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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #41, 97-03-19

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>


1175

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Wednesday, March 19, 1997

Briefer: Nicholas Burns

DEPARTMENT
1-2,15-19 Secretary Albright's Visit to North Carolina, March 25/Itinerary
          and Press Arrangements/Purpose for Travel
2         Secretary Albright's Address to Georgetown University, March 26
2         Secretary Albright to Address Harvard Commencement, June 5
2-3       Secretary Albright's Activities and Schedule for Today

FORMER YUGOSLAVIA 3 Serbia's Lack of Progress in Implementing Gonzales Recommendations 3-4 Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia - Interethic Tensions

ZAIRE 4-5,6-7 Summit Meeting in Nairobi/Situation on the Ground in Zaire 5-6 EUCOM Contingency Planning Team 6 Voluntary Departure of US Dependents 7-8 Whereabouts of President Mobutu

PERU 8-9 Reported Efforts by Japanese Vice FM to Seek Asylum for MRTA Rebels

ALBANIA 9-10 Situation on the Ground in Tirana/Albania 10-11 U.S. Contacts with Albanian President Berisha

NORTH KOREA 11 Departure of Hwang Jong Yop from Beijing 11-12 Political Stability in North Korea 12 Reported US Agreement to Unfreeze North Korean Assets 12-13 World Food Program Survey on famine Situation/US Assistance

MIDDLE EAST PEACE PROCESS 13-14 Israeli PM Netanyahu re Intelligence Information and Palestinian Authority

IRAQ 14-15 U.S Contacts with Iraqi Opposition


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #41

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1997, 1:20 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. BURNS: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the State Department. I want to tell you a couple of things about the Secretary of State's upcoming schedule.

As you know, the Secretary will be in North Carolina next Tuesday, March 25, at the invitation of Senator Jesse Helms. She's going to be visiting Camp Lejeune in the morning. On Tuesday morning she'll fly down to Camp Lejeune to meet with our troops and meet with our commanders there; and then she'll have a lunch in Charlotte, North Carolina, with community leaders, hosted by the Jesse Helms Center. The Secretary will deliver remarks at that luncheon; and then she'll travel to Wingate, North Carolina, where the Jesse Helms Center is located. And she and Senator Helms will have a joint press conference at the Wingate Center. That will be at approximately 3:45 p.m.

Following that, she will remain in Wingate at the Wingate University and have dinner with the trustees, with the Helms family, and with members of the Center; and that's in Wingate, North Carolina.

Then she departs late that evening from Charlotte for Andrews Air Force Base. It should be a terrific day. Unfortunately, she has a very small aircraft going down, a l2-seater, so we will not be able to take more than one or two members of the press on the aircraft, but we very much want to facilitate press coverage of the event. We wish we had a larger plane. So if you can get yourself down to Charlotte, North Carolina, we will do everything we usually do in a trip. We'll have transportation, and we'll make sure that you can travel from Charlotte to Wingate with her to participate in the joint press conference with Senator Helms.

This should be a rather unique day. I can't recall anything quite like this in the last couple of years. She's doing it, obviously, because, on the one hand, she believes it's very important to travel around the United States and speak to the American people about foreign policy. In this case she's delighted-she was delighted-to accept the offer by Senator Helms, who agreed to accompany her and to have this joint press conference and to have his family members there at the dinner, and she thinks it's a very good display of bipartisanship.

Yes, Betsy.

QUESTION: Is there any coverage of the evening events?

MR. BURNS: Yes. She's going to give an address after dinner. Dinner is at 6:00. At 7:30 she will give a speech at Wingate University, and that's in Wingate, North Carolina - which I understand is, I think - any North Carolinians here? I think it's around 40 minutes by car from Charlotte. And she will address students, community members, and faculty and trustees of Wingate University. This is where the Helms Center is located. That is open press.

So there are a couple of things that you can cover. There is the tour of the Helms Center. There is the joint press conference.

And there's the speech. So three different events to cover in North Carolina. And please direct your questions on this to John Dinger and Nancy Beck and others, and we'll be glad to help you. We do really want to encourage you to travel down to North Carolina if you can make it down there.

The following day, Wednesday, March 26, the Secretary at noon that day will give a major policy speech on U.S. policy toward Iraq. She'll give that speech at Georgetown University. There is a Georgetown symposium on U.S.- Iraqi relations and she'll be there at high noon to give a speech on our views about events in Iraq and our relations with Iraq.

I also want to let you know that the Secretary is going to be making a couple of commencement speeches in late May and early June. The one that I know is ready to announce is that on June 5 the Secretary has been invited to receive an honorary degree and give the speech at the Harvard commencement up in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This comes on the 50th anniversary of Secretary of State George Marshall's commencement speech at Harvard in June l947, the famous Marshall Plan speech, where Secretary Marshall unveiled the American ideas for assistance to the nations that had gone through the Second World War - both victors and vanquished. And the Secretary wants to use the occasion of this year's Harvard commencement to talk about the future of America's relations with Europe, European security issues, NATO enlargement - all of the issues that will be so prominent at the Helsinki Summit tomorrow and Friday.

She will be attending and speaking at other commencements, and once we're ready to announce those I'll be very glad to do so.

One more item about the Secretary's schedule. Today the Secretary, late this afternoon, will travel up to Capitol Hill to discuss with Senate and House members the issue of United States' arrears to the United Nations. Senator Trent Lott, the Majority Leader, has convened a bicameral, bipartisan group of Senators and Representatives, including Senator Daschle, Senator Helms, Senator Biden, Speaker Gingrich and others. And this group is a working group to work with the Administration on our hope that we'll come up with a financial plan to pay off the United States' arrears to the United Nations.

This meeting, of course, follows the very impressive announcement by Secretary General Kofi Annan two days ago about the reforms that he is making. He's going to cut a thousand people from the U.N. payroll, and he's going to be saving over $l00 million a year in doing so. We think that Secretary General Annan's reform program deserves our support. The Secretary spoke with the Secretary General about it and gave him her personal support, and she'll be reaffirming that on Capitol Hill this afternoon.

The Secretary then leaves, I think, around 9:00 this evening with the President for the Helsinki Summit. She'll be returning late on Friday evening. And I'll have any information about any weekend activities for you later in the week.

I have two announcements that we're going to be posting, two statements.

I'd like to go through them because they're both quite important.

The first concerns Serbia. The United States Government is concerned by Serbia's lack of progress in implementing the recommendations made by the former Spanish Prime Minister, Felipe Gonzalez, to the OSCE Chairman after the Gonzalez mission to Belgrade in late December. These recommendations have been repeatedly endorsed by the international community, and their full implementation is essential to the process of democratic reform in Serbia.

While we welcome the reinstatement of the results of the November l7th municipal elections, other important recommendations of the Gonzalez mission have not been implemented. In the area of media freedoms, for instance, the Serbian Government has taken a series of steps in precisely the wrong direction.

We note specifically, with concern, recent moves by the Serbian Government to restrict independent television transmission and to enforce the continued closure of the radio station BOOM-93 in Pozarevac. Both actions appear to be politically motivated efforts to restrict independent news sources. The proposed media law also appears to be aimed at restricting, rather than expanding, the free flow of information. Instead of passing a new restrictive media law, the Serbian Government should encourage independent private media and ensure independent, non-partisan management of the state-owned media.

The United States calls on the Serbian Government to initiate a constructive dialogue with the opposition on democratization measures that need to be taken in Serbia, including this issue of the independence of the press, the freedom of the press, and electoral reforms. The willingness of the Serbian Government to address genuinely these concerns and to lay the basis for free and fair elections later this year will determine the reaction and policy of the United States and other members of the international community concerning the Serb Government.

And, lastly, I wanted to note our Ambassador in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia - Ambassador Chris Hill - has asked me to read to you a statement that we have worked out with him concerning a very important initiative taken today by the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.

The United States strongly supports the territorial integrity and peaceful democratic development of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, which is an essential element of stability in the region. We have demonstrated that commitment with the presence of over 500 American troops and with considerable United States financial assistance. We welcome the declaration by the Parliament on promoting interethnic trust and respect. We are especially encouraged by the broad support this resolution has received among the different political parties.

The United States supports the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in providing all its citizens with equal human and civil rights and guaranteeing protection of cultural diversity. We believe that substantial progress has been achieved.

We do not support efforts to establish parallel structures, nor do we support any effort to establish ethnically based federalism in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The United States urges all citizens and political parties to work within existing legal and political structures, to address their concerns through peaceful, democratic means.

We condemn acts of intimidation directed against ethnic nationalities.

These have no place in a civil society.

Ambassador Hill, you remember, was a member of the Bosnia Peace Negotiating Team. He's an outstanding Ambassador. He's been working to promote the kind of interethnic civil actions and interethnic relations that we think are important for the future of the Balkans.

And, in addition to that, he is distinguished by the fact that he's probably the leading Boston Red Sox fan in the Balkans. He listens by shortwave to Red Sox games from Florida, from spring training. It's part of the picture. I thought I should mention that, George.

I'll be glad to go to your questions.

QUESTION: That's my lead.

MR. BURNS: Good. He'd appreciate that. He's a huge Red Sox fan.

QUESTION: Do you have anything on the summit in Nairobi, on the Zaire situation?

MR. BURNS: I know that the summit called by President Daniel arap Moi of Kenya has concluded; that President Moi, Prime Minister Mugabe, Pascal Lissouba of the Congo, the South African Deputy President Mbeki, the representative from Cameroon - they all got together and they called today for a cease-fire in Zaire.

Our Assistant Secretary, George Moose, and our Special Negotiator, Howard Wolpe, were in Nairobi. They had conversations with these leaders, including with Prime Minister Kengo. The United States would like to support the call by the African leadership for a true cease-fire in Zaire. The fighting has gone on too long.

As for events on the ground in Zaire, as you know, yesterday, on March 18, the Zairian Transitional Parliament took an action towards the Prime Minister, to unseat the Prime Minister. This action, we believe, by the Transitional Parliament presents complicated constitutional issues. It's unclear to the United States that the vote yesterday satisfied all the constitutional requirements to enter into force.

This is a Zairian domestic political issue. It's got to be sorted out by Zairians. But until it sorts itself out, the United States will continue to recognize Prime Minister Kengo as the Prime Minister of Zaire, and we will continue to work with him and his government.

In addition to that, I can tell you that we're going to continue our efforts - our political efforts - to try to reinforce the call for a cease- fire, and we're continuing our efforts to try to help the United Nations provide relief supplies to the refugee population.

I know that you're aware that the Pentagon announced yesterday that it has sent a EUCOM Team, a contingency planning team, into Libreville in Gabon, and to Congo, Brazzaville, as well Kinshasa, to prepare contingencies for any possible evacuation of American citizens and American employees.

As you know, until now, we have seen no reason, until today, to take such an action. I believe we have a voluntary departure for our dependents, but that's as much as we've done. Of course, that situation is always under review. We've had it under review this morning. And if it should change, I will certainly let you know.

QUESTION: That announcement was made yesterday about the time you were saying there was no evacuation contemplated; that things were fine. It appears to be another case where the State Department and the Pentagon are not reading off the same script.

You're now saying that things may have changed this morning.

What's changed? What's different from yesterday, and what's with the Pentagon and the State Department?

MR. BURNS: Sid, I'd like to just take this opportunity to assure you that we have a seamless operation between the State Department and the Pentagon. I talk to Ken Bacon every day before we come out. Actually, I was aware yesterday that the EUCOM mission had just begun its departure - its preparations to depart from Europe - for central Africa. If I had been asked about that in the Press Briefing, I would have told you that. I was prepared to talk about it. It is still true today, right now, at 1:34 in the afternoon, that we have made no decision to evacuate - to order the evacuation of dependents or non-essential personnel.

We have simply provided dependents of our employees in Kinshasa with the ability to leave should they wish to leave via commercial means.

Obviously, we're going to keep the situation in Zaire under constant review, because there's a war underway in eastern Zaire. Mr. Kabila has threaten to attack Lubumbashi as well as Kinshasa.

If that happens, I'm sure you'll see the United States and other governments take precautionary measures to protect our civilians, the roughly 2,000 Americans who live in Zaire, but we've not yet made that decision.

Understanding that we're in a very fluid, dynamic situation, we felt it was best, working with the Pentagon, to have this EUCOM Team travel to central Africa to make the contingency plans necessary to pull people out if we have to, but that decision has not been taken by the United States Government. I've just reviewed it with my good friend, Ken Bacon, as part of our seamless attempt to make sure that you have the fullest and freest and most up-to-date information from the United States Government on this issue.

QUESTION: Do you know if any of the non-essential Embassy employees and/or their families have left?

MR. BURNS: I know that as of Monday no one had left. But in the last 48 hours, John (Dinger), we'll just have to check.

I don't think we've seen a lot of people elect to go. The situation in Kinshasa is pretty calm, as you know. The journalists who are there have been reporting that as well. But in a situation like this, you never know. Things could change very rapidly.

That's the reason why we felt it necessary to make these contingency plans.

QUESTION: The Pentagon is saying, at best, that it will take them 12 to 13 days to get a ship in position to do that.

Does that give you all enough time?

MR. BURNS: Well, I can't comment on contingency planning.

For obvious reasons we don't always make public all of our contingency planning because you do want to have a degree of security for your operation. For instance, when we began to pull our people out of Albania last week, we did not tell you - the Pentagon didn't tell you nor did we - that the helicopters had left the Adriatic, the Nassau, for Tirana until the helicopters had landed and returned back because we wanted to avoid any kind of security problem. In fact, we had some security problems last week in Albania.

So I don't want to accept the premise of the question. All I can tell you is that the United States military, I think, has shown time and again - and most recently last week - it is one of the best in the world. It takes care of American citizens when they find themselves in danger.

QUESTION: Nick, were the rebels represented at this Nairobi summit?

MR. BURNS: I don't believe the rebels were represented.

I think it was a meeting of central African, southern African, and east African countries - interested countries. The United States was represented. I think a variety of European countries were as well.

QUESTION: Do you or the Europeans have any direct contact with Kabila?

MR. BURNS: We have had contact, yes, with him - Mr. Kabila.

As you remember, he went down to South Africa and met with President Mandela and others. We had contact with him when he was there.

We'll continue to try to have contact with him. He's kind of an elusive guy. He's moving around. He's an important figure.

He commands a great swath of territory in eastern Zaire. He is leading a rebel movement that threatens to destabilize the entire country-there's no question about that-so we'll seek to have communications with him when we can.

We don't agree with what he's doing. We don't agree with the attempt to overthrow a government through violent means; to put a whole region of Zaire into chaos, which is what he's done, and to endanger the lives of innocent refugees which is what he's also done. That is why we're asking Mr. Lawrence Kabila to agree to the cease-fire.

QUESTION: Were any of his putative suppliers of arms represented in Nairobi?

MR. BURNS: I'm not aware that any of the putative suppliers of arms - and they know who they are and you know who they are and we know who they are - were represented in Nairobi, but we can check that for you. I'm sure our Africa Bureau can check that for you.

QUESTION: About the action on the Prime Minister that you all find not necessarily meeting the standard of the Zairian constitution -

MR. BURNS: I would just suffice it to say that I think our Embassy and our Africa experts here who, of course, have read the Zairian constitution, think at least some fairly complicated issues were put into play by the vote in the Transitional Parliamentary Assembly yesterday. I don't think it's appropriate for me to try to be a legal constitutional scholar here and articulate those for you, but they're present. It's just unclear that the Parliament had the right to do what it did. But that really is for Zairians to figure out. Until they figure it out, it seems to us to be the best way forward to continue to recognize the Kengo government and to work with it.

Betsy.

QUESTION: Given the fact that the Zairian Government is in such disarray, what value was there to this meeting? The government representative really had no power. You have no idea whether he speaks with the authority of the government or not.

MR. BURNS: I think it's true that Prime Minister Kengo does retain a significant degree of power, both over civil agencies and also the military in Zaire, although it is a very complicated and complex scene. We recognize him to be a legal authority of the Government of Zaire, so therefore it was very much appropriate for him to attend.

I would just note that the other African countries essentially made the same decision-to meet with him and deal with him as a legitimate representative of the Government of Zaire. So it's not just the United States that is making this calculation.

Patrick.

QUESTION: President Mobutu's people are apparently saying he's going to go back to Zaire this week. Is that a welcome development from your point of view?

MR. BURNS: We've seen the press reports. We've seen a lot of press reports out of Nice about the intentions of President Mobutu. That's a decision he will have to make. We understand that he is not in good health. He'll have to make that decision on his own. I'm not sure the United States Government has a position either way on that.

Our position is that we'd like to see a cease-fire. We'd like to see humanitarian assistance to the refugees, and we'd like to see the Zairian Government and political structure agree to a reform process that would, at some point, lead to elections.

We think that Mr. Mobutu ought to be committed to that, as well as the other leaders in Zaire.

Still on Zaire? No.

QUESTION: Nick, the Japanese Foreign Minister, Minister Komura is going to Cuba today to work on an asylum deal for the Tupac Amaru rebels.

MR. BURNS: The Japanese Foreign Minister.

QUESTION: Vice Foreign Minister.

MR. BURNS: Vice Foreign Minister. Thank you.

QUESTION: Mr. Komura. There's also speculation that there may be money involved in this deal to entice Cuba to speed up negotiations and to work with the negotiations. How does the U.S. - what are the U.S. concerns with this, that Japan is involving Cuba in dealing with these hostage negotiations?

And, also, how does the U.S. view the aspect that there might be a financial settlement involved between Japan and Cuba on this?

MR. BURNS: First, I don't think it's appropriate for me to say much about the mission of the Japanese Vice Minister without having had the benefit of discussion with the Japanese Government first. So I'd rather put off this question perhaps until later today or tomorrow until we have the benefit of talking to the Japanese who are, of course, a very, very strong ally of the United States.

Second, I cannot agree with the presumption that somehow money is going to be involved. I do not know that for a fact.

Third, I would simply note that the Japanese Government did not bring the Cubans into this. President Fujimori and Castro got together a couple of weeks back and began talking about a possible role for Cuba in the peaceful resolution of the hostage crisis in Lima.

The Japanese obviously have an interest. It's their sovereign territory. It's their ambassador, and a great number of Japanese who are being held. We are satisfied that President Fujimori and Prime Minister Hashimoto and the others involved are doing everything they can to have this end peacefully, without violence, without in any way allowing the hostage- takers to win. No one wants the hostage-takers to win because they're terrorists.

So I'm not in a position here to second guess the Japanese Government without knowing the full facts about this current trip.

QUESTION: Was this discussed with President Fujimori, this issue of bringing Cuba in too?

MR. BURNS: I know that we've been informed by the Peruvian Government after President Fujimori's trip to Havana, about the reasons why it was undertaken.

Yes, we are updated by the Peruvian Government, I think, fairly continually on this crisis. It has been - what - three months now, that these people have been held hostage. That's inhumane, and it's wrong, and the hostage- takers ought to release these people immediately and safely, and that remains the bottom line of the United States position.

QUESTION: Has the United States been supportive of Fujimori's efforts to involve Cuba?

MR. BURNS: President Fujimori, of course, is in a very difficult situation. He needs to make the decisions that he feels best to resolve this peacefully and without harm to the hostages and without letting the terrorists win. I think that all of us are quite satisfied with his performance and with his actions over the last several months. He had a good meeting with President Clinton when he was here in Washington, and we've had good contacts with him since.

QUESTION: On Albania. Do you have any clear picture of what is going on, on the ground?

MR. BURNS: We, of course, are in contact with our Embassy.

We still have a Task Force underway up in the 7th Floor. That Task Force is in constant communication with Tirana, with the American Embassy. Ambassador Marisa Lino continues to be in contact with Prime Minister Fino as well as leaders of other political parties.

I can tell you that there have been some random gunfire in the vicinity of the United States Embassy in Tirana, but in a relative sense the situation remains calm, while the conditions in the rest of the country, particularly in the south, appear to be somewhat unstable. The evacuation has really come to a halt over the last two days. I don't believe we've taken out any American citizens over the last two days, although helicopters keep coming in to supply our Marine contingent there - the new Marine contingent there. Should any Americans wish to leave, our Embassy will make provisions for them to leave on one of the outgoing helicopters.

As for the political situation, we know that there have been upwards of 12- 15,000 refugees who have left Albania. The country that seems to be most affected is Italy. Italy has declared a state of emergency in Italy, because this is an enormous burden for a country like Italy to assume. We think the Italian Government, which has not requested any direct assistance from

us, has made extraordinary efforts to be humane, to be accepting, and to deal with a very difficult problem.

I understand that the European Union team that was in Tirana is now in Rome. They're working on their report, and we are awaiting a briefing by the European Union on its own assessment. Our bottom line view is that it's essential that all parties commit themselves to a peaceful resolution. While it is clear that President Berisha is the focal point of the anger of a lot of people, we think the key to recovery is for the government now - the new government - to try to exert greater authority throughout the country, to include a variety of political parties and leaders of the insurgency in political discussions and to move forward towards the elections that this new government promised when it took office about a week ago, or slightly more than a week ago. That remains our position.

QUESTION: On North Korea, yesterday you welcomed -

MR. BURNS: I think Charlie wants to stay on Albania, and I'll be glad to go back to you.

QUESTION: Is Ambassador Lino or is any other person from the U.S. not trying on purpose to contact President Berisha, or is contact impossible? Are we choosing to avoid contact? I don't get it.

MR. BURNS: I don't know the answer to that question. I think he is fairly isolated. That's what one hears. I think the Ambassador is in touch with the Prime Minister and other senior officials. Whether or not President Berisha has tried to get in contact with us, I do not know. I know that the Ambassador has not seen President Berisha for at least more than a week. I can check exactly on where that stands.

QUESTION: Could you check and see whether -

MR. BURNS: Be glad to do that.

QUESTION: -- he is trying to make and just can't because -

MR. BURNS: Be glad to do that. You're still on Albania?

QUESTION: Are you aware of any efforts, any negotiations going on, to get him out of the country - Berisha?

MR. BURNS: I am not aware personally of any negotiations to that effect. This is a decision - whether he stays, whether he goes, what he does is really a decision he needs to make with other politicians - other members of the government in Tirana.

Yes, back to North Korea.

QUESTION: Albania, one more.

MR. BURNS: One more on Albania.

QUESTION: You said President Berisha is isolated. Is he geographically isolated or -

MR. BURNS: Politically. I felt maybe isolated just in terms of who he was seeing. I wasn't trying to make any political statement by saying that.

QUESTION: Thank you. This is Chung-soo Lee of Korean Broadcasting system. Yesterday you work on the patient process of North Korean secretary Hwang Jang-Yop, and when Mr. Hwang Jang-Yop eventually succeeds in the defection to South Korea for political asylum, what do you expect him to do with South Korea?

MR. BURNS: That will be up to Mr. Hwang and the Government of the Republic of Korea. That will be entirely up to them. Obviously, he defected because he wanted to go to the Republic of Korea. He is currently in the Philippines; and, if he does make his way to the Republic of Korea, to Seoul, in the future, it will certainly be up to him and of the Government of the Republic of Korea to decide what his role is or if he is public about his views or not.

Of course, we have a great interest in this case, as you would expect, and we're very pleased that it was resolved peacefully by the Government of China - the People's Republic of China - and by the Government of Korea, with the assistance of the Government of the Philippines.

QUESTION: Is there any suspicion on the part of the State Department that there is this purge of top military leaders in North Korea that were sorted of hinted at?

MR. BURNS: It's very difficult for us to come to a definite conclusion about what's going on in North Korea. We have seen now, I think, the departure of two Defense Ministers in the last - a Prime Minister and two Defense Ministers or senior Defense people in the last month. Whether there's a pattern here to be established on an analytical basis or whether these are simply coincidental events, I think you might get a variety of viewpoints from experts on North Korea to answer that question.

We will simply have to try to wait and see what it all means -- perhaps this July when the three-year mourning period ends - to see if the Government of North Korea reveals more about its own internal composition and its own policies. In the meantime, we have to make sure that we are ready to defend South Korea, which we are, with our joint military force in the Republic of Korea along the DMZ. We have to make sure that we continue to see the application of the Agreed Framework and the nuclear freeze, and that is happening, and we are attentive to the Four-Party Talks.

We're waiting for a response from the North Koreans to that, and we're obviously interested in the food situation there, which is quite critical.

So those are the interests that we have. As for analyzing what's happening in North Korea, you can probably get that from Think Tanks around town, but we're a little bit reluctant to do that on the record, on camera, because there's so many different explanations of what might be happening.

QUESTION: There are reports out of North Korea that the United States has agreed to unfreeze North Korean assets in the United States as part of its offer on the Four-Party Talks. Any comments on that?

MR. BURNS: No, I simply can't comment on that. I simply can't comment on that at all. I'm sure the assets are still frozen, as we speak, and we have not yet received a response from the Government of North Korea about our proposal for the initiation of Four-Party Talks. Until we do, I don't think you're likely to see any kind of proactive measures on the part of the United States of the type you're citing.

QUESTION: Would you go into a little bit of detail on what the offer was that the United States made? I mean, it was more than just an invitation to come to the talks. You probably didn't offer -

MR. BURNS: We have really enveloped those talks in a veil of secrecy and confidentiality, as you would agree we should, in a situation like this. I mean, I'm sure you wouldn't want to write about most of this stuff, because we think our ability to be effective is going to be enhanced by maintaining the confidentiality of the talks. But we have an open offer on the table to begin the Four-Party Talks, and we hope that offer is accepted by Pyongyang.

QUESTION: The Middle East?

QUESTION: Wait, one more on Korea, please. The World Food Program sent a team to North Korea recently to survey the famine situation, and they came back with some really horrific stories of malnutrition. Do you know of any plans for them to up their requests, their dollar and I guess tonnage in food requests?

Is the United States being asked to give more?

MR. BURNS: As you know, we've just responded to a slightly earlier request just in the last month. We will be giving food aid to North Korea. That was announced by Secretary Albright during her European trip and her Asia trip. If the World Food Program comes forward with a new appeal, we will, of course, give it very serious attention, because we have great respect for that organization. Since 1995, the United States has given a total of $18.4 million in food assistance, cash and in-kind donations of food assistance to the U.N. appeals. We've been a major contributor, and we will continue to work very closely. Our latest contribution is $10 million to the latest U.N. World Food Program appeal.

QUESTION: Do you have any idea when that $10 million in food might leave this country?

MR. BURNS: When it will be disbursed?

QUESTION: Yes.

MR. BURNS: I can look into that and get you an answer.

I don't think the food has left the United States, but I can get you a specific answer on that, Betsy. Be glad to do it.

Sid.

QUESTION: The Middle East. Yesterday, the - we went through it a little bit yesterday, and the Prime Minister said he had received specific intelligence - specific information that Yasser Arafat had given extremist groups the green light for attacks, and you refuted that, saying you'd received assurances. My question is, did Israel share that intelligence with the United States, and, if so, on what basis do you reject it? And, if not, on what basis - how can you draw a conclusion without having seen it?

MR. BURNS: Sid, you give me one problem here in that you've mentioned the "I" word, and the "I" word is a very difficult word for me - the word intelligence. We don't discuss intelligence matters in public. We don't discuss different assessments or identical assessments, whatever they are. We don't discuss our respective intelligence assessments of any given situation.

I can tell you this. We have repeatedly and at the highest level made it abundantly clear to the Palestinians that they must do everything they can to contain and prevent the outbreak of violence in Jerusalem, in the West Bank, in the Gaza Strip and in Israel.

Secretary Albright mentioned that publicly yesterday. I have mentioned it publicly at every opportunity over the past week, because we're very sensitive to that. We have seen from Chairman Arafat over the last 24 hours a public commitment that he is disavowing terrorism, that he continues to, and that he calls on his followers to disavow terrorism. We also have private assurances from Chairman Arafat that he will not take any action that would lead to the outbreak of violence. That's a very important commitment.

Our call over the last week or so has been to the extremists - our warning has been to the extremists on the Palestinian side and on the Israeli side - those who in the past have undertaken violent acts. We have urged them and warned them not to engage in violence. We've said that violence is not the way forward, and, of course, we repeated that call yesterday - I did - and Secretary Albright, more importantly, did that, and I do it again today.

QUESTION: The hardest question is for disagreement, I guess apparently based on assessments as to what is actually going on behind the scenes in Mr. Arafat's camp. You appear to be accepting what he's saying publicly while Israel is showing a far different inclination - painting a far different picture. Are you basing your information - are you basing what you just said on real information, or are you basing it on what the Chairman is saying in public?

MR. BURNS: There's the "I" word again - information - which is really a veil for intelligence information, and I can't talk about that. I can tell you this: There must be an agreement among the Palestinians and Israelis that violence is not the answer, and the United States calls, of course, on the Palestinians as well as the Israelis to make that clear. I think that obviously you've seen from all sides, both sides, over the last day a renunciation of terror and of violence. It's been public on the part of Chairman Arafat, and it's been private, and I think I have to leave it there, Sid.

QUESTION: By saying what you have just said and by saying, as you said yesterday, that you have no evidence and in any case you don't believe it's true, do you suggest that the Prime Minister, Mr. Netanyahu, accusations are quite baseless?

MR. BURNS: What I've said today is what I wanted to say.

I intended to say what I said today, and I said what I intended to say, and I wouldn't advise you to infer anything else from what I've said but what I've said, and I'd be glad to review it with you again. But it doesn't serve a useful purpose to try to draw differences between people. What does serve a useful purpose is to say that we've seen the Chairman of the Palestinian Authority reject violence in his public statements, and he is now committed to do that, and we expect that he will meet that commitment.

Yes, Gene.

QUESTION: On the Middle East, a little different. Gulf security. I notice that the Russian submarines are being considered by the GCC to meet the requirements as against the Russian submarines that cross on the other side, and that the Chinese are also talking with the GCC. This sudden escalation of the competition for arms in the Gulf - what is the Department's view on that, and what are you doing about it?

MR. BURNS: Gene, I'm just not aware of the particulars of what you're reciting here.

QUESTION: (Inaudible)

MR. BURNS: Excuse me?

QUESTION: I say always ahead of you. I'm sorry.

MR. BURNS: We try to be ahead. Sometimes we are; sometimes we're not, but I'm just not aware of this commercial competition that you're discussing. I'll have to look into it for you.

Savas.

QUESTION: Nick, lately several U.S. officials contact with Iraqi National Congress, which is the opposition of Saddam Hussein, they based in (inaudible) right now, and are you trying to activate the Iraqi opposition against Saddam again?

MR. BURNS: We are in contact with a variety of Iraqi groups that are opposed to Saddam Hussein, as well we should be, since they want a different kind of future for the Iraqi people than does Saddam Hussein. Sometimes we talk to them in Northern Iraq, and sometimes we talk to people outside the region. I don't want to give you all the particulars, but we're certainly supportive of a variety of groups that we think have a better stand for a better future for the people of Iraq. You'll hear Secretary Albright next Wednesday give a major speech on Iraq, and she's going to tell it like it is, the way she usually does.

Sid.

QUESTION: Speaking of Secretary Albright in her travels, I'm just wondering, this trip to North Carolina seems a bit like kowtowing to me.

MR. BURNS: My goodness, Sid, that's a very strong word to use. I don't know who's doing the kowtowing, but I can assure you there's no kowtowing being done.

QUESTION: Well, who's got all the -

MR. BURNS: I don't think either individual has ever in their careers specialized in that practice.

QUESTION: Well, who's got all the business being held up by Senator Helms up on the Hill, and why, with all these great institutions like Harvard, where he said she's going, why does she choose to go to the little known institute in North Carolina -

MR. BURNS: Sid, are you casting aspersions on Wingate University, which is a fine educational institution in Wingate, North Carolina? It's the seat of the Jesse Helms Center. I wouldn't do that. I think you're treading on very thin ice in saying that.

My sister lives in North Carolina and my brother-in-law and their four sons, and they're proud to be North Carolinians.

I think they'd be - as well as Senator Helms - would be shocked by any kind of negative inferences from establishment types up in Washington about Wingate, North Carolina. It's the heart of America.

QUESTION: I hardly think of myself -

MR. BURNS: Do you still have a question?

QUESTION: -- as an "establishment" type. No.

I'm telling it like it is, Nick. It's a legitimate question.

"Tell it like it is," as you all like to say. Why is she making this trip besides -

MR. BURNS: I'm going to ask Mark Thiessen to give you a call. My good friend and colleague, Mark Thiessen. I'm sure he's outraged, too.

QUESTION: (Inaudible)

MR. BURNS: Sid, remember this. The President is the President.

The Senate and House are controlled by Republicans. Therefore, for us to do business as a country on foreign policy, this Administration has to be cooperative with the Republican majority in the Congress - with Senator Lott, and with Senator Helms, with Speaker Gingrich, and with a variety of Congressmen and Congresswomen, as well as with Democrats.

The Secretary's first trip outside of Washington, D.C., as Secretary of State, was to Houston, Texas, where she met with former President George Bush and former Secretary of State James Baker - two Republicans.

This trip is to North Carolina with the Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. The Secretary believes that we ought to try to build a bipartisan consensus in the United States for our foreign policy overseas. It makes perfect sense, and it is a good use of her time, to spend a day with the Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He's a very powerful man.

A lot of what we need to do will go through his committee.

She had a conversation with him today where she previewed for him the Helsinki Summit. She called him this morning and told him what we expected to do and say, and what we hoped the results would be.

She talked about some of the specific issues with him, and she'll continue to do that. It makes perfect sense to do this.

We thought we were being open to the press corps when Mark Thiessen and I arranged this joint press conference. That's what Senator Helms and Secretary Albright wanted us to do. You'll have a chance to talk to both of them.

Sometimes, you can't just go to Cambridge, Massachusetts, New York, and Los Angeles. You've got to go to Wingate, North Carolina.

You've got to Alabama where the Secretary hopes to travel in a couple of months. You've got to go to the mid-West and the Rocky Mountain States because that's where the American people are. They're not just living up in the Athens of America up there in Boston, Massachusetts. (Laughter) It's my hometown, the hub of the universe. They're also living in small towns. This is where the Jesse Helms Center is.

She felt that by honoring Senator Helms, by going there, by spending a day with him, she would send a clear and unmistakable signal that she wants to do business with the Republican majority in the Congress; that that is what the President wants her to do, and she's going to do that.

QUESTION: These problems with Senator Helms - you can use whatever words like; "problem" is my word - didn't just dawn today. They've been going on - they've gone on in the first term. Was Secretary Christopher ever invited to go to the Wingate Center? If you don't know, would you take the question?

And if he was, why did he choose not to?

MR. BURNS: All I can say is, in the first two years of Secretary Christopher's tenure, there was a very different situation in the Congress of the United States. That changed in 1994. Secretary Christopher actually had a very good relationship with Senator Helms. I think both men would tell you that. They spoke often.

Secretary Christopher testified often before the Foreign Relations Committee. There was mutual respect there. I don't know if Secretary Christopher ever received an invitation to the Helms Center, but he certainly had an amicable relationship.

QUESTION: Could you take that question?

MR. BURNS: Gosh, I don't know how we would answer that.

You might go to Mark Thiessen to ask that. I don't know what the answer to that question would prove. I think that Secretary Albright is continuing a tradition that Secretary Christopher established of reaching out to key Republican members of Congress.

Because in our system - we're fortunate in our system. We're not polarized ideologically the way many countries are. We can work together and have to work together.

Another thing. Secretary Albright believes that we ought to encourage members of Congress to travel abroad. There's a tradition in Washington of people calling Al Kamen from the bowels of this Department, trying to embarrass members of Congress who travel on CODELs, insinuating that they're somehow wasting the taxpayer's money. Secretary Albright does not believe that.

When she meets with members of Congress - Republicans and Democrats - she encourages them to travel overseas. Because how else are we going to established a broadly-based bipartisan consensus about our strategic interests.

About our policy towards China, for instance, Ambassador Sasser believes that he saw about one quarter of the Senate of the United States in Beijing in January. They visited. It's a very good thing. So we're encouraging Congressional travel overseas. We're encouraging Congressional participation in policy discussions with us. The Secretary is going to be on the Hill meeting with Senator Lott and others this afternoon. This is a big part of her job.

In fact, one of the reasons why she has decided to defer some foreign travel in the first few months of her tenure is because she wants to spend a lot of time on Capitol Hill. I know I'm protesting a lot here, in answer to the question. But I wanted to extend it a little and give you a sense of how she views here relationship with the Congress.

QUESTION: Methinks she doth protest too much.

MR. BURNS: I'm just trying to defend her from, I think, an unwarranted charge here. I think this is a very positive, very important trip to North Carolina. I hope you're there. I hope you're in Wingate, North Carolina, next Tuesday afternoon.

We'll let you ask the first question. Not even Barry or George.

Sid.

QUESTION: If you could answer the answer on Secretary Christopher, what it would show, since you raised the question is, that Secretary Albright has chosen to take a far different approach to Congress than her predecessor. If you're going to take that question, the second question you could take is, how much the American taxpayer is going to pay for Secretary Albright to go down and hang out with Senator Helms and his family.

MR. BURNS: Well, let me just take that second question.

This is a very serious charge to make.

I think one of the problems that we've had in the United States - I know Secretary Albright does - is that we haven't had enough people from Washington, D.C., to get up out of their chairs and fly outside the borders of the Beltway here and actually talk to people who don't read _The Washington Post_ every day but who may read small-town newspapers -the American people who live outside of Washington, D.C., by and large - and its incumbent on all of us who work for them, and they pay our salaries here, to report to them from time to time on what we're doing with their tax money and what we're doing to support them and defend them overseas.

She believes very strongly that it's appropriate for her to get into a U.S. Government jet and to take that jet with some staff members and reporters and to travel to Wingate, North Carolina, or Charlotte, North Carolina, or Houston, Texas, or Cambridge, Massachusetts, or south Alabama, and to meet with American citizens who don't get a chance to talk with the Secretary of State the way you do on a variety of occasions on a weekly basis.

I think that's an absolute good use of the taxpayer's money. I'm a taxpayer, and I hereby volunteer some of my tax money to pay for those trips (laughter); and I think it's a good use of the taxpayer's money.

And you know what? We have a web site, and we have an E-mail address for the Secretary. Anybody listening to this or reading your column or George's column or watching this on C-Span ought to E-mail us at www.state.gov., and you tell us as average Americans:

Do you want us to sit here in our prison inside the Beltway and not talk to the American public, or do you want us to get out and talk to the American public in Wingate, North Carolina? And I think that 98 percent of the people who send those E-mails in - and I'll have my kid sending them in tonight (laughter) - I think the great majority of the people who responded are going to say, "Of course, the Secretary of State, in addition to visiting Beijing and Helsinki, ought to be in Wingate, North Carolina."

Of course, she should because we derive our strength from the American people and our support from the American people.

QUESTION: Let's say you're in, you know (inaudible)

MR. BURNS: Let's keep this going. This is a fun discussion.

I like this!

QUESTION: So the virtual audience can make an informed decision before they send in their still positive E-mail, why don't you tell them how much it's going to cost and then let them decide whether they think it's worth it?

MR. BURNS: Well, listen, Sid. We're been very open. I mean the American public - if they want, they can know how much I make and how much she makes and how much it costs to travel to any country, and we're quite willing to release that information any time. But, you know, you can't run a foreign policy if you're the greatest power in the world on nothing. You've got to have tax dollars to support it. And do you know much we pay as taxpayers for our foreign policy every year? We pay one percent of the Federal budget - one percent. And when the Americana public is polled by the Chicago Council, by the University of Maryland, by objective independent groups, the American public usually says, "We think we pay about l0 to l5 to 20 percent of our budget every year for foreign affairs." It's one percent. And for that they get protection from nuclear threats, from drugs, from terrorism, from environmental problems, the conduct of our relations with other powers around the world - great powers. They get the defense of the United States by diplomatic means.

I think that's a lot that the American people get - you and me as taxpayers - for what our foreign policy does for the American people, and it's absolutely legitimate for Secretary Albright or Secretary Christopher or Baker or Dean Rusk or Cordell Hull to get into an airplane and to travel to a foreign country - or, as Dean Acheson did, when he went down before Secretary Marshall and spoke in Mississippi in l947 - Secretary Marshall flew up to Boston in l947, fifty years ago, in a Government aircraft.

How much did it cost? It certainly was worth it, because he announced the Marshall Plan which revived Western Europe.

So I absolutely defend her right to get into a Government airplane, to go out and talk to the American people. It's high time we had a Secretary of State who took this responsibility as seriously as she and Secretary Christopher have.

QUESTION: You're not comparing the announcement of the Marshall Plan to, say, the Secretary's speech in Wingate University?

(Laughter)

MR. BURNS: Well, Sid, you never know! (Laughter) She tells it like it is. And you know, she said something very important in every speech she's given. The Rice speech was terribly important.

George, you're having too much fun. You want to go? (Laughter)

QUESTION: I'm worrying about the court reporters. (Laughter)

(The briefing was adjourned at 2: l2 p.m.)

(###)


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