USIA - Text: Albright Before House International Relations Committee, 97-02-11
From: The United States Information Agency (USIA) Gopher at <gopher://gopher.usia.gov>
TEXT: ALBRIGHT BEFORE HOUSE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE
(SecState calls for new NATO, stable SE Europe, close ties with Russia,
Ukraine) (7410)
Washington -- Secretary of State Madeleine Albright told the House
International Relations Committee February 11 that U.S. leadership in
Europe "is on solid ground," but has three challenges to meet to fully
reach the goal of "an integrated, stable and democratic Europe."
Albright said the United States has "led the way in revitalizing NATO,
ending the carnage in Bosnia, mobilizing support for Russian democracy and
upholding the independence of Europe's new democratic nations. Now we are
on the verge of realizing one of the most elusive dreams of this century --
an integrated, stable and democratic Europe."
To fully reach that goal, Albright said the United States has to meet three
challenges: "We must create a new and larger NATO, while promoting the
integration of all of the continent's new democracies. We must build close
and constructive partnerships with Russia and Ukraine. And we must promote
democracy, maintain stability and defuse tensions throughout southeastern
Europe -- and particularly in the former Yugoslavia."
Albright, who will visit a number of key capitals in Europe and Asia
starting February 15, called for more bipartisanship and more spending for
U.S. foreign affairs agencies during her testimony in support of the
Clinton administration's FY-1998 International Affairs budget request.
"The success of our new foreign policy will depend largely on whether we
can revive the spirit of bipartisanship that prevailed after World War II,"
Albright said. "One of the first tests of our bipartisanship will be
whether we can agree on the Fiscal Year 1998 international affairs
budget."
She emphasized that "We must stem the erosion of our diplomatic resources
that has begun to hamper our foreign policy in recent years. This budget
gives us the opportunity to begin that process."
The administration is asking the U.S. Congress to approve and fund $19.45
billion for international affairs. The request represents less than one
percent of the entire federal budget.
Following is the State Department text of Albright's opening testimony, as
prepared for delivery:
(Editor's Note: In the text, $1 billion equals $1,000 million.)
(begin text)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
Office of the Spokesman
February 11, 1997
OPENING STATEMENT SECRETARY OF STATE MADELEINE K. ALBRIGHT
BEFORE THE HOUSE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS COMMITTEE
Mr. Chairman and members of the Committee, it is an honor and a pleasure to
testify before you for the first time as Secretary of State. As Ambassador
to the U.N., I benefited greatly from our constructive dialogue over the
past four years. I look forward now to continuing our relationship with the
same candor and commitment -- and to working with you on an even broader
array of challenges facing our nation and the world.
Mr. Chairman, more than seven years have passed since the fall of the
Berlin Wall and five years since the demise of the Soviet Union. Today,
America is secure, our economy vibrant, and our ideals ascendant. Across
the globe, the movement towards open societies and open markets is wider
and deeper than ever before. Democracy's triumph is neither accidental nor
irreversible; it is the result of sustained American leadership. It would
not have been possible without the power of our example, the strength of
our military, or the constancy and creativity of our diplomacy. That is the
central lesson of the 20th century -- and this lesson must continue to
guide us if we are to safeguard our interests as we enter the 21st.
Make no mistake: the interests served by American foreign policy are not
the abstract inventions of State Department planners; they are the concrete
realities of our daily lives. Think about it. Would the American people be
as secure if weapons of mass destruction, instead of being controlled, fell
into the wrong hands? That is precisely what would have happened if the
administration and Congress had not acted to ensure the dismantling of
Iraq's nuclear weapons program, the freezing of North Korea's, and the
securing of Russia's.
Would we be as safe if small conflicts, instead of being contained early,
spread across entire regions? That is what would have happened had we not
devised a formula for ending the war in Bosnia and had we not persisted in
our search for a comprehensive Middle East peace.
Or would we be as prosperous if the global economy, instead of becoming
more open to our trade and investment, had caved in and closed up behind
protectionist walls? That is what would have happened had we not pushed
hard to achieve NAFTA and the GATT Uruguay Round agreements -- and to
expand trade through our hemisphere and across the Pacific.
The great divide in the world today is not between east and west or north
and south; it is between those who are the prisoners of history and those
determined to shape history. That is not only a statement of fact; it is a
stark choice for us to make. Mr. Chairman, that is the same choice America
faced 50 years ago in the aftermath of World War Two. It was not self-
evident then that we would make the right choice. We were tired of war, and
we were just a few years removed from the Great Depression. But fortunately
for our generation, President Truman, Secretary Marshall and Senator
Vandenberg and other leading members of Congress from both parties were
determined that America should lead rather than withdraw. In a bipartisan
manner and together with our allies, they forged a set of institutions that
have for a half-century successfully defended freedom, rebuilt economies,
upheld law and prevented war.
Since the end of the Cold War, we have chosen a similar course. We have
begun to build a new framework of American leadership appropriate to the
challenges of a new century. In so doing, we are required to address not a
single overriding threat such as Soviet Communism but rather a variety of
perils -- some as old as ethnic strife; some as deadly as terrorist bombs;
some as pervasive as illegal drugs; and some as new as global warming.
To respond effectively to diverse threats, we require a full range of
foreign policy tools. That is why we need to retain a military that is
versatile, mobile, ready and strong -- and as President Clinton has pledged,
we will. But force, being a blunt instrument and one with sometimes extreme
consequences, cannot solve all our problems. There will be many occasions,
in many places, where we will rely on diplomacy to protect our interests,
and we will expect our diplomats to defend those interests with skill,
knowledge and spine.
Mr. Chairman, while our military is the ultimate guarantor of our freedom,
our diplomats are our first line of defense. One of my most important tasks
as Secretary of State will be to work with you and your colleagues in
Congress to maintain the superb diplomatic representation that our people
deserve and our interests demand. As I said in my confirmation hearing, we
cannot have world-class diplomacy on the cheap. We must invest the
resources required for American leadership.
In recent years, these resources have dwindled. During the last four years,
the State Department has cut more than 2,000 employees, closed more than 30
embassies and consulates, and deferred the badly-needed modernization of
infrastructure and communications. We have deeply reduced our foreign
assistance programs, and we now contribute a smaller percentage of our
national income to growth and democracy in the developing world than any
other industrialized nation. We are the largest debtor to the United
Nations and the international financial institutions.
Our spending on international affairs constitutes barely one percent of the
federal budget. If this small amount were to be cut further, it is our
influence in the world, not the deficit, that would decline. In his State
of the Union address last week, President Clinton said, "If America is to
continue to lead the world, we here who lead America simply must find the
will to pay our way."
The FY'98 budget that the President has submitted to Congress seeks to
restore our diplomatic readiness, including a modest increase in the
funding of State Department operations. In my view, the entire $19.45
billion requested for international affairs is required to sustain American
leadership. I ask your support for this budget. In so doing, I pledge my
own best efforts, and I am determined to work closely with you, to
guarantee that the American people receive full value for every dollar
spent on our diplomacy.
Mr. Chairman, I want to review with you today our developing framework for
continued American leadership in the world and to highlight parts of our
budget that will support it. This framework includes measures to control
weapons of mass destruction, to prevent or settle dangerous regional
conflicts, to maintain the United States as the hub of an expanding global
economy, and to promote fundamental principles of democracy and respect for
the rule of law. But we will not achieve these goals unless we are also
able to reinforce our alliances and manage well our key bilateral
relationships.
Leadership with Key Partners
Our relations with the world's major powers help bind together not only
American diplomacy but the entire international system. By acting together,
the leading nations are able to elevate overall standards of international
behavior, spur economic and social progress and strengthen the rule of
law.
On Saturday (February 15), I will begin a visit to a number of key capitals
in Europe and Asia. My purpose will be to establish or renew my personal
acquaintance with leaders there and to discuss the range of pressing issues
before us. My goal is not to reach new agreements, but to exchange views
and to lay a strong foundation for enhanced cooperation, especially in the
year just ahead.
If the fundamental lesson of this century is indeed that America must lead,
one of its major corollaries is that we must remain a European power. We
have an interest in Europe's security, because since the founding of our
Republic we have known that the Atlantic Ocean is not an impregnable
barrier for our defense. We have an interest in Europe's prosperity,
because our own prosperity has always depended greatly on our trans-
Atlantic trade and investment. And we have an interest in Europe's freedom,
because it was the triumph of democracy there that ended the Cold
War.
Today, American leadership in Europe is on solid ground. America led the
way in revitalizing NATO, ending the carnage in Bosnia, mobilizing support
for Russian democracy and upholding the independence of Europe's new
democratic nations. Now we are on the verge of realizing one of the most
elusive dreams of this century -- an integrated, stable and democratic
Europe. To fully reach our goal, we have three challenges to meet: We must
create a new and larger NATO, while promoting the integration of all of the
continent's new democracies. We must build close and constructive
partnerships with Russia and Ukraine. And we must promote democracy,
maintain stability and defuse tensions throughout southeastern Europe --
and particularly in the former Yugoslavia.
In 1994, President Clinton proposed and our allies embraced a program to
adapt NATO to meet new challenges. These efforts will reach a new milestone
at this July's NATO summit in Madrid. At the summit, the Alliance will
invite several nations to begin negotiations to join NATO and will approve
important changes in NATO's internal structure. The negotiations leading to
the NATO summit will be among the most ambitious and complex in the history
of the Alliance. In the coming months, Mr. Chairman, administration
officials will be making the case to the Congress and the American people
why the new, larger NATO will advance our vital interests.
At its core, that case is this: Fifty years ago, the birth of NATO united
new democracies, vanquished old hatreds, boosted economic reconstruction
and prevented future conflicts. What NATO did then for Europe's west, it
can do now for Europe's east -- the region where this century's two global
hot wars and the Cold War began. The process of enlargement has already
encouraged the settlement of historic disputes between Hungary and Romania,
Germany and the Czech Republic, and Poland and Ukraine. In the future, it
can increase our confidence that there will be no more Bosnias, that the
democratic revolutions of 1989 will endure, and that the Cold War-style
division of Europe will not re-open in some new and dangerous form.
That is what we are trying to achieve. Just as important is what we are
trying to avoid. For there are only two real alternatives to enlargement.
We could replace the Alliance with a lowest-common-denominator NATO that
includes everyone and imposes obligations on no one. That would devalue and
degrade NATO. Or we could delay enlargement indefinitely, freezing NATO's
membership along its Cold War frontier. That would create not only a
permanent injustice, but also a permanent source of tension and insecurity
in the heart of Europe.
Of course, as we move forward, we must make sure no new lines are drawn
across Europe. That is why we are strengthening NATO's Partnership for
Peace, and why our financial support for the Partnership is vital. It is
why we support the expansion of the EU and the courageous work the OSCE has
done from Chechnya to Bosnia. It is also why funding under the SEED Act
remains critical. Our assistance has helped nations from Estonia to the
Czech Republic establish thriving democracies and thereby graduate from our
program. But aid is still desperately needed in struggling democracies like
Bulgaria and Romania.
One of the President's top budget priorities is the Partnership for Freedom
initiative, which will open a new phase in our assistance to Russia and the
other New Independent States. The first phase was devoted to establishing
the basic institutions of democracy and a market economy. On the whole,
this assistance has been enormously successful -- especially in promoting
private ownership, free elections and civil society. Our efforts will now
focus on boosting trade and investment, thereby unleashing the potential
for long-term growth that is central to the transformation of these
societies.
Mr. Chairman, Russia and many of its neighbors are making choices today
that will have monumental consequences for our security and the cause of
human freedom. At stake is this: will they emerge as normal democracies
with growing market economies that are fully part of the European
mainstream? Or will they become poor and isolated nations, plagued by
instability, corruption and crime? These are not choices we can make. But
we can choose to help those in each society who are determined to make the
right choice.
Certainly, our interests are clear: A strong and permanent democratic
process in Russia and the other New Independent States will enhance our
security, aid in the fight against proliferation, help combat international
crime, provide new economic opportunities and create a climate of lasting
stability in a region as vital to our future as it has been central to our
past.
We understand that Russia opposes the enlargement of NATO and we do not
expect that to change. We must address Russia's legitimate concerns, but it
is not in our interest to delay or derail a process that is helping to
build a reunited Europe. In any case, the decisions NATO makes in Brussels
and in our allied capitals are not going to determine the fate of Russia's
democracy. That will depend on the ability of Russia's leaders to meet the
real needs of their people and to speed Russia's economic recovery and
revival.
What NATO can do and what it wants to do is to make Russia our full partner
in building a united and peaceful Europe. NATO has proposed a formal
charter to Russia that will allow us to cooperate, consult, train and
respond to crises together. We have made steady progress toward this goal,
which will be a major subject of my discussions in Europe.
The success of Ukraine's new democracy is also fundamental to Europe's
future. Of the New Independent States, Ukraine was the first to experience
a transfer of power between two democratically elected governments. More
recently, President Kuchma has launched a bold program of reform that has
reduced inflation and prevented an economic collapse. Our relations with
Ukraine are based on a solid foundation of shared interests, including the
achievement of a more secure and integrated Europe. As with Russia, we have
established a binational commission, chaired on our side by Vice President
Gore, to set the agenda for cooperation on a wide range of important
issues.
Today, the greatest test of Europe's capacity to act together on behalf of
European security is in Bosnia, where NATO and non-NATO nations alike are
implementing the Dayton accords. IFOR carried out its military mission in
Bosnia brilliantly, but more time is needed for political reconciliation
and economic reconstruction. SFOR will give Bosnia the opportunity to make
its new peace self-sustaining. Our strategy is to continue diminishing the
need for an international military presence by establishing a stable
military balance, improving judicial and legal institutions, helping more
people return safely to their homes and seeing that more of those indicted
as war criminals are arrested and prosecuted.
In Bosnia, the immediate task is to determine the status of Brcko and the
date of municipal elections -- both of which are critical milestones in
completing the implementation of the Dayton accords. Beyond Bosnia, we will
continue to make clear that the nations of the former Yugoslavia can rejoin
Europe only as free and open societies.
For the past 13 months, almost every nation in Europe has worked together
to bring hope to the continent's most fragile region. Our challenge is to
extend this spirit of cooperation to all the ties that bind our New
Atlantic Community.
Mr. Chairman, while this century has taught us that America's vital
interests are intertwined with those of Europe, it has also shown that our
security and prosperity hinge equally on events in Asia. Indeed, since the
turn of the century, the United States has been a Pacific power. Three
times in the last six decades, we have fought wars in Asia. Since World War
Two, we have been actively engaged in the Asia-Pacific, and in recent years
our leadership has contributed to the emergence of many of the world's most
dynamic economies. Moreover, from South Korea to the Philippines, and from
Mongolia to Thailand and Taiwan, there has been a steady advance of
democracy, human rights and the rule of law -- developments that highlight
the universal aspiration for freedom.
President Clinton has given new prominence to Asia in our foreign policy.
Together with our partners, we have begun building an Asia-Pacific
community. We are opening markets for American goods, services and capital -
- both bilaterally and through APEC. We are strengthening our core
alliances and maintaining our forward deployment of 100,000 troops in the
western pacific. We are supporting new multilateral security dialogues such
as the ASEAN Regional Forum. And we are continuing to support new
democracies and to stress the importance of respect for human rights.
Our alliance with a democratic and prosperous Japan is one of the great
successes of the postwar era. Today, our two nations cooperate on a host of
bilateral, regional and global issues. We have fortified our military ties
through last year's Security Declaration, and we have brought greater
balance to our economic relationship through an unprecedented 22 trade
agreements negotiated since 1993. By means of our ambitious Common Agenda,
we are addressing complex global issues such as AIDS, pollution and
unsustainable population growth. And together we are supporting democracy
in Haiti and Russia, and peace in Bosnia and the Middle East.
We are cooperating with Japan and another valued ally, the Republic of
Korea, to implement the Agreed Framework freezing North Korea's development
of nuclear arms. In recent weeks, we have worked closely with the South
Korean government to reduce tensions with the North and to regain momentum
in the peace process. I ask for your support of our FY'98 funding of KEDO,
which will be critical to sustaining this renewed momentum. The United
States is currently the largest contributor to KEDO. But in the future,
Japan and the Republic of Korea will eclipse us by far as they pay for the
construction of two lightwater reactors in North Korea. We will also
continue to press the proposal made by Presidents Clinton and Kim for Four-
Party talks on achieving permanent peace on the peninsula.
China's emergence as a world power and the evolution of its relations with
other nations will do much to determine the history of our era. That is why
we must continue to expand our ties, and why we are encouraging China's
active and responsible participation in the international community. Our
two nations share many common interests and have already cooperated on many
issues -- including the Korean Peninsula, international crime, nuclear
testing and the global environment. At the same time, we have had
significant differences on trade, arms transfers and human rights.
We have important interests in Hong Kong, our 13th largest trading partner.
China will soon regain sovereignty over Hong Kong, but Hong Kong will not
cut its ties to our nation and the world. We look to China to live up to
the letter and spirit of its accord with the United Kingdom on the
reversion of Hong Kong. In that agreement, China pledged to maintain Hong
Kong's open economy, democratic government, distinct legal system and civil
liberties. By honoring its pledge, China will not only help assure Hong
Kong's future, it will also enhance the PRO's standing and contribute to
its own growing prosperity. I look forward to discussing this issue during
my upcoming visit to Beijing and other capitals.
While our interests demand that we maintain strong relations with Europe
and Asia, we are first and foremost a nation of the Americas. Never before
has the Western Hemisphere been more free or more prosperous. And never
before have our relationships with our Latin American and Caribbean
neighbors been so strong. When the hemisphere's democratic trend was
threatened in Haiti, it was our decisive action that restored legitimate
government. And when free markets were threatened by the financial crisis
in Mexico, it took our leadership to restore confidence.
Mexico's repayment of our loan three years ahead of schedule has vindicated
President Clinton's bold decision and given confidence in our neighbor's
ability to take tough but necessary actions. We are continuing to encourage
further political and economic reform in Mexico, with which we share a 2,
000-mile border and many common interests -- including the combating of
crime, narcotics, illegal migration and damage to the environment. The
President and I will also continue to press our allies and friends to join
with us in isolating Cuba's dictatorship. In South America, the strength of
our relations with Argentina, Brazil and Chile was demonstrated when our
four nations cooperated to end the border violence between Ecuador and
Peru in early 1995. Across the hemisphere, we must continue to foster
the spirit of cooperation that we forged at the historic Summit of
the Americas in Miami two years ago.
Leadership to Control Deadly Arms
Mr. Chairman, with American leadership, the world has made important
progress in controlling nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction. The
hands of the doomsday clock, once so close to midnight, have retreated. For
the first time since the beginning of the nuclear age, no Russian missiles
are pointed at the United States, and no American missiles are pointed at
Russia. Nuclear weapons have been removed from Belarus, Kazakstan and
Ukraine. Iraq's nuclear capability has been dismantled, and North Korea's
frozen. The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty has been extended indefinitely
and unconditionally, and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty has been
approved.
Despite these advances, the threat is far from over. That is why arms
control and non-proliferation remain a fundamental part of our foreign
policy framework, and why our continued support of ACDA and the IAEA
remains an important part of our budget.
Our most immediate arms control imperative is to ratify the Chemical
Weapons Convention, or CWC, before it enters into force in late April. As
you know, the CWC was negotiated by the Reagan and Bush administrations,
and signed in January 1993 by Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger. It
enjoys wide support among our two parties, military leaders and the
business community. Like any arms control agreement, the CWC is not a
panacea. But it will be a powerful tool in preventing those hostile to our
interests from developing or obtaining chemical weapons. Approval of the
Convention would make all our people safer, while making it less likely
that our armed forces will encounter chemical weapons on the battlefield.
We have several other priorities as well. We will seek the Senate's swift
approval of the CFE Flank Agreement, which will fortify the CFE Treaty and
thereby enhance European security. We will be working with Russia to secure
the Duma's early ratification of the START II Treaty and then begin
negotiations for further reductions in our nuclear arsenals. And we will
continue our pursuit of a global agreement to ban the use, stockpiling,
production and transfer of anti-personnel landmines.
Finally, we are taking important measures in addition to the CWC that are
designed to prevent weapons of mass destruction from being obtained by
those who might be tempted to use them. We are working to improve the
security and prevent the diversion of fissile materials. We have convinced
the other 32 major arms suppliers in the Wassenaar Arrangement not to trade
in arms or sensitive technologies with Iran and other countries who have a
proven disregard for international standards. And we are insisting on the
maintenance of tough sanctions on Iraq unless and until it complies with
relevant Security Council resolutions.
Leadership in Support of Peace
Mr. Chairman, because of America's unique capabilities and unmatched power,
the world often looks to us to help end conflicts and respond to crises.
Yet our primary obligation is to protect our own citizens. We have limited
resources and broad -- but still limited -- interests. To maintain our
credibility and avoid quagmires, we must be careful in our commitments and
selective in our actions.
Nevertheless, we recognize that occasions will arise when our interests and
those of our allies require an active American role. We also understand
that small conflicts may, if left unattended, grow into large ones that
will create dangers for us that could have been avoided. Accordingly,
during the past four years, President Clinton and Secretary Christopher
have been steadfast in supporting peace in those regions of the world where
our interests are engaged. We recognize that while we cannot impose
solutions, we can make it easier for the champions of peace to take the
risks required to achieve it.
In the Middle East, last month's agreement on the redeployment of Israeli
forces in Hebron was an extraordinary success for U.S. diplomacy. The
intensive negotiations helped to create new confidence and trust between
the Israelis and Palestinians. The agreement not only provides a road map
for the future of their relations, it restores momentum to the overall
peace process.
I congratulate Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat for their
courage in personally concluding the accord, and I thank King Hussein for
his important role in helping to bring the long talks to a successful end.
Former Secretary Christopher and special coordinator Dennis Ross and his
team deserve great credit for their tremendous effort not only on the
Hebron agreement but throughout the past four years. You may be assured
that I will maintain fully America's commitment to an active U.S. role in
this region of vital importance to our interests.
To maintain the momentum produced by the Hebron agreement, we have a three-
part agenda. First, we will support continued progress between the Israelis
and Palestinians. Second, we will search for ways to stimulate the
negotiations between Israel and Syria and between Israel and Lebanon. And
third, we will encourage other Arab states to expand their ties with
Israel. To support all these efforts, we must preserve our current levels
of bilateral assistance to Israel, Egypt, Jordan, the West Bank and Gaza,
and Lebanon.
As you know, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat will visit
Washington shortly, and President Mubarak and King Hussein will come next
month. Under President Clinton's leadership, we will persevere in our quest
for a secure, comprehensive, and lasting peace between Israel and her Arab
neighbors. In all our efforts, we will be guided by America's unwavering
commitment to Israel's security and by our equally strong opposition to
those who would use violence and terror to deter the advent of peace.
In Cyprus, the long-standing conflict between the Turkish and Greek
communities remains unresolved. Last year's increased violence on the
island impeded efforts to restart negotiations, but it also dramatized the
urgent need for a lasting solution. The dispute, of course, divides more
than the two Cypriot communities; it continues to act as a wedge between
two NATO allies, Turkey and Greece. In so doing, it threatens European
stability and our vital interests. Accordingly, the United States is
prepared to play a larger role in promoting a resolution to the conflict.
But for such an effort to yield results, the parties must agree to concrete
steps that will reduce tensions, build confidence and make productive
negotiations possible.
In Northern Ireland, we are encouraged that multiparty talks began last
June, but we are disappointed by their lack of progress. Still, we
recognize the historic significance of gathering the representatives of the
nationalist and unionist communities as well as of the British and Irish
governments around one table. Meanwhile, we deplore the IRA's return to
violence, and we support the decision to bar Sinn Fein from the talks until
the IRA restores an unequivocal and lasting cease-fire. I applaud Senator
Mitchell and his Canadian and Finnish colleagues for their determined
leadership of the negotiations. We will certainly work hard for a
breakthrough in the coming months.
In Central Africa, we are cooperating with regional leaders and our allies
to prevent further tragedy in this area already so devastated by genocide,
refugees and war. In Rwanda, most of the refugees have returned home, but
we will continue to do our part in providing emergency assistance until the
remaining refugees have been reintegrated. In Burundi, we are urging the
government and the rebels to declare a cease-fire and begin serious talks
on national reconciliation. And in Zaire, we are deeply concerned by recent
signs that heavy fighting will resume in the eastern part of the country.
We maintain support for a resolution of the conflict based on recognition
of Zaire's territorial integrity and full respect of human rights.
Given Central Africa's continuing crisis, we will give priority to our
proposal for the African Crisis Response Force. The ACRF would give Africa
a standing force for carrying out peacekeeping missions. The international
community would supply the training and equipment, but African nations
would themselves supply the soldiers and the military leaders.
In Africa generally, the prospects for democracy and economic growth are
improving. Many of Africa's new democratic governments are facilitating
growth through policies that allow private enterprise to take hold, while
investing public resources wisely in education, health and measures that
expand opportunities for women. We will work with Africa's democratic
leaders to broaden and deepen these trends. But daunting problems of debt,
conflict, environmental stress and inadequate investment remain. It is in
our interest to help Africa's leaders overcome these problems and to build
a continent that is more prosperous, democratic and stable. We will foster
the integration of Africa into the global economy and help deserving
countries, where we can, through targeted programs of bilateral aid.
In Africa and elsewhere, the United States will continue to promote
sustainable development and to provide humanitarian and refugee assistance
when crises occur. But our limited resources create a powerful incentive
for us to strengthen other mechanisms for responding to emergencies and
conflicts including the peacekeeping, development and humanitarian
activities of the United Nations. The President is requesting $100 million
this year and a $921 million advance appropriation, to be made available
next year, to pay our arrears to the U.N. and other international
organizations. Our goal is to ensure continued American leadership within
these organizations and to work with other member states, in consultation
with Congress, towards further U.N. reform.
Mr. Chairman, this is an area where it is absolutely imperative that we
establish common ground. American leadership at the U.N. matters. For four
years I had the privilege of sitting in the Security Council, behind a sign
that read simply "the United States," defending American interests. During
that time, we maintained sanctions on Libya and Iraq. We argued for a
balanced approach to the Middle East. We condemned the Cuban shootdown of
unarmed aircraft. We authorized peacekeeping missions that have worked well
in Angola, Haiti, Eastern Slavonia, the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia and elsewhere. We established a War Crimes Tribunal and are
engaged in diplomacy to prevent a recurrence of genocide in central
Africa.
In the General Assembly and other U.N. bodies, and in its specialized
agencies, a great deal of the world's business is conducted. Compliance
with nuclear safeguards is verified; efforts to end the exploitation of
children are pursued; refugees are cared for; epidemic disease is
contained; and standards are established that allow American companies to
export billions of dollars in goods. This is but a sample. We have an
enormous stake in this system -- a system that Americans did more than any
other nation to create.
Now, we are at a critical point. We are one billion dollars behind in
paying our assessment, which are required under rules to which our nation
long ago voluntarily agreed. We have a broad agenda for reform that, if
approved, would go far to prepare these organizations for the 21st century.
We have a new Secretary General who has made it clear that he supports
reform, but that he also believes -- as our nation has always believed --
that obligations should be met.
In the days ahead, I want to work with you to find a way to implement the
President's plan. Our continued leadership at the U.N. depends upon it. Our
principles require it. Our budget allows it. And our interests demand
it.
Make no mistake. To those who are jealous or hostile to American leadership,
these arrears are an open invitation to run America down. We need to put
this issue behind us, and move forward with a better set of international
organizations led by a strong and respected United States.
Leadership for a Global Economy
Mr. Chairman, shortly after President Clinton took office in 1993, he
declared that "we must compete, not retreat." Since then, his leadership
has produced spectacular success in creating jobs for Americans at home by
opening markets abroad. We have signed more than 200 trade agreements and
vigorously enforced our trade laws. We have passed NAFTA and concluded the
GATT Uruguay Round. And we have forged the commitment of the Miami summit
to complete negotiations by 2005 for a Free Trade Area of the Americas and
the APEC commitment to achieve free and open trade in the Asia-Pacific by
2020.
These historic measures have contributed to a one-third increase in our
exports since the beginning of 1993 and to the creation of 1.6 million new
jobs. More important, this administration has positioned the United States
to become an even more dynamic hub of the global economy in the 21st
century.
But we cannot rest on past progress. We will be working closely with other
federal agencies and calling on our posts around the world to move forward
on our economic agenda. In our hemisphere, we will seek the early addition
of Chile to NAFTA on equitable terms and the extension to Central America
and the Caribbean of arrangements equivalent to NAFTA. In the Asia-Pacific,
we will ensure that our market agreements with Japan and our intellectual
property rights agreements with China are fully implemented. We will also
pursue wider access to key sectors in China, and work with China as it
makes the changes necessary to gain acceptance to the WTO on
commercially-acceptable terms. And we will encourage U.S. trade and
investment with India as it continues to carry out path-breaking economic
reforms.
In Europe, the New Transatlantic Agenda that we and our EU partners signed
in 1995 provides a blueprint for making our trade even freer and easier. We
will also intensify our efforts with our OECD partners to combat the
corrupt trading practices that cheat American companies and workers -- and
corrode the rule of law around the world. Finally, we will continue to work
with our partners in the Middle East to strengthen the economic dimension
of the peace process.
In today's fiercely competitive world markets, our firms must often compete
with foreign companies that receive active support from their governments.
That is why the State Department must -- and will -- do all it can to
ensure that American firms and workers receive fair treatment. And that is
why I ask you to continue your support for the programs of the Export-
Import Bank, the Overseas Private Investment corporation, and the Trade and
Development Agency.
In addition to creating opportunities for U.S. businesses abroad, we must
also continue to show leadership in the multilateral institutions that help
the global economy to expand. I am confident that our firms can succeed in
a truly fair competition. But our challenge is to keep the system fair.
That takes hard work and vigilance. Within the WTO, we must make sound
rules and ensure strong enforcement -- and we must persevere in our support
for high standards on labor and business practices as well as on the
environment.
We must not forget that developing countries around the world offer the
fastest-growing markets for American companies. We must continue to
encourage these countries to participate fully in the global economy. And
where possible, we should support their reforms through our bilateral
development assistance and through the multilateral development banks. For
every $1 that the United States contributes, the Inter-American Development
Bank lends out $40, the Asian Development Bank $80 and the World Bank
$135.
Mr. Chairman, one of the most important ways we contribute to sustainable
development is through our support for international family planning. By
stabilizing population growth rates, developing nations can devote more of
their scarce resources to meet the basic needs of their citizens. Moreover,
our voluntary family planning programs serve our broader interests by
elevating the status of women, reducing the flow of refugees, protecting
the environment and promoting economic growth. That is why I urge Congress
to adopt a joint resolution by the end of the month to release immediately
USAID's FY'97 population funds. As the President has determined, a further
delay will cause a tragic rise in unintended pregnancies, abortions, and
maternal and child deaths.
Leadership for Freedom and the Rule of Law
The United States was founded on the principles of law, human dignity and
freedom not just for some, but for all people. Mr. Chairman, as a refugee
from tyranny, I cherish these principles. I can assure you that as
Secretary of State I will speak out against the violation of human rights
wherever they may occur. I will also support our promotion of democracy
around the world. Democracy is not only the best guarantee of human rights;
it is the most fundamental source of peace and prosperity as well. That is
why we must continue to support our democracy programs -- which are
strengthening elections, political parties, governmental institutions,
civil society and the rule of law in many developing nations.
The United States will also increase our efforts overseas to defeat the
forces of international crime and narcotics trafficking. With our help,
many drug-producing nations are strengthening their democratic institutions
against the corrupting influence of criminals. We have made important
progress: More kingpins than ever before are behind bars; Peru, the world's
largest producer of coca, has decreased its cultivation to the lowest level
in a decade; and we have negotiated many bilateral treaties of extradition
and mutual legal assistance.
We will also persevere in our efforts to defeat international terrorism.
Our policy is forthright: We make no concessions to terrorists; we exert
pressure on states that sponsor terrorism; and we do all we can to bring
terrorists to justice. Under President Clinton's leadership, we are
mobilizing support around the world in opposition to the forces of terror.
Together with our G-7 partners and Russia, we have agreed to improve our
counter-terrorist cooperation in many areas -- including protecting mass
transit, strengthening law enforcement, tightening border controls,
blocking terrorist fundraising and pursuing an international treaty against
terrorist bombings.
We will maintain our strong backing for the U.N. war crimes tribunal for
Rwanda and the Balkans. After all the horror of this century, history will
not forgive us if we do not strive to hold accountable perpetrators of
ethnic cleansing, mass rape and other atrocities. Our proposed contributions
to the U.N.'s peacekeeping activities include continued support for these
tribunals.
Mr. Chairman, one final note. I would like to make it clear that I will
carry on Secretary Christopher's landmark initiative to integrate
environmental issues into the mainstream of our foreign policy. The threats
of global warming, pollution, deforestation and loss of biodiversity may
not be as dramatic as those posed by nuclear missiles or a terrorist's
bomb. But if we ignore them, we will surely pay the price in terms of poor
health, lost jobs and the deterioration in our quality of life. That is why
we must continue to forge bonds of cooperation in protecting the health and
productivity of our common heritage of air, water and land.
This year will be a critical one for the protection of the international
environment. Our major goal is to conclude by December an agreement on the
next steps to take on global warming. There is a consensus within the
scientific community that the problem is real and serious. Indeed, we must
act soon to prevent the disastrous effects of climate change -- including
rising sea levels, more severe weather and increased spread of infectious
disease. In the coming year, the United States will also launch an
international drive to ban the production of some of the world's most toxic
chemicals. Although already outlawed in our country, these chemicals are
still manufactured overseas -- and when released into the air and water
they can travel thousands of miles to harm us.
Conclusion
Members of the Committee, the success of our new foreign policy will depend
largely on whether we can revive the spirit of bipartisanship that
prevailed after World War Two. A bipartisan foreign policy is important
because it allows us to act with more authority on the world stage, because
it inspires greater cooperation from our allies and greater caution from
our actual and potential adversaries, and because it reinforces our role as
a model for democracies and democrats around the world.
Bipartisanship not only suits our currently divided government; it is
appropriate to our times. The end of the Cold War has already changed the
domestic politics of American foreign policy as much as it has changed
world politics. Now the greatest split in our foreign policy debate is not
between our two parties but between the proponents and opponents of
American engagement. The leadership of both our parties understand the
imperative of continued American leadership.
One of the first tests of our bipartisanship will be whether we can agree
on the FY'98 international affairs budget. Let me reiterate: The enactment
of this budget is essential if we are to maintain American leadership in
the world. We must stem the erosion of our diplomatic resources that has
begun to hamper our foreign policy in recent years. This budget gives us
the opportunity to begin that process. Mr. Chairman and members, let's get
started.
Thank you very much.
(end text)
From the United States Information Agency (USIA) Gopher at gopher://gopher.usia.gov
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