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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #61, 97-04-24

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>


1194

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Thursday, April 24, 1997

Briefer: Nicholas Burns

ANNOUNCEMENTS
1,9        Welcome to Visitors and Sons and Daughters of State
             Dept. Employees
2-3,8      Secretary Albright's Meeting with Vice Premier/FM Qian Qichen
3,4,6,20   --Upcoming Travel to Russia and Latin America
3          --Activities in Support of Chemical Weapons Convention Vote
3-4        --Comments on Reorganization of the State Department
4          --Meeting with the Dalai Lama this Afternoon
4          --Meeting with Susanna Agnelli, Election Fundraiser for the OSCE
             in Bosnia, and Announcement of Financial Support
4          Statement on Behalf of Co-Chairman of the Monitoring Group

NATO ENLARGEMENT 4-7 Status of NATO-Russia Agreement 7,9-10 Status of Romania and Other Possible New NATO Member Countries 9-10 Secretary's Meeting with Slovak FM Hamzik: Discussion of NATO Candidacy; Czech-Slovak Relations

CHINA 6,8 U.S. Views on Tibetan Quest for Autonomy 13-14 Transit Visa for Taiwanese President Mr. Lee Teng-hui 15-16 Jiang-Yeltsin Meeting and Border Treaties Signed with Russia and Central Asian Republics

CUBA 11-12 Planned Foreign Investment Agreement Between France and Cuba

AFGHANISTAN 12 Reports of Taleban Destruction of Sacred Statues of Buddha 12-13 U.S. Contacts with Taleban Officials 13 Possible Taleban Links to Narcotics Trafficking

JAPAN 16 Visit of PM Hashimoto 16 Food Aid to North Korea

NORTH KOREA 16 No Link Between Humanitarian Food Aid and Four Party Talks

AL KHOBAR BOMBING 16-17 Extradition of Mr. Sayegh from Canada

BOSNIA/SERBIA 17-19 President Izetbegovic's Letter to Clinton on Dayton Accords Implementation

MEXICO 19-20 Effectiveness of Counter Narcotics Efforts


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #61

THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 1997 1:07P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. BURNS: Good afternoon. Welcome to the State Department briefing. We have a lot of guests with us today, and I want to recognize those guests because it's a very special day here at the State Department.

First, we have three Ukrainian journalists visiting under the USIS International Visitors Program: Natalia Mychailivna Barynova, who's the anchor and commentator on National Television of Ukraine; Vyacheslav Kononchuk, the deputy editor of Internews, the Ukrainian independent TV company; and Olena Zerniak, the acting director and editor UTAR TV production studio. Welcome to all of you.

We have the Slovak Embassy press counselor here, Juraj Sivacek.

From the Bureau of Public Affairs, we have Lorena Gonzalez, a student at Maryland's Montgomery College, a member of our Press Office, and her cousin, Cristina Aguilera from Paint Branch High School.

I have very good friends of mine from Boston, Joan and Ann Greene, Red Sox fans to the core, who are here with us, visiting the nation's capital. Welcome.

A special welcome to all the kids here. We have a lot of kids here who are visiting with their parents today. Today is Take Your Daughter, and son, To Work Day here at the Department of State. Secretary Albright met a group of about 30 or so kids this morning. She spoke to them about the importance about women believing the central truth of our times; and that is that girls really are better than boys. (Laughter.) Isn't that right, girls?

Do all of you girls here agree with that? Right?

The Secretary addressed them. We have, I think, a couple of hundred kids here today throughout the building. The Department is organizing a number of programs for them. I want to introduce some of our special guests, starting right over here with Emily Klosson, who's the daughter of Mike Klosson. Emily, welcome.

Emily is ten and goes to Flower Valley Elementary School. We have Megan and Christopher White, the niece and nephew of Laura Byergo in the Economics Bureau; and they go to Park Side Middle and Elementary Schools. Right over here, terrific, nice to have you here.

We have Brandi Ward, a student at Sherando High School in Virginia.

She's the daughter of Glen Ward from our Bureau of Public Affairs.

Nice to see you, right over there. We have India Murray, a student at Oxon Hill High School, the daughter of Christine Murray. India, are you here? Right there. Thanks for coming. We have Kristin Rogus, Kristin. We have a big contingent from Vienna, Virginia.

Kristin goes to Thoreau Middle School. She's here with her father, Dave Rogus.

Then we have some young ladies sitting over here. I'd like to introduce them. The first lady is Elizabeth Burns. She goes to Louise Archer Elementary School. Elizabeth, why don't you stand up? (Laughter.) She's 11. She is a big Red Sox fan, right Elizabeth?

MISS BURNS: No.

(Laughter and applause.)

MR. BURNS: You missed your cue. Well, who do you root for, if you don't root for the Red Sox?

MISS BURNS: Orioles.

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: The Orioles? See, we've got to move the entire family back to Boston. That's enough, Elizabeth.

(Laughter.)

We have Sarah Burns, Sarah, a 13-year-old from Thoreau Middle School in Vienna, right? We have Devon Simmons, who's a friend of theirs, also from Thoreau.

So girls, guys, thanks for coming. You don't have to stay throughout the whole briefing if you get really bored.

QUESTION: Can we leave too?

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: Hey, listen, if you leave, I'll leave.

QUESTION: Are you all going to make available copies of the photo op with the Secretary and these young girls?

MR. BURNS: We'd be very pleased to do that. Yes, there was a photo with the Secretary this morning. She gave a really nice speech to all the girls and a couple of the sons of people who are here today. Anyway, welcome to all of you. Now, down to business.

The Secretary has a very busy travel schedule coming up, and I wanted to go through that with you. First, you know that next week the Chinese Foreign Minister Qian Qichen will be here in Washington for meetings with the Secretary on Monday - a meeting in the afternoon, a dinner in the evening. Minister Qichen also has meetings, I believe, over at the White House and at the Pentagon throughout that week. That is an important visit because we need to discuss with the Chinese leadership, with Minister Qichen, the full range of U.S.-Chinese issues following up the Secretary's visit to Beijing in February.

Second, as I said yesterday, the Secretary will be traveling to Moscow next week. She'll be leaving on Wednesday. She'll arrive Thursday morning. She will have meetings with Minister Primakov on Thursday and then will leave Moscow for Washington on Friday.

This meeting is designed to have the Secretary and Minister Primakov discuss the latest issues in our efforts to bring about a NATO-Russia charter or a document to define our relationship with Russia into the future. I don't believe that this visit will result in a final agreement on that issue. We expect, however, that we might be able to make some progress, move the ball forward towards an eventual agreement, we hope by the end of May. That is a very important visit by the Secretary.

Now, the Secretary will be back on, as I said, Friday from Moscow.

Then on Sunday, May 4th, the Secretary will make a trip to Guatemala that will focus on showing support for that nation's ongoing peace process, including the successful demobilization of 3,000 former guerrillas. The visit will also demonstrate recognition of the commitment to peace and the internal reforms of President Arzu.

She will then travel on to Mexico that evening, the evening of Sunday, May 4th. She'll be in Mexico ahead of the President for about 36 hours. She will be leading the United States delegation to the Bi-National Commission Meetings. As you know, we meet annually. Last year, I think we had ten or eleven Cabinet secretaries and agency heads on both sides - ten or eleven on each side, excuse me. She will lead the U.S. delegation.

That is a full review of our relationship with Mexico on everything from narcotics to border problems to environmental issues to regional trade issues in advance of the President's visit to Mexico. She will then join the President on his trip to Mexico, Costa Rica and Barbados. She will be returning to the United States with the President on Saturday, May 10th. So that's an important visit that I wanted to let you know about.

Now, in addition to that, the Secretary today, of course, has spent a lot of time thinking about, talking about the Chemical Weapons Convention ratification. We are going down the wire obviously on this. The President, the Vice President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense and many others in Washington are all working on this. She is making some last- minute calls, and we are very hopeful for Senate ratification, although it is going down to the wire; and we need to keep working at it.

This morning the Secretary addressed the senior staff meeting, which included all our assistant secretaries in the building.

She talked to them about the issue of reorganization of the foreign affairs agencies, She said that she believed that this is a huge and important step forward for the Executive Branch of our government.

Certainly now, we will look towards integrating public diplomacy, arms control and security issues into one agency over the next three years. We will have a much tighter relationship, closer relationship with AID. She really appealed to all of us in the room to approach this creatively, flexibly and with a certain degree of hope that along with an internal reorganization of the State Department, we are going to have a leaner and more efficient State Department in the next two to three years.

Now, this afternoon, the Secretary, of course, will see the Dalai Lama. You know he'll be here at the State Department in just about an hour to discuss human rights and religious rights issues with our committee on - our advisory group on religious freedom.

The Secretary's going to stop by that meeting. She will have a pull-aside in another room, meeting with the Dalai Lama. We are going to have an official photographer there. We'll be glad to release that photo to any of you who would like that.

Now, in addition to that, the Secretary just met at 11:30 a.m. this morning with Susanna Agnelli who, as you know, is the former Foreign Minister of Italy. They had a very good meeting together.

Mrs. Agnelli has agreed to be the fundraiser, the international fundraiser for the OSCE mission in Bosnia-Herzegovina. That mission is supervising the upcoming municipal elections in Bosnia. The Secretary thanked Mrs. Agnelli for taking on that responsibility.

More importantly, the Secretary pledged that the United States would now give an additional $3.3 million to the OSCE's voluntary fund to support those elections.

This follows on the $5 million pledge that the United States has already made. We have contributed 55 American government personnel to be socconded to the OSCE mission in Bosnia to help organize that election. We've recruited 158 American volunteers to form the staff of those who will be particularly in a lot of the small towns and cities throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina.

This is a very important pledge. It represents, I think, the deep commitment that the United States has to making sure that the Dayton Process works and succeeds. We certainly hope that all of us around the world will be able to meet the OSCE's target of $50 million. The United States has done it's share.

In addition to that last issue that I had for you, we are issuing a public statement today on behalf of the co-chairmen of the monitoring group; that is the monitoring group that looks at problems on the Lebanon-Israel border. There was a recent complaint brought by Israel to the monitoring group about an incident that took place. The group met on April 23rd - yesterday - and the statement describes the outcome, the verdict of the monitoring group.

And with that, Barry, welcome back to you.

QUESTION: Thank you. Nick, you said the charter will not be ready. I assume it's still a charter. It will not be ready - I assume it's not still legally binding. What's holding it up? Or is it just a matter of trying to have dramatic timing?

MR. BURNS: I don't think there's anything in particular that's holding it up. It is a very important document. It's quite complex. It is taking time to work out because, I think, it represents so much for NATO. It's such a big step forward for NATO and for Russia.

The process will be that we'll continue to have bilateral meetings - the French and the Germans, the Americans, the Brits, and others - with the Russians. But the central negotiator for NATO is Secretary General Solana. He will have a meeting with Minister Primakov, I believe, just a couple of days after Secretary Albright has her meeting with Foreign Minister Primakov.

What we hope is that President Yeltsin's assessment when he met Chancellor Kohl last week will turn out to be accurate. And that is that we'll be able to complete the negotiations sometime in May for signing late in May, while the President is in Europe for the 50th anniversary celebration of the Marshall Plan. We'd be very pleased to do that. If it's not possible to complete the negotiations in May, we'd certainly be willing to complete them any time thereafter.

But I do want to remind you that no matter what happens on the NATO-Russia negotiations, we are going forward to Madrid and we will be announcing the enlargement of NATO and the new countries who will be invited to take part in that, regardless of what happens on the NATO-Russia front.

QUESTION: You said various bilateral meetings. Basically - not basically, is that it as far as you know? There's no group meeting? Remember the old French idea and all? That's it now.

It's going to be --

MR. BURNS: Right, the schedule in Moscow will be the Secretary meeting with Foreign Minister Primakov. I don't believe that President Yeltsin will be in Moscow on the two days or the day and a half that we're there. So the meetings will really be with the foreign minister and perhaps some other senior officials of the government.

QUESTION: There's going to be no group, you know, Americans, Germans, French, British?

MR. BURNS: Not that week, no.

QUESTION: Or any time before May that you can see?

MR. BURNS: Oh, it's just hard to --

QUESTION: Or the end of May?

MR. BURNS: I don't want to close off any options. I'm not aware of any plans for a group meeting, but I don't want to foreclose the option should it be necessary.

QUESTION: Okay.

MR. BURNS: Charlie.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) - same thing as this trip?

Is it just Washington, Moscow, back to Washington? Is there any other stop?

MR. BURNS: That's right. Leave, I think, mid to late afternoon on Wednesday, arrive in Moscow Thursday morning - full day of meetings, perhaps a couple of meetings Friday morning, leave about noon, and back here late Friday afternoon; so a very, very quick visit. As you know, Foreign Minister Primakov has been in the hospital. The Secretary is very pleased to travel that distance because this is very important. She feels the need to continue to work with him.

They have developed a very good working relationship. They talk on the phone. They correspond frequently. They've had a couple of very good meetings. She feels that she needs to work directly with him on this very important issue. It's arguably the most important foreign policy challenge that we have after this evening, when we hope the Senate will ratify the Chemical Weapons Convention.

Yes.

QUESTION: Does the Secretary agree with the Dalai Lama's demands for greater autonomy for Tibet?

MR. BURNS: The position of the United States for a long, long time, I think going back to well before the Chinese Revolution in 1949, is that we consider Tibet to be part of China.

What we have encouraged is a direct dialogue between the Dalai Lama and his supporters and the Chinese government officials.

We think that's important. What we are particularly concerned about is the issue of religious rights in Tibet. We would hope that the religious and cultural traditions of Tibet can be preserved.

We have been concerned by many of the encroachments on the Tibetan people, particularly in the religious and cultural fields by the Chinese Government. We have noted them publicly for many, many years in our human rights report.

I think the central message the Secretary has today is the message that President Clinton had yesterday. We will continue to push for an opening of a dialogue. It's not for the United States to decide whether or not - what the relationship between the Dalai Lama and the Chinese Government should be. That ought to be worked out directly between him and the Chinese Government.

QUESTION: Nick, let's go back to the NATO thing for a moment. Instead of going through a checklist with you because we'll speak partly in code here, all the - all the - what should I say, features - positive and negative, meaning what's not in it and what's in it, are as we know it? There have been no radical changes made in preparing the Charter?

MR. BURNS: No, and I --

QUESTION: It's still not legally binding?

MR. BURNS: Right.

QUESTION: It's an oral promise by the leaders of whatever - of the allied leaders that they will - that NATO doesn't menace Russia or something like that - the nuclear thing remains, et cetera. As we left it in Helsinki --

MR. BURNS: Well, Barry, I don't want to go through a checklist like this either.

QUESTION: No, no --

MR. BURNS: But I can just tell you my own appreciation of the current state of the negotiations is that we are pretty much where we thought we would be.

QUESTION: Right.

MR. BURNS: The discussions now, of course, are flowing out of the Helsinki meeting, where President Clinton and President Yeltsin agreed on the direction in which they want to move. I don't think there have been any surprises for the United States or our NATO partners.

Secretary Albright and Secretary Cohen gave three hours of testimony yesterday on this, very specific testimony. The Secretary talked about what we can and cannot do to reach an agreement. We hope to have an agreement, but we are not willing to anything to get agreement. You know that.

QUESTION: Do you know if they happened to touch on infrastructure?

MR. BURNS: Oh, there was - yes, there was specific discussion of all those issues yesterday. Yes.

QUESTION: Also on NATO enlargement. The Romanian foreign minister held a news conference this morning, and he said that he was not successful in winning support by the United States Government for Romania's inclusion in the first wave of new members.

One, is that - is he assessing it correctly? And, two, has the United States made up its mind which applicants it will support on the first wave?

MR. BURNS: Jim, Foreign Minister Severin had a very good visit here, and Secretary Albright enjoyed her meeting with him.

I want to be clear about one thing. The United States Government has not told any country privately you're in, you're in, or you're out, and we haven't said that publicly. We have not yet made a decision in this government for what our position will be I believe in late May, early June when NATO must sit down at Sixteen to make this final decision.

We are one of the few governments in NATO that has done this.

Most of the NATO countries have publicly said they support this country or that country and don't support this country or that country. We have not done that. We prefer to have private discussions with the Romanians, the Czechs, the Poles, the Hungarians, the Bulgarians, the Slovenes, the Russians, the Estonians, the Latvians, Lithuanians, any number of countries about their interest in membership - or lack of interest in membership.

Then at some point, late spring, early summer we will sit down at Sixteen and we will make that decision. We gave no positive or negative signal to Romania this week, privately or publicly, and I think that does distinguish us in the field a little bit.

The reason we are doing that is because this is a very important decision. Several countries will be admitted - the exact number has not yet been determined. This is still an open decision that NATO must make.

But I do want to put the accent on the positive here. Minister Severin is a very impressive man. Romania has made dramatic positive changes for the better in its political and economic direction over the last year, particularly over the last couple of months since their elections, and we were very impressed with the Romanian delegation.

I just want to make sure I didn't cut you off. Did you have a chance to --

QUESTION: I'd like to do a follow-up to that. Is the Secretary going to bring up the issue of Tibet with Qian Qichen next week?

MR. BURNS: Excuse me, the Tibetan issue with --

QUESTION: Qian Qichen.

MR. BURNS: Qian Qichen. The Tibet issue is raised at almost every high- level meeting with the Chinese --

QUESTION: Did she raise it when she was in China?

MR. BURNS: Yes, she did. The Secretary always raises -- Secretary Albright and Secretary Christopher before her -- always raises human rights issues with the Chinese leadership and that includes Tibet, where we have a number of very strong concerns that the religious rights of the Tibetan people are not being - the Tibetan Buddhists -- are not being respected by the Chinese Government. So it's certainly part of our ongoing discussions with the Chinese leadership. I would image that would be on the agenda for next week.

QUESTION: Nick, on NATO?

MR. BURNS: I just want to make sure we haven't cut --

QUESTION: We can wait. We can just finish --

MR. BURNS: Let's wait. I should just take a moment just to - Bob, I know you just walked in late. You have a young lady with you. Do you want to introduce her to us.

QUESTION: My daughter, Emily Deans.

MR. BURNS: Emily, welcome. We have a lot of our kids here today. I think you are the only daughter or son of a journalist here, if I'm not mistaken. It's nice to see the Fourth Estate represented. Are you a basketball player, Emily? Are you the basketball player?

MISS DEANS: Yes.

MR. BURNS: I know your dad coaches, right? That's terrific.

Did you have a good season this year.

MISS DEANS: Yes, we were totally undefeated.

(Laughter.)

MR. BURNS: Totally undefeated? That's awesome. That's terrific. All right. Ron.

QUESTION: Did the Secretary give negative reaction to the Slovakians yesterday because of their political problems?

MR. BURNS: Well, the Secretary met yesterday with the foreign minister of the Slovak Republic, Pavol Hamzik, and they had a good discussion of bilateral issues. The Slovaks, of course, are interested in integrating into NATO, into the EU, into the OECD. Minister Hamzik raised Slovakia's candidacy for NATO, and he emphasized his government's commitment to build democracy and to integrate Slovakia westward.

The Secretary, in the meeting, took note of the economic progress that had been made inside Slovakia since Slovakian independence in 1992. But she also noted that the United States does have considerable concerns about the democratic evolution of the Slovak Republic, and that we would continue to want to discuss that with the Slovak leadership. She urged him and she urged the Slovak Government to take concrete steps to pass a minority language law and to give opposition members a greater chance of being represented in the life of the government and certainly to work on the issue of media and press freedoms, where there have been a number of problems within Slovakia itself.

So I do want to make sure that you have an understanding of the full breadth of that meeting. We did note a number of concerns that we have, along with some of the positive aspects of our own relationship with Slovakia.

QUESTION: Is there an economic test to NATO membership, as there is a democracy test?

MR. BURNS: Well, I think in general, as you know, broadly speaking, without quoting from the Partnership For Peace documents, NATO members ought to be similar in their governing structure and in what they believe and in what they practice to the NATO - potential members - to NATO members who are currently inside the alliance; that is liberal democracies with liberal market economies -- democracies committed to human rights, to shared power, to civilian control of the military, and to respect the borders of their neighbors.

Now, one of the very interesting byproducts of the NATO enlargement process is to see Ukraine and Poland and Hungary and Romania and some of the Baltic countries - Estonia and Russia - try to resolve some of the border problems that have existed for the greater part of a century or more, but particularly those that have arisen in this century after the collapse of both the German and the Austria-Hungarian empires after the first world war. So that's been a very positive byproduct of our effort to enlarge NATO.

But that in general, Barry, is what we're looking for.

QUESTION: Even though Slovakia is trailing by yards and yards behind the Czech Republic since the split, economically, the concern she registered was on the democracy front, not on the economic front.

MR. BURNS: That's right because the Slovak Republic -

QUESTION: They have a free market economy.

MR. BURNS: The Slovak Republic has made some impressive steps economically, but they've lagged behind almost all of their neighbors -- not just the Czech Republic, but the Hungarians, the Poles, the Balts -- on the issue of democratization, internal democratization. Yes.

QUESTION: Was the current tension between the Czech Republic and Slovakia also subject of discussion?

MR. BURNS: That came up in the meeting. It also came up in the meeting that the Secretary had with Foreign Minister Zieleniec last week, the Czech Foreign Minister. I said at the time, and we firmly believe this, that we hope very much that we hope very much that the Czech and Slovak Republics might resolve their bilateral problems. But we don't believe that the existence of those particular problems are going to undercut the efforts of either country to integrate themselves westward.

In the case of the Czech Republic, it should not be an impediment at all to the Czech Republic's wish to integrate itself into European institutions. Yes.

QUESTION: Can I - well, no, there are others.

MR. BURNS: Whatever you want to do, Barry.

QUESTION: Well, I want to ask - I think you can polish this up with a quick son of a gun. The French agreement with Cuba, the trade agreement, I don't suppose you're happy about that.

MR. BURNS: This is the agreement for --

QUESTION: The trade agreement.

MR. BURNS: The trade agreement, yes.

QUESTION: The French say it's not a provocation, they just have to look after their business interests. That's not a unique position.

MR. BURNS: The United States has a very clear position.

We have had one for 37 years. We have an economic boycott in place on Cuba. We believe that's the right policy. We do not favor any other countries normalizing their economic relations with Cuba.

But what we prefer to do, Barry, and particularly with the European Union members, I turn our joint attention on the human rights situation in Cuba. We hope that the French Government, while it's taking this step economically will also remain active in the fight for human rights in Cuba. We have an agreement with the European Union that we're going to focus on that issue together.

We hope that the French involvement will be multifaceted, not just economic, but they'll call 'em as they see 'em and they'll be objective when it comes to ascertaining the problems that the Cuban Government has had in treatment of its own people.

Castro is a major human rights violator. He jails his opponents for very long sentences. He cracks down on the press. He is the remaining autocrat in our hemisphere. The French ought to be focused on that as well.

QUESTION: I think this is a somewhat more benign reaction than the Canadians business with Cuba. The French, who just dealt you a blow on China in Geneva - what is your hope that France will carry the banner of human rights? What's it based on?

MR. BURNS: Barry, I think the reaction today is --

QUESTION: (Inaudible.)

MR. BURNS: -- in my own view, is completely consistent with our reaction to the Canadian visit and agreement earlier.

We are very skeptical that Castro is going to change his stripes.

Now, we continue to hear from a lot of countries around the world, well, if we just engage with him, if we trade with him, if we give him the time of day and invite him to international meetings, he's going to change.

Our view is, he's in his seventies; he led a revolution in the 1950s; he's ruled Cuba for one way for 37, 38 years; he's a dictator.

That's all he knows. He follows Communist political and economic practices. They have a failed economy. He does not brook any opposition in his own country. This guy's not going to change his stripes in the latter part of his life. He's an older man in his seventies.

What we hope is that the younger generation coming up in Cuba -- people in their twenties and thirties and forties - are going to look towards the United States and towards Europe and see what can happen when you allow democracy and liberal economics to be the life of your country. Certainly the Cuban people are not well off right now. Yes, Betsy.

QUESTION: I've been asked to ask a question on Afghanistan.

The Taliban are threatening to destroy two large 14th Century statues of Buddha, which the Sri Lankans consider sacred.

They are evidently very exercised about this, and the U.N. has also gotten involved in this. Has the State Department weighed in on this at all? Are you aware of this?

MR. BURNS: I have heard about this. I don't know if, in our discussions with the Taliban, we have mentioned this. I can check on that and get back to you. But in general, I can say this, we have urged the Taliban, in all of our diplomatic contacts with them, to be more broad-minded and certainly more inclusive in the way that they attempt to govern Afghanistan.

We do not recognize the Taliban as the legal government of Afghanistan, nor any of the other factions.

But we're very concerned about the policies, the internal policies of the Taliban, which are intolerant of differences that characterize Afghanistan - intolerant of other ethnic groups, intolerant of women and young girls. They have kicked young girls out of the schools. They have kicked women out of the workplace. It is one of the most discriminatory places on earth towards women.

Our message to the Taliban is, you can't hope to have a normal relationship with the United States as long as you openly discriminate against other ethnic groups, other religions and against women the way you do.

QUESTION: Would you check and see on whether -

MR. BURNS: I am certainly going to take the question and see if we have raised that particular issue with the Taliban but we do have on going contacts with them, as you know.

QUESTION: When do you meet with the Taliban, and how often?

MR. BURNS: We've met with the Taliban inside Afghanistan . We've met with the Taliban in Pakistan. We've met with the Taliban in Washington, D.C. They had a group here I believe, John, about a month or two ago. They had a Taliban group here in New York and Washington. We met with them then.

We haven't tried to boycott them. They are the largest and most effective fighting force right now in Afghanistan so, therefore, we're going to continue to talk to them. But talking to them doesn't mean that we agree with them. We disagree with them on many issues. We just hope that the Taliban and the other ethnic groups, the other fighting groups will at some point agree to lay down their arms and try to resolve their problems peacefully, because we're going on 19 years now, Afghanistan has been in civil war.

QUESTION: Do you think that the Taliban, this strict Moslem Fundamentalist group, is involved in narcotics trafficking to support their movement which would, of course, be a gross violation of their principles they purport to uphold?

MR. BURNS: I can tell you that we are concerned about the issue of narcotics trafficking among many of the fighting groups in Afghanistan. I wouldn't just pinpoint the Taliban.

As for the Taliban, itself, specifically, I'd have to ask for - I'd have to get back to you on whether or not we have determined that they are engaged in that type of activity. But certainly other groups are, and it is the scourge of the country, as you know. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Deputy Assistant Secretary Bader said yesterday that President Lee Teng-hui of Taiwan is eligible to apply for a transit visa when he visits Panama in September. Does that indicate a higher degree of willingness on the part of the United States to issue the visa to him? Question number two, will this have any impact on U.S.-China relations?

MR. BURNS: Well, thanks for that very provocative question.

(Laughter.)

Let me just say, Jeff Bader is our senior China expert in this building. All of us have great respect for him. He is testifying this afternoon. I want to be fair to Jeff. I didn't see his statement, nor have Jeff and I had a chance to talk about it.

All I can do is point you to the very consistent long-held and very clear policy of our government and that is that visits by Taiwan's leaders -- any U.S. agreement to a transit of a Taiwan leader will be on a case-by-case basis, case-by-case basis, and for the senior leaders in Taiwan, rare, only considered on a case-by-case basis and certainly unofficial.

Let me go further to say that I am not aware of any consideration by Lee Teng-hui to transit the United States. I am not aware of any consideration by anybody in this government to suggest that. We certainly would not suggest it. It would have to be for him to suggest and our policy towards China remains constant.

We have a one-China policy. We recognize the People's Republic of China as the sole and legitimate government in that area and we have unofficial relations with Taiwan. I want to be very clear about that so that I am not signaling and nobody is signaling that we are going to change or modify what we have said would govern our policy on transits by senior leaders of Taiwan. Rare, unofficial, case-by-case - those are the watch words and nothing has changed.

QUESTION: Let's talk about the watch words. You have used "rare." Are you talking about a transit visit or a private visit?

MR. BURNS: I thought I heard in your question a transit visit, so I responded a transit visit and that certainly would include private visits as well. Yes? Still on China?

QUESTION: Bosnia.

MR. BURNS: Let's just stick with Asia and then we'll go to Bosnia. Yes.

QUESTION: Well, this is on China. President Jiang Zemin is having a good time in Moscow. Do you have any comment on -

MR. BURNS: Have you talked to him? Is he enjoying himself?

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: Did they charge him $80 for his visa application?

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: As they're ripping off the entire Press Corps, which you're aware of, aren't you? $80 for a visa application because of the short notice, meaning about a week-and-a-half.

MR. BURNS: Barry, I wasn't aware of it.

QUESTION: You don't need to answer that.

MR. BURNS: I wasn't aware of it.

QUESTION:80 bucks to process a piece of paper.

MR. BURNS: Maybe that will pay for the Romanov jewels to stay in the United States. What do you think? John's coming to the rescue.

QUESTION: Play along with that stuff -

MR. BURNS: Pardon?

QUESTION: You should try to stop that -

MR. BURNS: Barry, all countries have - I mean let's be fair. All countries have the right to determine whether or not they want to charge for visas. Some countries do, some countries don't.

QUESTION: Nobody charges -

MR. BURNS: The United States does -

QUESTION: -- one-tenth of that.

QUESTION: To the traveling Press Corps, the American Secretary of State.

MR. BURNS: We'll try to make the trip worth your while in other ways. Yes, sir? Jiang Zemin's visit to Moscow?

QUESTION: Do you have any comment on the declaration and agreements signed there?

MR. BURNS: Yes, I do. The United States welcomes the agreements signed between Russia and China because we hope that Russia and China will fully normalize their bilateral relationship and take efforts to make sure that the long border between those two countries is stable and peaceful. All of us remember the 1960s and 1970s and into the eighties when there were considerable problems along that border and that wasn't good for the United States. No one wants to see these two very important countries fighting or not in agreement.

Now, Mr. Jiang Zemin is also going to be signing a treaty with Russia, Kazakstan, Krygyzstan and Tajikistan, which is a very important treaty. Those four countries have a 4300-mile border and there have been some border problems with the Central Asian countries as well as with Russia. This treaty leads to greater transparency in the military relationships among those countries and we hope it will lead to an improvement on the situation along that common border.

I would also say, some of the press has been touting the Jiang Zemin- Boris Yeltsin meeting as some kind of face-off with the United States. That is not how we see it. We're in the 1990s now. We're not back in the Seventies when Henry Kissinger and others were playing triangular diplomacy among Russia, China and the United States. The world has changed. The United States then had a competitive rivalry with the Soviet Union. Now, the United States has a friendship and partnership with the Russian Federation.

Look what we've done because of that. We've lowered the nuclear threshold. We have reduced the number of nuclear powers from four to one in Eurasia. We've vastly improved the chance that we're never going to have a nuclear altercation between our two countries. We have a policy of engagement with China. All of this improves stability, security and the chances for peace in Europe and Asia.

So I was surprised that a lot of the press commentary and coverage was somehow, this is a bad thing for the United States. We think the meeting has been positive, and we want to work with both of those countries in the next century for peace on two continents and in two oceans.

QUESTION: One more follow-up, if I may, Nick. Specifically, both the Chinese and the Russian presidents are calling for a multipolar new world order, instead of a unipolar.

MR. BURNS: Well, I think it's very difficult for any group of countries to get together and diagram, as if you were in a political science class, what the structure of the world is going to be. Power and influence in the world are governed by interests, by economic power, military power, political influence and values.

I think it's very clear that the only country in the world that has all those things together and moving forward is the United States. That does not mean that we seek any kind of domination or a unipolar world. We want to have very close relationships with Russia, China and a number of the other great powers in the world, and that's the basis of our foreign policy. Yes.

QUESTION: The Japanese Prime Minister is going to be arriving here tonight. Does the Secretary have any plans to meet with him?

MR. BURNS: The Secretary will be participating tomorrow in the President's meeting with Prime Minister Hashimoto. She'll be over at the White House for those meetings. She'll be participating in the briefings for the President for those meetings. We're very much looking forward to the Prime Minister's visit. We want to try to focus it on some of the security, regional/political issues that are so important to the United States and Japan. Of course, we'll also talk about economic issues.

QUESTION: Just a follow up - you've said several times that the U.S. does not consider food aid to North Korea as a political issue, but a humanitarian one. The Japanese seem to have a bit of a different idea in failing to respond to the recent request for food aid. Is that something you've discussed with them? Will you be discussing it during this visit? And will you be trying to encourage them in any way to separate politics and humanitarian aid?

MR. BURNS: The answer to the first question is yes. The answer to the second question is yes. The answer to the third question is, it's really up to the Japanese Government to decide what it's going to do. We believe there's a severe food shortage in North Korea. We believe there's an international humanitarian imperative to meet that food shortage, and we call upon all countries to contribute.

QUESTION: Nick, the North Koreans have made a food deal a precondition to four-party talks. They've added a few other preconditions. I'd like to ask you to comment on those. And the United States in the past have rejected food aid as a precondition for talks. Now, is this a non-starter on the part of the North Koreans?

MR. BURNS: Yes. We will not agree to any preconditions to start these talks. As we said yesterday - and I'm going to be very brief about this, because we've gone over this every day this week. The central point is this, if there's a critical food shortage in North Korea, why in the world would we link food assistance to the slow-as-molasses political talks that have taken 44 years not to begin? The North Koreans have a direct interest in getting the food aid there. They surely can't want to tie it political talks that may or may not begin at any time during this year.

That is our answer. David.

QUESTION: About Mr. Sayegh, who is in a Canadian prison at the moment.

MR. BURNS: Yes.

QUESTION: He faces an immigration judge soon. It's been reported that both the United States and Saudi Arabia are interested in having him extradited back to their countries. Has the United States filed a formal extradition request with the Canadians?

And which extradition request does the U.S. believe should take precedence and why?

MR. BURNS: We have discussed this issue of Mr. Sayegh with the Canadian police and security authorities because we have an abiding, ongoing interest in finding out who killed 19 American officers at Khobar a year ago last summer. We will continue to discuss this issue with the Canadians. Until the Canadians make a public announcement about what they intend to do with him, I am not going to have a public announcement about the details of our own discussions with the Canadians.

The Canadians have this person. They have to decide on the proper course of action with him. Then if they decide on one or another options, perhaps we will be in a position to comment publicly.

QUESTION: Is there a formal extradition request filed with the court or not?

MR. BURNS: I just can't answer the question, David. I can't go into the details of what we are talking to the Canadians about.

QUESTION: Nick - all right, why don't you finish?

QUESTION: Bosnia. The Chair of the Presidency of Bosnia Izetbegovic sent a letter to President Clinton two days ago saying basically the Dayton agreement is not being implemented. In a short analysis, Izetbegovic said that overall the peace process, because of inconsistent implementation and violation of the agreement obligation, is in crisis. Would you care to comment on that?

MR. BURNS: Well, we - you know John Kornblum and Bob Gelbard met with President Izetbegovic last week. The President and the Secretary of State met with him in late March. There have been a lot of problems associated with implementing the Dayton Accords. But there has also been a lot of progress, particularly in the economic area.

The United States and many other countries have troops in Bosnia, have aid officials in Bosnia who are there to help implement the accords. It's not particularly helpful to just go out with a complete litany of what has gone wrong when a lot has gone right.

But all of us know it's a tough battle, and we have got to stay focused on achieving results. That is how we look at it. We are very pragmatic.

QUESTION: He said that after 16 months - he said that only the military part is going well. But my question to you is, is it possible that the Administration is preparing its own analysis of the implementation?

MR. BURNS: You know, the military mission has gone quite well, but there also have been national elections, which brought Mr. Izetbegovic to the position where he is. That was quite an achievement after five years of war. There has been considerable economic assistance that has begun to rebuild Sarajevo and the other towns in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

I don't think it's fair to disregard what has gone right and to disregard the enormous effort that the Bosnian people have put in to rebuilding their own country, and the enormous effort, frankly, that we have made. We have got young men - American men and women there - who have put their lives on the line to safeguard the security of the Bosnian people. We've got aid workers there, and I'm not going to allow that to be dismissed by some statement. We think the people ought to be pragmatic and they ought to be focused on what is going right; and we ought to work together on what is not going right.

QUESTION: I'm sure that Bosnians are thankful for what the United States did in the past and in what you are doing. But at the same time, I'm just asking for an answer of those questions, which is he mentioned Brcko, precisely, for instance. He mentioned elections. He mentioned economic reconstruction. Fifteen days ago, the World Bank gave $55 million to the Republika Srpska, precisely to the Republika Srpska. The next credit is $145, 59 percent is going to Republika Srpska.

Before, you told us that Republika Srpska is not complying so they are not going to get any money, specifically not from the United States. So what is your answer on that?

MR. BURNS: My answer is that perhaps the Bosnian Government leadership ought to think they maybe they want to be as effective of sales people as we are about what is happening there. I think that is a challenge that I would put in front of them.

On Brcko, we have set up a process to adjudicate internationally the fate of that town. On economic reconstruction I very much disagree - I very much disagree. A lot of good things have happened.

Billions of dollars have gone in -- $600 million from the United States over three years. I'm not going to paint an entirely black picture for you. You know the situation better than I do. How about the situation four or five years ago? Would you want to go back to that? I don't think so.

QUESTION: If we are going back to that time, and if President Izetbegovic was willing to give up half of the country, probably Bosnia would never have gone to war. But I don't want to speculate.

I am asking, is it possible that America is willing to participate in the partition of Bosnia-Herzegovina?

MR. BURNS: No.

QUESTION: One or two years after Dayton?

MR. BURNS: No, no. We don't favor partition. We negotiate - we stopped the war and we negotiated the peace for you because we wanted to see your country whole. We do not favor partition.

All of our military and political and economic efforts are against partition.

By the way, check with Carl Bildt's office. I would like to see a break- down of the economic assistance to Sarajevo -- the Bosnian Government -- versus economic assistance the Republika Srpska and Pale. It's probably about 98 to 2 in percentile terms.

There is no comparison. We have punished the Republika Srpska because of its failure to comply with its Dayton commitments.

I think you have got to acknowledge that in your questioning.

QUESTION: Yes, I'm totally aware. Carl Bildt sent a letter and report to Kofi Annan. He said that the returning of refugees is quite well. He said that freedom of movement is going quite well. But in the Republika Srpska they have zero refugees going back on the previous territory.

MR. BURNS: That is a big problem. I agree with you.

That is a big problem.

QUESTION: I don't want to argue with you. But my final question is, would America under any conditions conceive of supporting partition?

MR. BURNS: No.

QUESTION: What if Bosnian Muslims say we would like to do it?

MR. BURNS: I can't - in my wildest dreams, I don't think that the Bosnian Government is capable or at all interested in proposing a partition plan. That's an extreme hypothetical example that I don't think merits much discussion. The Bosnian Government doesn't want to partition itself, and we don't either; and we are the best friend the Bosnian Government has. I think that is another useful reminder today. Thank you. It's good to see you back here. You make life exciting.

Okay. Anything else? Bill?

QUESTION: Take one on Mexico? The New York Times article today says the anti-drug efforts on the part of the Mexican Government are dead in the water and that the United States --

MR. BURNS: Well, I don't agree with The New York Times.

The New York Times should have read their wire reports from Mexico City yesterday and today which talk about the creation of a new anti-drug effort with new people in it and a rededication of that government to fighting the narcotics trafficking. I think they ought to be up-to-date in what they say.

QUESTION: Well, Nick, not only this article, but Mr. Constantine's report about six weeks ago said that the U.S. was holding back waiting for the Mexicans to decide what their policy would be.

MR. BURNS: I don't believe he's been quoted accurately because President Clinton and Secretary Albright and General McCaffrey have all said we have full support for President Zedillo and his renewed efforts to fight narcotics. I would invite some of you to sign up for the trip to Guatemala and Mexico. We have a sign-up sheet in the press office. Come with us. Listen to the Secretary and General McCaffrey as they brief you on the narcotics cooperation. It is a big issue. See for yourselves. Visit Mexico with us.

QUESTION: That's what I saw.

MR. BURNS: Okay. Thank you very much.

(The briefing concluded at 1:53 P.M.)

(###)


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