirm or deny
the location of particular terrorist leaders. We have to be very careful if
we're going to continue to work with the countries that we want to work
with to try to fight terrorism and to be very careful what we say
publicly.
QUESTION: The Secretary and Sandy Berger met with families of the victims
of Pan Am flight 103, and some of the members of the families made some
statements on the way out -- including the suggestion that something may
happen on December 21, which is the 10th anniversary, unless the trial
begins before then. Can you shed any light on what happened up there?
MR. RUBIN: Yes. The Secretary and Sandy Berger did have a meeting with
Pan Am 103 families. I will try to get you a copy of the remarks that she
made there. We were trying to bring the families up to date on the status
of this important initiative that we've made -- the priority that we have
placed on trying to bring to justice those responsible for the murder of
Americans and British citizens, the current status of that proposal
and the success we think we've had in turning the tables on Qadhafi
and calling his bluff.
And now the state of play, as I understand it, is that the UN is answering
some of the technical questions that Qadhafi and his lawyers have about
this initiative. We've made clear that this is not a negotiation, and we
are going to give him some time to respond to what he said he wanted, which
was a trial in a third country. We have created a very unprecedented and
worked very hard to create a way to have Scottish justice in a third
country. The trial would take place in The Netherlands. It would be
identical, except for the question of judges instead of a jury, to one
held in Scotland. Legislation has been passed in the United Kingdom
and The Netherlands to permit this extraordinary trial. Family members
would be permitted to attend. The Secretary told the family members how
important it would be for them to be present at the trial.
The reason for the initiative is obviously to try to see whether, after ten
long years, bring to justice those responsible for this heinous crime. But
even if Qadhafi does not turn them over, and after getting his clarifications
and questions answered he chooses not to comply, we will have called
Libya's bluff and we think it will be easier to get support in the
international community for stiffer measures. But I don't want to prejudge
that and tell you what exactly will happen on what date. The goal here is
not the stiffer measure; the goal here is a trial -- it is compliance.
QUESTION: Can you shed any light on what may or may not happen on
December 21?
MR. RUBIN: I think what they are referring to is the prospect that this
matter will be looked at by the Security Council in a number of different
ways, and that particular date applies to -- we have not set a deadline,
but the offer will not remain on the table indefinitely. I believe there is
a review process in the resolution. First there is a review process for the
sanctions which occurs on October 30; and then I think, as the months
unfold, there will come a time that it will become clear that the
Libyans don't intend to comply and that this was always a ploy and
then we will have to decide what to do.
Let me say, as well, that the families, it was the sense of Mr. Berger and
Secretary Albright, were quite supportive of what we've done here. We've
turned the tables on Qadhafi, increased the chances of a trial and
increased the chances of stiffer action by the international community if
there isn't a trial.
So I'm not saying that every family member feels that way, but I think they
were heartened by the support they received. Obviously, with each passing
day, Colonel Qadhafi has to make a decision - does he want to take yes for
an answer or does he want to try to continue to throw sand in the eyes of
the international community and avoid this trial?
QUESTION: Does it appear, up to this point, that it is a ploy by Libya
and they're not serious?
MR. RUBIN: We'll only know - they've asked questions, they want
clarification the UN is providing them. We'll know after that whether this
was a bluff or not.
QUESTION: It's too early to say that they're not serious, then?
MR. RUBIN: Well, it's too early to know what their ultimate answer will
be.
QUESTION: Do you have any comment on the signing ceremony of the peace
accord with - Peru and Ecuador?
MR. RUBIN: With respect to that issue, we put out a statement on Friday
on that subject that I would be happy to provide for you.
QUESTION: Last week at the White House, after the White House meeting,
the oil company executives announced that they will suggest another route
for the - other than the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline. Do you have anything on the
subject?
MR. RUBIN: That meeting marked a positive step forward in America's
efforts to develop an east-west transit corridor for Caspian energy
resources, and focused in particular on the Baku--Ceyhan and Caspian
Pipeline Consortium Pipelines.
Senior officials from the US Government and US oil companies that are
active in the Caspian region discussed a broad range of commercial,
political and economic factors that directly affect decisions on pipelines.
All participants agreed that Baku-Ceyhan offers the best option for a new
main export pipeline for oil.
Intense negotiations involving the relevant companies and countries of the
region are currently underway and focused on bringing this pipeline to
fruition as soon as possible. The participants agreed on the importance of
completing this pipeline, in which Russian companies and Russian Government
play a central role.
To that effect, the United States understands Turkish concerns that came
out today about the effective increased tanker traffic in the Turkish
straits. We have consistently urged Turkey to work within the International
Maritime Organization to develop regulations that will increase the safety
of navigation and maintain freedom of navigation through the -- (inaudible)
- We continue to believe this is the best forum for managing these
issues.
In addition, Turkey has joined the convention on civil liability and issued
a tender for a vessel tracking system. The US supports the construction of
this main export pipeline that will carry Caspian oil to international
markets without relying on the Turkish Straits. Ambassador Morningstar is
in Istanbul today and tomorrow to participate in various training programs
and information seminars for companies interested in doing business in the
Caspian region under the Caspian Sea Initiative.
How did you like that transition I did there?
Ambassador Morningstar will be in Ankara October 28 and 29, for meetings
with senior Turkish officials and presidents from the states of Central
Asia and the Caucasus and Turkey for celebrations for the 75th anniversary
of the founding of the Turkish Republic.
QUESTION: Has the United States received any requests for documentation
or any other sort of assistance from Judge Garson in Spain who's working on
the Pinochet matter?
MR. RUBIN: There has been contact and cooperation between the Spanish
judges investigating General Pinochet and the US Department of Justice for
over one year. In February and July 1997, the Spanish judges initiated
broad, formal requests for US assistance under the 1990 US-Spain Legal
Assistance Treaty in connection with their investigation of General
Pinochet.
The State Department has provided hundreds of documents through the Justice
Department to the Spanish court, including pertinent unclassified and
declassified documents, and we continue to review our files. The Justice
Department is the designated central authority of the United States under
the treaty and is, therefore, the US Government agency responsible for
handling these requests. Therefore, any specific questions about the
details of that ought to be directed at the Justice Department.
QUESTION: Do you have anything to say about the status of the visa of
this baseball player, Hernandez's, family?
MR. RUBIN: Yes?
QUESTION: Why are you cooperating, then?
MR. RUBIN: It's pursuant to a mutual legal assistance treaty with the
Spanish Government. I got that right - the 1990 US-Spain Legal Assistance
Treaty. We call that an MLAT.
QUESTION: Do you have any other view on the whole Pinochet case
today?
MR. RUBIN: It's a matter to be decided between the courts and the
countries involved.
With respect to the Orlando Hernandez family, the attorney general
authorized last Thursday the parole in the United States from Cuba of the
mother and ex-wife of Orlando Hernandez. The parole, issued for six months,
was granted to supplement the issuance of derivative visas by the US
interest section in Havana with the concurrence of the Department of State
to Hernandez's two daughters and to ensure that the family remained
intact.
Hernandez was admitted to the United States, as you may remember, under a
visa petition approved in March of '98. The visa allows his children to
apply for derivative status. Further details need to be directed at the
Department of Justice.
QUESTION: Was enough funding provided in the budget compromise to give
North Korea its quota of oil for the year?
MR. RUBIN: I had some information I provided to some of you who were out
at the Wye River Middle East Conference facility. I will get that for you.
I believe there was $35 million provided, and there was waiver authority
which was also provided.
QUESTION: Speaking of that conference, are you prepared now to say who
paid for what as far as facilities and for you all arranging this?
MR. RUBIN: Well, I don't have numbers, but I can say that we paid for
both parties equally. In other words, we paid for each of the parties. I
don't know that each of the parties spent exactly the same amount of money,
but we paid for both their presence there. We think it's a small price to
pay for trying to advance the cause of peace in the Middle East.
QUESTION: Do you know how much it cost?
MR. RUBIN: I'll try to get that. It's going to be very hard to track
down; it will take some time.
QUESTION: Jamie, back to the budget. What was the final dollar amount for
the security of embassies abroad?
MR. RUBIN: I'll have to get that for the record. I believe we got what we
wanted.
QUESTION: Thank you.
(The briefing concluded at 1:40 P.M.)
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