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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #33, 99-03-17

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

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


1141

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Wednesday, March 17, 1999

Briefer: James B. Foley

STATEMENTS
1		US Condemns Belgrade's Latest Attack on Independent Media

SERBIA (Kosovo) 1,2,7,8 KVM, Peace Accord, Paris Negotiations 1,3,6 Racak Investigation, Forensic Report 1 ICTY and the Hague 3 Noncompliance of October Agreement 3 Implementation of Political Agreement 3 Serb Military Buildup 4 Rubin's Travel to Paris 5,7 KLA Self-Rule Plan 9 Embassy Withdrawal of Personnel from Belgrade, 9 Serbian Economy 5,7,8,9,13 NATO-Led Peace Implementation Force

MEPP 10 Dennis Ross' meeting with Chairman Arafat in Madrid 10 Arafat Visit to US 11 Unilateral Declaration of Palestinian Statehood 11 Ambassador Indyk's Travel

BRAZIL 12 Secretary Albright's Meeting with Brazilian Foreign Minister Lampreia

SLOVENIA 13 Meeting with Slovenian Foreign Minister Frlec, NATO Membership, US-Slovenian Relations 13 Peace in the Balkans

CHINA 14 Promotion of US National Interests, Human Right's Practices 15 National Security Issues, Non-Proliferation, US Commercial Interests, WTO Agreement, 15 Espionage Issue, Theater Missile Defense

DPRK 15 Missile Negotiations 16,17 Cost of Pilot-Agricultural Program (Potato), World Food Program, 17,18 Four-Party-Talks in Geneva

IRAQ 18,19 Cooperation with Sanctions Committee, Pilgrims Travel to Haj 19 Proposal to Expand Oil-for-Food Program


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #33

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1999, 1:15 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. FOLEY: I'll be posting a statement on Belgrade's latest attack on independent media. Let me just read briefly from it, and you can get the rest in the Press Office.

The United States strongly condemns Belgrade's recent actions against independent media in Serbia. Serbian authorities brought court proceedings and heavy fines against multiple independent media publications over the weekend. Two Albanian language Kosovo newspapers were fined on March 13. Meanwhile in Belgrade, authorities brought charges against three independent papers. Verdicts were handed down, also on March 13, inflicting fines on Danas, Glas Javnosti and Blic.

The United States Government calls on the authorities in Belgrade to end their attacks on the independent media. It is essential for Belgrade to respect the principles of a free and open press if it hopes to climb out of its self-imposed cycle of violence and repression.

QUESTION: Does the State Department have any observations on the forensic report and on Mr. Walker?

MR. FOLEY: Yes, I do. We received a four-page summary of the Finnish forensic team's report on the Racak killings. We've not yet seen the full text or the full autopsy reports on the 40 bodies that the team had access to; but again, we have seen the summary. The report concludes that the victims were unarmed civilians, including several elderly men and a woman and that they died at approximately at the same time.

The 22 bodies discovered in a gully were most likely shot exactly where they were found. No ammunition or traces of ammunition were found on the victims and conclusive lab tests showed no trace of gunshot residue; that is, none of the victims had fired weapons. The clothing of the victims, which did not appear to have been altered or tampered with, showed no identifying badges or insignia of any military unit.

The summary itself makes clear that the Finnish team's medical autopsy reports are not equivalent to a full-scale criminal investigation, and that the facts can only be derived from such a full criminal investigation. Therefore, we call once again upon the Belgrade authorities to comply with UN Security Council resolutions and allow the International Tribunal -- the ICTY in The Hague -- to conduct a full and impartial investigation of this and other possible crimes against humanity in Kosovo.

Now, you asked about Ambassador Walker. We believe the findings of this report support Ambassador Walker's on the ground conclusion on the day of the massacre, which was also the conclusion of the UN Security Council, namely that a massacre was committed at Racak. Bear in mind that Ambassador Walker and other members of the OSCE KVM - Kosovo Verification Mission - arrived in Racak, as I said, on the morning the bodies were discovered. We fully support Ambassador Walker and the brave verifiers of the KVM who make up the OSCE mission. They're working in very difficult and challenging circumstances.

QUESTION: Also on that part of the world, there are reports the Serbs appear to be preparing for war rather than preparing to sign any documents, with the build-up of as many as 30,000 troops plus armored vehicles.

MR. FOLEY: Well, it doesn't appear that they're preparing for peace or preparing to sign peace accords in Paris, certainly. In terms of what their actual intentions are, that's difficult to read. But in terms of what they're doing with their forces, that is deeply troublesome.

Based on preliminary field reports today, the KVM believes that the Serbian military continued moving reinforcements into Kosovo overnight. Just outside of Kosovo, Serbs have positioned some 18,000 to 21,000 troops. Significant troop movements are reported along the Albanian border and the road to the Macedonian border and near Pristina.

The KVM observed two VJ convoys in Gnjilane, which included 80 armed civilians. Yesterday, KVM observed a train transporting into Kosovo a large FRY armored element, including seven T-72 type tanks. They also reported that additional tanks are positioned near Podujevo, indicating that two armored brigades have now deployed in the province.

Reporting from other sources provides disturbing evidence of a large-scale mobilization and force build-up taking place within the FRY. I believe Mr. Bacon spoke to that at the Pentagon yesterday. The United States is deeply concerned by these deployments of additional FRY forces into and around Kosovo. This is a clear case of non-compliance with the October agreement signed by the FRY. It also certainly flies in the face of the Rambouillet process, currently continuing in Paris. Indeed, we see two parallel movements - one on the ground, one in Paris - that point only in the direction of continuing Serb refusal to deal with the underlying problems and to insist on a continued militarization of the conflict.

QUESTION: The Paris conference - this may be a moot point eventually, but for the moment it's not. If the Serbs will not sign, will the Kosovars go ahead and will the Kosovars be asked to sign anyway?

MR. FOLEY: Well, you may be the only one in the room -- I don't know if there were others -- who have not watched their TV screens in the last half an hour. While I was preparing for the briefing, I had my eye on the TV screen because the three negotiators in Paris gave a press conference in the last hour. I believe it was Ambassador Petritsch himself stated very clearly that the Kosovars will be invited to sign the accord at the close of this round of talks in Paris.

QUESTION: Jim, if I could ask, you said two brigades have come over from Serbia across the border into Kosovo; is that correct?

MR. FOLEY: Yes.

QUESTION: That's of course in violation of the agreement that Mr. Holbrooke made.

MR. FOLEY: Yes, it is.

QUESTION: I want to ask, is it all but over at Rambouillet?

MR. FOLEY: Well, again, I'd refer you to the voluminous interviews or the lengthy press conference that just took place I was watching, as many of you were. I just saw Ambassador Hill say that we've not seen really any willingness on the Serb side to engage. They are clearly nearing the end of the Paris talks. Certainly the intention has always been that the talks in Paris would not last more than a few days. If the Serbs continue to refuse to discuss the agreements seriously, we do not expect the talks to continue much longer.

QUESTION: Jim, I'm just wondering, the Racak investigation is now out. I suppose you saw the TV footage of Serbs -- basically Serbian troops, burning houses, stealing televisions, waving to the cameras, showing absolutely no respect towards threats NATO keeps making. You said repeatedly they're violating the October accord. What is - troops -- there's plenty of targets there outside Kosovo; there's plenty of targets inside Kosovo - heavy targets, tanks, artillery pieces - all, as you say, in violation of the October agreement. What's preventing NATO from acting to back up its threat or to enforce the agreement?

MR. FOLEY: Well, let me point out, first of all, that during the negotiations in Paris, today, Ambassador Hill, in addition to discussing with the other negotiators the political agreement and the implementation -- especially with the Serbs -- also took the opportunity to express the United States' deep concern over the Serb military build-up in and around Kosovo. He reminded the Serbs of the consequences of non-compliance with the October agreement.

These consequences are spelled out in the NATO decisions of January 30. The Activation Order that was decided on January 30 remains in effect. There are two triggers, as you know, for NATO military action. One is having to do with the negotiations themselves in the event that the Kosovars say yes, which they now have, and the Serbs say no, which they continue to say. The other trigger is a large-scale violation of the commitments that Milosevic gave to Generals Nauman and Clark in October. On both scores, we are seeing increasing evidence that the Serbs are meeting the criteria for triggering a NATO response.

The negotiations continue. As I indicated, they will not last much longer, but our focus at the moment remains on squeezing out every chance of achieving success at the negotiating talks. But certainly, the consequences of a Serb "no" at the conclusion of these talks and the continued mobilization and violations of the October agreement on the ground do not bode well. President Milosevic needs to be aware that the consequences will be very serious if these two factors continue much longer.

QUESTION: Do you think in any sense American credibility is on the line, having, as you say, in both instances said if the Serbs do what indeed they're doing, they face NATO attack; or is it too early, on the theory that maybe there will be an incredible about-face? Is that what you're holding out for - some 11th hour change of heart?

MR. FOLEY: Well, I think your formulation, a little provocative, is probably accurate because it would be a dramatic about-face because they've not shown any signs of serious engagement. What they're doing on the ground shows a spirit to the contrary.

I would say that NATO's credibility, of course, has been tested many times in its near-50 year existence, and we don't need to measure NATO's success on the basis of any one issue. But certainly NATO has made clear its determination to act in the event of either of these two circumstances continuing. Secretary General Solana actually has been authorized by the North Atlantic Council to engage in military action if this continues. So I don't challenge the premise of your question.

QUESTION: Has any decision been made about whether the Secretary would go to Brussels were the talks to end, were Milosevic not to --

MR. FOLEY: Betsy, that's a number of hypotheticals down the road. I'm certainly not aware of any such plans.

QUESTION: Could I just ask a footnote question - what the spokesman, Mr. Rubin, is doing unannounced in Paris?

MR. FOLEY: Sure. Well, as you know, Mr. Rubin actually wears two hats here in the State Department. One is as Department Spokesman; but he's also one of the key policy advisors to Secretary Albright. In that capacity, she asked him to go to Paris. Actually, my understanding is that it came up several weeks ago when she was in Rambouillet. Mr. Rubin had developed a rapport with Mr. Thaci, so she asked him to go there and meet with him and to convey on her behalf an invitation to members of the Kosovar Albanian delegation to travel to Washington, which we expect to happen at the close of this round of talks in Paris.

QUESTION: Let me get this out. Two days ago Mr. Cohen, Secretary of Defense, said we are pursuing diplomacy at this point but NATO has not decided to try to intervene in the non-permissive environment at this point. I would ask, what will that involve? If it comes to that, where will that have to go and who will have to approve it? Is it just Javier Solana or is it the NAC or can you tell me?

MR. FOLEY: To approve what?

QUESTION: To approve a non-permissive environment, which apparently the Serbs are anticipating will happen, by the movements of their troops.

MR. FOLEY: I don't understand - to approve a non-permissive environment.

QUESTION: For NATO to approve a non-permissive environment, what will have to happen?

MR. FOLEY: I don't see a question there.

QUESTION: A non-permissive deployment is what I mean.

MR. FOLEY: Oh, deployment. Well, no, we've ruled out a non-permissive deployment.

QUESTION: Fully? I mean, if something happens that the Serbs do not perform at Rambouillet, do not cooperate then --

MR. FOLEY: Well, I think as far as the United States is concerned, the President has made clear that he has no intention to deploy American ground forces to Kosovo in a non-permissive environment. We would participate, he has indicated, in a NATO-led peace implementation force in the event of a signed agreement by both sides.

QUESTION: Let's go back. The spokesman, Mr. Rubin, went to convey this invitation on behalf of Secretary Albright.

MR. FOLEY: Yes, and to meet with Mr. Thaci.

QUESTION: Does this just - do you have any details on it? Is it just Mr. Thaci?

MR. FOLEY: No, it would be more than him. I don't have the list of who would be coming, but I think it would be a representative group of Kosovar Albanians.

QUESTION: Okay, and they would be --

QUESTION: (Inaudible.)

MR. FOLEY: I didn't give a day; I don't think we have a day yet. After the talks are finished.

QUESTION: What is the purpose of that?

MR. FOLEY: Well, as envisaged in the accords, the KLA will be transformed into a politically oriented organization. They have sought discussions and assistance from us in this regard, with an eye toward their future role under a peace accord in Kosovo.

QUESTION: There must be something afoot. I mean, beyond that do you plan any - I don't know what it's called - any sort of an arrangement like you have with another non-state, the Palestinian Authority? Some sort of a working relationship to bolster them, to show backing for them in their political pursuits?

MR. FOLEY: Sure, we want to develop a good relationship with them as they transform themselves into a politically-oriented organization under a Kosovo living in peace under the terms of the interim accord. We want to develop closer and better ties with that organization.

QUESTION: It might take some formal structural --

MR. FOLEY: I think that's getting ahead of the day. For example, we don't have a peace accord yet. We want to, even in the meantime, continue to build on the good relations we're developing with them.

QUESTION: You don't have a peace in the Middle East yet either, but you've done that with the PLO. I just wondered if you were going to do it with the Albanians. There's a certain parallel there. They're emerging and you support their political destiny, as the President has spoken of the destiny of people seeking whatever --

MR. FOLEY: We support peace and stability --

QUESTION: You also support their self-rule aspirations. You support everything --

MR. FOLEY: Yes, we support enhanced autonomy for them to run their own lives free of Serb repression.

QUESTION: That sounds parallel to what's in the Middle East, doesn't it?

QUESTION: Can we go back to the release of the forensic report? Is there some concern on the part of the US that the timing of the release of this report, coming during the second round of talks as the Serbs are refusing to engage so far, is going to keep them or discourage them from engaging even more - the release of this pretty incriminating report?

MR. FOLEY: I think if there were any word that the report were not being released for tactical advantage, that the talks would give occasion to a very serious question on the part of some of your colleagues. I don't think that we can criticize the fact that the forensics experts have finished their work. I have no information on the timing of the release of their report, but I would not want to make any connection with the talks going on.

QUESTION: Let me just follow up. Is there concern, though, on the part of the US that this is going to make it even more difficult to get the Serbs to engage?

MR. FOLEY: I really don't think so. The Serbs have not engaged. It's not as if they were poised or something to engage. In any event, it's a matter that we believe needs to be further investigated under a criminal investigation.

QUESTION: I don't know whether you can answer this, but aren't you all at all concerned about this embrace of the Kosovar Albanians? I mean, there's all sorts of allegations about their ties to illegal arms trade, the narcotics trade. I mean, they sort of went from militant group to self-rule and visit to the White House without ever going to the fighting stage. Isn't there a political liability for the Clinton Administration?

MR. FOLEY: Are you suggesting they go through more fighting? I don't quite understand your question.

QUESTION: No, it was just a miraculous transformation. It took Yasser Arafat three decades.

MR. FOLEY: First of all, Sid, our aim is to bring peace to Kosovo, to end this conflict before it continues and possibly spreads and certainly, in the meantime, causes much more mayhem and humanitarian dislocation. Part of the accords that the Contact Group has proposed envisages the transformation of the KLA into a political actor. We believe that we have a lot of advice and a lot of help that we can provide to them as they become precisely the kind of political actor we would like to see them become under the three-year interim period that will be implemented by a NATO-led force.

The security environment will be assured by the NATO led force. The KLA will not need to and will not be permitted to continue as a military force, but they will have an opportunity - the entire people of Kosovo - to realize their political aspirations for self-government and a better life under a completely different context. If we can help them and they want us to help them in that effort of transformation, I think it's nothing that anybody can argue with.

QUESTION: By chance you folks aren't considering imposing the self-rule plan all by yourselves without Serb consent, are you? It sounds like you're getting close to it. Frankly, I didn't think that would be germane until the description of the Kosovar -

MR. FOLEY: To impose what, Barry?

QUESTION: The plan. You have a plan, a six-nation plan; the Albanians say yes, the Serbs say no. You've already asserted the right, under international law, to bomb the Serbs for refusing to agree to something on their own territory. So it isn't a big step, I suppose, to also impose the plan.

MR. FOLEY: No, it is a big step.

QUESTION: Well, is that what you're thinking about?

MR. FOLEY: I've made very clear, in response to Bill's question today and on previous occasions, that there is no such plan on the part of the United States to seek to impose a peace settlement, at least not certainly using US ground forces. We aim to persuade the parties to agree to the Contact Group plan and to invite a NATO-led peace implementation force under a permissive environment. I've not seen any talk anywhere and our discussion about the transformation of the KLA has nothing to do with any such notion or idea.

QUESTION: What happens if the Serbs never - even if they are hit with air strikes by NATO and still refuse to do it, does it keep going on? I mean, we get into an Iraq situation or -

MR. FOLEY: You're asking a profoundly hypothetical question; and profound or not, I'm not willing to walk down that path. I will say this, though, I've seen --

QUESTION: (Inaudible.)

MR. FOLEY: I don't want to speculate on what might happen. NATO has made its decision. If we continue to have Serb intransigence, NATO's decision becomes extremely relevant. What may happen in the event of military action, I'm not in a position to predict; but neither is President Milosevic in a position to predict. What I will say is the one thing that people can count on, what President Milosevic can count on, is what happens if the Serbs do reverse course and accept the Contact Group proposals.

We will have peace in Kosovo. We will have a NATO force providing security not only for the Kosovar Albanians, but for the Serb minority. We will have a Kosovo that is enjoying self-government but remains within the FRY. I think President Milosevic and other people in Belgrade ought to understand that this is an agreement that they can count on, in which the future can be chartered and anticipated. Whereas, if we go another path the consequences are very unpredictable and very risky from his point of view, I should think.

QUESTION: Just a couple of familiar bases. Your description, which is essentially the progression of a concept that time is running out and the Serbs better watch out, do the allies share - totally -- and the Russians -- share the various analyses you've given us of the situation? Has the Secretary made those familiar telephone calls?

MR. FOLEY: Well, the Secretary has spoken with Foreign Minister Vedrine this morning. I don't have a read-out on that conversation. She may be speaking with other colleagues at another point in the day. But in terms of the NATO allies, I've seen no evidence that there's dissent with the decision that the NATO allies made on January 30. The Russians are a different issue, of course.

QUESTION: No, I'm into the decision, I'm sorry. I mean, the appraisal of how the Serbs are moving, violating the cease-fire, et cetera.

MR. FOLEY: I think the EU negotiator talked about -- an hour ago -- a clear violation of the October agreement, he noted, apart from what's going on in the peace talks.

QUESTION: Doesn't Serbia win if there's a non-compliance or there's no treaty? If there's a bombing penalty that comes from NATO; if NATO has to pull out its verifiers before the bombing, and the United States will not force its way in militarily -- and nobody else in NATO is going to go with out us -- doesn't Serbia win? Don't they have the whole darn Kosovo again the way they had it?

MR. FOLEY: In terms of one of your points -- our personnel on the ground - let me just say that planning for the withdrawal of embassy personnel, if need be, is well underway. Withdrawal will occur if the situation warrants it.

In terms of your larger question, though, about whether Mr. Milosevic wins if this thing is not settled in Paris at the negotiating table, I think it's inconceivable to me that he can win under any definition. I tried to describe a different scenario where he and his people of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia can count on peace in Kosovo; can count on Kosovo remaining within the FRY during the three-year interim period; can count on the protection of the Serb minority in Kosovo; can count on an end of this incredible drain of Serb resources.

Our understanding is that the Serb economy is in very, very pathetic shape right now and that their financial wherewithal is dwindling. This is not something they can sustain and sustain. I think it's well-known that President Milosevic is regarded as a tactician and not a strategist, and maybe looks to the next day and not the day after. But the day after does not bode well for him and his country if this is not settled rapidly at the negotiating table.

QUESTION: Do you all have any refugee camp people who have been displaced by the current --

MR. FOLEY: I'll have to get that for you; I don't have the latest figures.

QUESTION: I know (inaudible) time and patience is running out and I know you never want to do a deadline, but I think Wolfgang Petritsch earlier today was saying we now have hours. I mean, is tomorrow the --

MR. FOLEY: I didn't see that. What he said --

QUESTION: He said it's hours in an interview with CNN I.

MR. FOLEY: I understand the talks were nearing their end is how he put it. I was watching him. If he said hours in another context, I didn't see that. But clearly, I was very clear myself that we don't expect the talks to continue much longer unless the Serbs reverse course.

QUESTION: Is tomorrow the last day?

MR. FOLEY: I don't have that information.

QUESTION: Can you go over what you said about planning for withdrawal of embassy personnel is well underway?

MR. FOLEY: I have nothing more specific; just that we're continuing to look at and refine our plans as needed.

QUESTION: Just your embassy, or does that include verifiers and others?

MR. FOLEY: You'd have to ask the OSCE about that.

QUESTION: And are these the same plans that were made for the last time?

MR. FOLEY: Essentially, yes.

QUESTION: Let me just clarify, Solana is correct, I believe, this week, isn't he, when he says the monitors are brought out by an extraction force now in Macedonia?

MR. FOLEY: That depends on the circumstance. They can be withdrawn by the OSCE in an environment that permits that.

QUESTION: I mean if the situation is difficult.

MR. FOLEY: The NATO force in Macedonia is an extraction force in extremis.

QUESTION: Can I switch to a subject? What is Dennis Ross doing in Madrid?

MR. FOLEY: I don't know if he's still there. He was yesterday. He may be. He's returning today, let me correct the record. He traveled to Madrid yesterday to consult with Chairman Arafat on the peace process and on the Chairman's upcoming visit to Washington. He, as I said, is returning to Washington today. It was decided that a meeting prior to Chairman Arafat's visit to Washington would be useful, and this meeting was arranged for that reason.

QUESTION: Are they talking about what's on the table? There are no new ideas, no new initiatives coming from the American side?

MR. FOLEY: No, I'm not aware of any initiatives. Often when a visiting foreigner is going to meet with the President or an important meeting with senior American officials, you try to sit down and discuss what's going to be discussed and prepare such a meeting. That's what Ambassador Ross was doing.

QUESTION: And did he relay the sense of the American Government that it would not be a good idea to unilaterally declare statehood on May 4?

MR. FOLEY: Certainly he is. I read in the newspapers this morning that someone on Capitol Hill called the Administration position on this ambiguous; because the House, of course had a vote yesterday on this subject. There's never been any ambiguity about the American opposition to unilateral actions, including a unilateral Palestinian declaration of statehood.

QUESTION: But the Administration has also said it's only understandable that people express their aspirations.

MR. FOLEY: That's a different matter.

QUESTION: Well, perhaps that's what they think is a little ambiguous.

MR. FOLEY: No, we believe - we can't tell people to stop thinking what they think or wanting what they want.

QUESTION: But in any event - speaking of what they'd like to have.

MR. FOLEY: What has to be done is that the question of statehood or the political future of the Palestinian Authority is something to be decided at the negotiating table.

QUESTION: All I'm saying is if you see a distinction between somebody saying I'm going to establish a state come what may in May and someone saying we're determined to have a state, and you think there's a world of difference between the two.

MR. FOLEY: That's not ambiguous.

QUESTION: Okay. Let me ask you about what parallel consultations you may be doing with Israel. First, your two key players have been abroad - both unannounced, by the way. Indyk went to Syria and Jordan, which sort of is in the neighborhood where Israel lives. Ross went to talk to Arafat. Isn't somebody missing from this picture - some country missing from this consultation picture?

MR. FOLEY: Which country?

QUESTION: I think Israel, no?

MR. FOLEY: Well, we remain in close contact with the Israeli Government.

QUESTION: Oh, I know, I know; and with Australia, too.

(Laughter.)

Because you've had your people out on the road, don't they have time to talk to the Israelis on their own turf?

MR. FOLEY: Happy St. Patrick's Day to you, too, Barry.

QUESTION: No, no, no, I'll be at the embassy and I'll join you tonight and we'll raise a cup of (inaudible) I guess.

(Laughter.)

But the question is, why are you icing Israel until after the election?

MR. FOLEY: No, I don't accept the premise of that.

QUESTION: It's a very simple question.

MR. FOLEY: I don't have the exact information on Ambassador Indyk's schedule or itinerary, but I think we made clear when he was out in the region that he would be meeting with Israelis on a subsequent occasion. I can check to see if we have anything more on that.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) - no date for that yet.

QUESTION: Might you be staying away from Israel because of the elections? You don't want to be seen - -

MR. FOLEY: Well, I don't accept the premise of the question. Let me check to see what the schedule is of our senior officials and negotiators.

QUESTION: Do you have a read-out on the Secretary's meeting today with the Brazilian Foreign Minister?

MR. FOLEY: I have limited information and I will be eager to provide that to you, but it is limited.

As you are aware, the United States enjoys excellent bilateral relations with Brazil. The Secretary meets with Foreign Minister Lampreia frequently to exchange views on a wide range of topics. Today they discussed a number of important issues before the UN Security Council, including Kosovo, Iraq and Cuba. They also exchanged views on the improving financial situation in Brazil, and the Secretary reiterated US support for Brazilian efforts to manage the crisis.

In addition, they reviewed a wide range of bilateral issues. As in past meetings, the discussions were cordial and productive, led to a fuller understanding of areas of mutual concern. As you know, Brazil is currently on the UN Security Council and so we had a lot of business to discuss in that regard.

QUESTION: Not to be contentious, but the Secretary - there's been a lot of her events on the schedule the last few weeks and none of them have been open to anything but cameras. No reporters have been allowed there to ask questions. Is that a new policy she's setting, no more reporters speak at photo -

MR. FOLEY: Not at all.

QUESTION: Perhaps we could -

MR. FOLEY: Well, we tried to ensure that - I don't know what my boss, Jamie Rubin's, exact definition is, but the Secretary be available to take questions on a fairly regular basis. She traveled to Independence on Friday and met with the traveling journalists during that visit. But in terms of anything scheduled this week, I'm not aware. It is something that we do keep in mind.

QUESTION: Well, NATO was a piece of cake, I mean, the expansion of NATO - all the controversy has been squeezed out of that long ago.

MR. FOLEY: There were no ground rules when she met with the media.

QUESTION: I understand. But Kosovo is sort of pregnant with expectations now.

MR. FOLEY: She talked about the Kosovo issues.

QUESTION: We could wait till the Sunday talk shows, but is it possible that she might actually talk to print reporters this week about Kosovo?

MR. FOLEY: Which print reporters, Barry?

QUESTION: The people that cover the State Department, present and unpresent.

QUESTION: (Inaudible.)

MR. FOLEY: I'll take it up with my boss, certainly.

QUESTION: There was also a meeting today with officials from Slovenia, and some officials close to that delegation say that the Secretary told them Slovenia would be the next country invited to join NATO. Do you have any response to that?

MR. FOLEY: I would be surprised if Slovenian officials were saying that. We expect the open door to be reaffirmed in Washington during the summit at the end of April. The Secretary stressed that to the Slovenian Foreign Minister. She discussed the excellent state of US-Slovenian relations, not only the US commitment to the open door but our support for Slovenia's NATO aspirations and our partnership with Slovenia's efforts to strengthen regional stability and cooperation in Southeastern Europe and to bring peace to the Balkans. I was at that meeting and, yes, they did discuss the NATO summit. They did discuss the open door. Quite a bit of the discussion focused on the situation in Kosovo -- the fact that Slovenia, while of course it has a European vocation and aspirations to join Euro-Atlantic institutions, also can bring a lot of positive influence to bear in the Southeastern Europe region. They had a very fruitful discussion on Kosovo as well.

QUESTION: But did the minister say that they would come to the summit? There are 25 non-members invited, not all expected -- because that would register interest.

MR. FOLEY: I don't believe that came up. I was there, and I don't recall it coming up.

QUESTION: That description you just read out sounds remarkably similar to the one that was released yesterday in this joint-statement with the Lithuanian. Did US have a preference over between Slovenia and Lithuania in terms of the next member of NATO?

MR. FOLEY: I think these issues will be addressed at the summit. I think that's what the summit is going to do is concentrate on defining a mechanism for helping prepare aspiring members to ready themselves for membership. A membership action plan is envisaged, but I don't want to get too far ahead of the summit news at this point.

QUESTION: Moving to China, it seems every day Republicans and even some Democrats are attacking the Administration over these espionage issues. Now there's some concern that politics is creeping into the debate. I just wonder, in this building is there concern that this whole issue over China is getting too politicized right now?

MR. FOLEY: Well, I don't have a formal statement for you on the issue, but the phenomenon of China becoming a political football in American politics is not new by any means. It goes back to the late 1940s and crops up from time to time. I think that as far as policy-makers are concerned, especially in this building -- Secretary Albright - I think we have to have our eye on the ball, which is promoting US national interests in our relationship with China, which is a country of great significance with which we have difficulties, disagreements and also important issues that we need to work on together.

So I don't think we're going to be deterred from pursuing the national interest in our relationship with China.

QUESTION: But the whole politicization that's going on right now, how is that going to make it more difficult for you?

MR. FOLEY: Well, let me stress that Secretary Albright, as Jamie Rubin has told you, when she was in Beijing she made clear to the Chinese leadership the deep concern over the reverses of China's human rights practices over the last half-year have caused anguish across the board in the United States; it's not a partisan issue. It's not a Congress versus the Administration issue. There is a genuine consensus that China has moved in the wrong direction on human rights.

In terms of the other issues we deal with - national security issues - whether it's Korea, South Asia, non-proliferation, we continue to work with the Chinese because it's in our interest to do so. We can find common ground with China on some of these issues. It's important for world peace that we do so.

We also have important commercial interests in China. Jamie Rubin spoke about that yesterday - that we believe that the WTO agreement, if it can be negotiated such that the US exporters enjoy real access to the Chinese market, will help the American economy and American workers and businesses.

So there are a lot of areas where we need to work with China on. But that does not in any way mean that we are not keenly aware of problems in the relationship, aware of such matters as the espionage issue that you're very familiar with that we need to be very vigilant about, and aware of the gulf that separates us on human rights.

QUESTION: The New York Times had a very long piece Monday about China and the issues and others. They quoted Chinese officials saying they would have to respond to this missile defense program of the Administration's by developing better and more effective long-range missiles, which, of course, is why the ABM Treaty was passed in the first place - not to set off an arms race. Is there any effort on the US' part to persuade them not to take that kind of approach; that the missile defense is not really related to China, it's related to imagined or rogue regimes?

MR. FOLEY: I don't think you were on the trip of Secretary Albright to China recently, and I think Jamie Rubin has spoken about that trip from this podium following their return. As I understand it, not having been on the trip myself, Secretary Albright spoke very clearly to the Chinese, who raised concerns about the prospect of theater missile defense. She explained that this is a system that's not been technologically established yet; that we're working on it; that we haven't made a decision in that area, but that we and our allies have legitimate security concerns about the kind of proliferation that's occurring, especially on the part of states that really do not play by the rules internationally; and that we have an obligation to pursue that technology and to pursue the security of ourselves and our allies.

She also pointed out to them, though, that in this environment what North Korea does can have an accelerating impact on our thinking and planning in that regard and that the state of relations, including the security dimensions to the relations across the Straits are also an important factor.

QUESTION: To follow, what's the state of play with regard to the missile negotiations with the DPRK?

MR. FOLEY: Well, Mr. Rubin announced yesterday that those negotiations would resume, I believe, on March 29 in Pyongyang. That's the state.

QUESTION: And is there a possibility of getting Mr. Kartman to come visit with us in the near future?

MR. FOLEY: I would have to check to see if we're going to make a senior official available to brief in the coming weeks before that. I wouldn't rule it out.

QUESTION: Do you all have a handle on the real costs the pilot potato -

MR. FOLEY: I don't have the cost yet. I think what we're hoping to do is maybe by next week

QUESTION: Small potatoes.

(Laughter.)

MR. FOLEY: Hey, this is St. Patrick's Day; let's be careful on potatoes. They're important, that's what I'm trying to say.

QUESTION: The reason I ask is, there is a common theory out there today that says that the cost of this program will far exceed the $300,000 that North Korea had initially asked.

MR. FOLEY: You're talking about $300 million, I think.

QUESTION: I'm sorry, $300 million - had initially had asked for.

MR. FOLEY: Yes, I don't know what the cost of the potato -- of the pilot agricultural program would be, and I think we hope to have someone expert in the area be in a position to brief you on that, perhaps as early as next week.

But you're right that the North Koreans did demand a large monetary payment that we rejected. They also tried to link different forms of payment to satisfying our concerns, our suspicions about the suspect site. We rejected that. I think we've been very clear on that.

QUESTION: Do you have any idea how soon the US will complete the delivery of the 500,000 tons pledged last year? I understand, most of it is gone, but not all of it.

MR. FOLEY: Right, that's true.

QUESTION: Also, there seems to be a decision pending on a request for an additional $200 million --

MR. FOLEY: $200, 000.

QUESTION: $200,000, I'm sorry, unfilled pledges. Any notion of the timing? I know it's not linked, but any notion of when this might be done?

MR. FOLEY: You're paying attention, Barry.

QUESTION: I've got the line down straight, yes.

MR. FOLEY: Again, as we've stated many times, our provision of food aid is based on humanitarian concerns, and we've responded to appeals from the World Food Program in the past. We expect to respond similarly to anticipated appeals from the World Food Program in the future. You're right, last year on two occasions we responded to World Food Program appeals. I believe, in the early part of the year, we pledged 200,000 tons; and in September, following the latest appeal, we pledged 300,000 metric tons of food, the last of which will soon be delivered to the DPRK.

That last appeal by the World Food Program in September was for - I don't have the exact amount -- but in any event, there are 200,000 metric tons that are still unmet from that last appeal, and we're going to evaluate a further response to that appeal and announce our decision as soon as it's made. We would expect that the WFP, the World Food Program, will issue a new appeal later this year, and we'll consider a response at that time.

QUESTION: You say later?

MR. FOLEY: I don't have that.

QUESTION: No, I mean, I think they make their assessments in the spring.

MR. FOLEY: It's almost springtime.

QUESTION: That's what I mean. I wondered how imminent the possibility of doing something about starvation is.

MR. FOLEY: I don't have that. You might ask the WFP.

Barry, are you bringing us to an end?

QUESTION: No, no, no.

MR. FOLEY: Okay, I see your body language.

QUESTION: I'm going easy on you because it's St. Patrick's Day.

MR. FOLEY: Thank you, Barry; God bless you.

QUESTION: Are there any other plans for more North Korean meetings between now and the next Four-Party Talks, besides the missile meeting in Pyongyang?

MR. FOLEY: Well, I think in New York, the channel remains open. I have nothing to announce, though, in terms of further meetings. I'm not aware. The date for the Four-Party Talks - can someone help me? -- they're late next month in Geneva. Missile talks March 29, he mentioned that as well.

QUESTION: Jim, I just need to have something cleared up because some of the wires are reporting that there was food distributed this year. Was there no food at all distributed this year?

MR. FOLEY: No, the distinction is this -- apparently, there was an erroneous report that the United States has already agreed this year, 1999, to provide food aid through the World Food Program. I think it was a garbled report based on Mr. Rubin's statement yesterday that we provided half a million tons last year. But the shipments have continued into this year - the shipments that came about from our responses to the World Food Program request in September. As I indicated a minute ago, those final shipments, I think, are about to be made to complete that commitment.

QUESTION: Last week, I believe, there was a human rights convention in Geneva, I think.

MR. FOLEY: Right.

QUESTION: Will the United States get more detailed in their objections to China's human rights abuses?

MR. FOLEY: Well, as Mr. Rubin's indicated, I believe as late as yesterday, we've not made a decision yet in that regard in terms of how we're going to handle that issue in Geneva.

QUESTION: The Iraqi pilgrims - there are 18,000 of them - blame the United States for holding up their money in the sanctions through the Oil- for-Food thing.

MR. FOLEY: Which money? I really don't know the issue.

QUESTION: Well, they need money to go to Mecca.

MR. FOLEY: Well, I'm not aware of that report. But the fact is, as Mr. Rubin stated very, very clearly yesterday, that Iraq can cooperate, if it chooses, with the sanctions committee in order to get the green light to allow pilgrims to go to the Haj. We support that. They've chosen, at least by air, to subvert their obligations under Security Council resolutions.

In terms of the issue involving pilgrims traveling by land, I'd have to refer you to the UN. I'm just not aware of the issue, but I'm sure we're not blocking what pilgrims need to undertake their pilgrimage.

QUESTION: Speaking of the green, would you take an Irish question?

MR. FOLEY: Well, I might be inclined to refer to the White House because I understand that Mr. Steinberg has given an extensive briefing on the visit of the Prime Minister. Secretary Albright met with the Prime Minister yesterday. She's participating actively in a whole series of White House meetings with the different leaders this afternoon, and she's having lunch now with Speaker Hastert, who's hosting the Irish visitors.

QUESTION: But it is, of course, the 17th of March.

MR. FOLEY: Very good.

QUESTION: Let me just ask on Iraq. There was really a lot of criticism from both Republicans and Democrats today of the proposal to expand the Oil- for-Food program. How concerned is the State Department about criticism coming from both sides? Will that opposition impact getting this proposal underway at the UN?

MR. FOLEY: Well, I think if we're being criticized from both sides, we're probably getting it about right. I think we made clear we want to make sure that the humanitarian needs of the Iraqi people are met and that Saddam Hussein is the one who has, in many cases, prevented assistance from going to the Iraqi people and certainly has failed to cooperate adequately with the UN and the Oil-for-Food program. We want to make sure, by increasing the ceiling of Iraqi oil imports in the Oil-for-Food program, to ensure that what the Iraqi people need in terms of food, medicine, humanitarian supplies goes to them. We also want to ensure and we will ensure that it goes to the people of Iraq, and it doesn't go to Saddam Hussein and his government for his purposes.

So we can say to the Congress that we will ensure that Iraqi imports continue to be monitored by the United Nations and that Iraqi exports will be monitored similarly and that these moneys continue to be escrowed for humanitarian purposes.

Thank you.

(The briefing concluded at 2:00 P.M.)


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