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U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing #124, 97-08-29

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>


987

U.S. Department of State
Daily Press Briefing

I N D E X

Friday, August 29, 1997

Briefer: James P. Rubin

ANNOUNCEMENTS/STATEMENTS
1                Briefing Schedule for Next Week

MIDDLE EAST 1-2 Secretary Albright's Travel to the Middle East/Purpose/ Itinerary 1 --Discussions with Saudi Arabia 2-3,7 --Timing of Secretary's Trip to the Middle East 2-3 --Israeli-Palestinian Track 3,8,15 --Security Cooperation 3,4-5 --Israeli-Syrian Track 4 --U.S. Policy re Iran/Dialogue 5-6 --Secretary Albright's Conversations/Calls re Trip 5 --Prospects for Visit to Lebanon 5 --French Foreign Minister's Comments re Middle East Peace Process 6 --Issue of Settlements 6-7 --Proposed Dam Construction Along Yarmouk River/Impact on Peace Process

RUSSIA 8 Seismic Event in Vicinity of Novaya Zemlya on August 16

NORTH KOREA 9 Status of the Preparatory Meeting Scheduled for September 15 9-10 US Contacts with North Korea re Defectors

UK/NORTHERN IRELAND 10 Inclusion of Sinn Fein in All-Party Talks 10 Visit to US by Gerry Adams

BOSNIA 10-11,14 Developments on the Ground/SFOR Role and Mandate 12 --Statements by General Shalikashvili and Richard Holbrooke 8,12-13 Ambassador Gelbard's Travel/Meetings 13-14 Prospects for Elections

GREECE/TURKEY/CYPRUS 14-15 Reported Turkish Violations of Greek Airspace in Aegean

COUNTER-NARCOTICS 16 Reported Threats Against General McCaffery


U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE
DAILY PRESS BRIEFING

DPB #124

FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1997 12:40 P.M.

(ON THE RECORD UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED)

MR. RUBIN: Greetings, another Friday, late August. I will not be here next week. The able Jim Foley will here on his first days at this podium. Please be nice to him. I have a couple of announcements I will post afterwards. But let me start by saying the following: Secretary Albright will depart for the Middle East on September the 9th. The Secretary's trip will have several dimensions. First, the Secretary will see what she and the United States can do to help Israel and the Palestinians address the crisis of confidence that she said has been blocking the resumption of negotiations.

Second, the Secretary will explore with the parties how we can again find ways to move forward towards a comprehensive peace. Third, the Secretary will be consulting with our friends in the region about a variety of other important issues, including the security of the Persian Gulf, the issue of Iran, and the issue of Iraq. Towards these objectives, the Secretary will visit Israel, the Palestinian Authority, Egypt, Jordan, Syria, and Saudi Arabia.

The United States continues to believe in the importance of achieving a comprehensive peace settlement of the Arab-Israeli conflict. President Clinton and Secretary Albright will do everything they can to assist in that effort.

Barry.

QUESTION: On the Gulf part of the component, can you in advance of the trip - I don't know if this is the occasion, if you have that kind of information handy - but could you give us an idea of the Saudis disposition at this point to stockpile, for instance, weapons, and to be a true partner of the United States in protecting oil - oil reserves, oil supplies in that region?

MR. RUBIN: Yes, we will obviously be talking about that issue. There are always issues involved in trying to assess the right way in which to ensure that our forces are in a position to defend what we have regarded in the past and still regard as a vital interest of the United States, and that is the stability and security of the Gulf and the oil supplies therein.

As far as any specific issues of concern on both sides, with regard to security, or where the troops are located, or how many of a particular type of equipment is in what location, that will surely come up. At the time we will try to get you some information on the state of play in that regard.

QUESTION: How many days is she going?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I have given you what I can say, which is the date of departure. At this point, I am not able to go into much more detail. But for those of you who will be able to accompany us - and let me emphasize that the plane is the smallest of the three planes and the demand is the highest that I have seen yet on a trip for the Secretary of State -- so I wouldn't schedule anything for at least a week. But we will have to see how it goes. We will try to give you more detail on the specific dates and times as they become available. But there will be a sign-up sheet posted this afternoon.

QUESTION: Jamie, and she obviously made this decision for this particular date because she feels as though the time is ripe now and that they have made some progress?

MR. RUBIN: Correct.

QUESTION: Could you just elaborate on --

MR. RUBIN: Well, the Secretary said in her August speech that she would travel to the region when the time was appropriate and ripe and her trip would be useful. She also said she would go if there were some progress in the security situation. There has been progress. Some progress has been made and there is a trend in the right direction, and that direction is towards greater cooperation in the area of security.

At the same time, we need to build on this trend and see greater efforts from the Palestinians. We will be raising that issue with Chairman Arafat and the Palestinians when we meet with them. Security is an ever present part of the peace process. No process can succeed without security, and it is impossible to discuss getting this process back on track without discussing security. Clearly the peace process is in trouble. As the Secretary stressed in her speech, there is a crisis of confidence. The Secretary's trip is designed to begin to address that lack of confidence, but the problems between the two parties are complex. They are deeply entrenched, and they will not be solved by one trip.

Secretary Albright is a lot of things, but she is also a realist. She is not a magician. She has quite realistic expectations about what can be solved on this trip.

QUESTION: I just want to follow up with one other thing. Some Palestinians were saying that if she didn't come soon, they feared that there would be another eruption in the region. How would you respond to that?

MR. RUBIN: She is coming soon.

QUESTION: No, no, no, that she was - no that she was coming in order to avert some other kind of eruption, and that things, you know, they were basically pleading with her and you said she wasn't a magician, but it seems as though she was going to be some kind of patchwork-maker, if you will.

MR. RUBIN: Secretary Albright believes that the moment is ripe for the reasons that I stated. We, obviously, don't want to see an eruption in the Middle East. We've seen some progress in recent days. There has been some lifting of the closure by the Israelis. There has been movement on the security track. The trend is in the right direction, and during her trip she will be, hopefully, moving the parties forward in that area.

But, again, the trip is about trying to build back the peace process from the abyss it has been in. She is not a magician; she's a realist. But she believes that it's time to take the first trip to talk to the leaders on their home turf, to see the people in the region and to talk to them, and to see the other aspects of Israeli and Palestinian society. So that's where we are.

Yes, David.

QUESTION: Could you update us on progress on the security track?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I can't give you any more details than I've given you in the past. What I think I said - I don't know if you were here - was that in recent weeks there had been some progress in the area of the explosives involved, and there has been, since that time, progress in other areas. But, again, our feeling is that, when we have progress and we're moving in the right direction, it's better to let the experts do their work than to crow about it from here.

Yes, Judd.

QUESTION: Jamie, what are the expectations on the Syrian front? Does the Secretary have a proposal to get Syria and Israel back to the negotiating table?

MR. RUBIN: Well, on the Syria front, there are a lot of issues to be discussed, including terrorism. As you know, Syria is on the list of state sponsors for terrorism. We will be addressing that, as we have in the past. We will also be seeing if we can find a way to bridge the gap between the current Israeli and Syrian positions on how to get the Syria-Israel track back working.

The United States has long sought, and continues to seek under President Clinton and Secretary Albright, to close the circle of peace, and that would require peace between Israel and Syria. The Israelis very much want us to see if there are ways to bridge that gap.

We do not have any expectations whatsoever that this trip will move it forward on that front. However, no secretary or higher has met with President Assad in over a year, and we think it's time to sit down with him and see where he is at on this question and to determine whether there are ways that we can move it forward.

Yes, Roy.

QUESTION: The realistic expectations you said that she's going in with, what do you expect could be accomplished on the Israeli-Palestinian front?

MR. RUBIN: It's hard to answer that other than to say that one trip is not going to turn around this crisis of confidence. She's a realist, not a magician. The Secretary will provide a reality check of what is required to make the process succeed. She will explore ways to reestablish engagement of the various negotiating tracks, none of which are now operating, whether that's the seaport, the airport, the safe passage, other issues related to implementing Oslo. Again, she has said, in her speech, that ultimately we would like to see whether there is a way to marry the idea of accelerating permanent status talks with the aspects of the Oslo process that have not been completed. But that's not something we expect to make significant movement on in this trip.

Given the state of the peace process, given the fact that it is a crisis of confidence, I think she will be happy in giving the leaders a reality check and the people a reality check of what direction the trend is leading, and seeing whether she can reverse the downward slide that we've seen in the Middle East in recent weeks.

QUESTION: On the Persian Gulf and -- you say she will be discussing Iran and Iraq. In light of the shift in the Iranian governance, is there any review going on now within the U.S. Government about dual containment and its viability?

MR. RUBIN: Let me say that, given the job that I have, which involves a lot of close contact with the Secretary, I am going to make it a practice of not talking about reviews of policy, because it can be very misleading. People can be saying that they are thinking anew about a subject, or they can be saying, "I wonder about this," and "I wonder about that," which is exactly what you would expect from policymakers, and since I might hear more of that than some of my predecessors, I'm not going to make it a practice of discussing with you every time I think somebody said, "Oh, gee, wouldn't it be interesting if this," or "What if that."

Having said all that, to my knowledge, there is no review of the kind that you described. Our views on Iran are well known. We believe that we are prepared to have a dialogue with the Iranian Government. In our view the Iranian interlocutor must an authoritative representative of the Iranian Government. The fact of the dialogue must be publicly acknowledged. Of course, we would raise the issues most important to us, that is Iranian policies with regard to proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, support for terrorism and violent opposition the Middle East peace process. So that's where we are on Iran.

QUESTION: Apparently, taking a cue from what you have been saying here, that the new president or some of his spokesmen have been saying that they would be willing to have a dialogue with the United States but they think actions speak louder than words. They want to see some actions on the part of the U.S. Government. Do you contemplate any gestures in that direction?

MR. RUBIN: I think they must have read what I said because I think that's what I said.

(Laughter.)

QUESTION: So you agree?

QUESTION: Jamie, back to the Syrian part.

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: Has the Secretary spoken with President Assad at all or with Foreign Minister --

MR. RUBIN: Last week - last week I think I told you that she was woken up in the middle of the night regarding the Lebanon situation and spoke to Foreign Minister Shara to see whether we could try to avoid a situation where the violence in southern Lebanon spun out of control. In preparation for her trip, however, this morning she has spoken to Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat. She also spoke yesterday for Russian Foreign Minister Primakov. She spoke this morning to French Foreign Minister Vedrine. She spoke, as well, to the British Foreign Secretary Cook, and some others, and some members of Congress she has been speaking to, as well. So she has been working the phones all morning and yesterday. I do not believe that Foreign Minister Shara was on her list.

QUESTION: The French Foreign Minister yesterday has criticized strongly the United States for being too passive in the Middle East process, as he said. He wanted Paris to take a more active role in reviving the peace talks. Has any --

MR. RUBIN: I know I didn't brief yesterday, but I was reading the wires. I thought he was saying something entirely different about France's role in the world. So I don't know where that comes from.

QUESTION: Is she going to Lebanon? And what's the objective for that part of --

MR. RUBIN: She has made no decision to go to Lebanon. Obviously, the question of Lebanon is one that will come up in a lot of different meetings she will have. We are very concerned about what's going there. We would like to urge all the parties to exercise maximum restraint. We saw a time last week where it looked like the situation was getting worse. We have been working through the monitoring group to try to keep it under control. We are obviously concerned about that. The subject will surely arise. But she has made no decision to go to Lebanon.

QUESTION: The subject of going there on this trip?

MR. RUBIN: No, the subject of Lebanon.

QUESTION: Is she considering going there on this trip, though, I guess?

MR. RUBIN: The Secretary has made no decision about going to Lebanon.

QUESTION: What was the message to the Europeans then -- Vedrine and Cook - - when she called?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I think without, again, breaking the purpose of diplomatic exchanges, which is to keep them confidential, I think she briefed them on her intentions, what she is doing, why she decided to go, who she will meet with, what messages she will be carrying - in general terms - and tried to get their advice and support in trying to promote peace in the region. Each of those leaders in their own ways has some influence on the process. We would like to encourage the maximum support from our allies and friends to try to encourage and put leverage on the leaders in the region to move in the right direction because we are very concerned about the state of the Middle East peace process.

Any more on the Middle East?

QUESTION: Talking about building confidence, does the Secretary intend to raise the question of the settlements and to demand to freeze them?

MR. RUBIN: I think our position on settlements is fairly well known and we don't think it would be constructive in advance of a trip to get into exactly what we will and won't ask the Israeli Government to do.

I can say this, the Secretary made clear in her speech that unilateral actions have contributed to the crisis of confidence. Those steps that were reserved for final status, permanent status talks, should be left for final status, permanent status talks, and unilateral prejudging or predetermining the outcome is one of the reasons why we are in a crisis of confidence. But I don't have anything for you on what she will specifically say in Israel. I suspect we will be doing the best we can to let you know what happens when we are there.

QUESTION: Jamie --

MR. RUBIN: Any more on the Middle East, yes.

QUESTION: -- (inaudible) talking about building the dam in disputed territory not contributing to the easing the crisis of confidence in the Syrian negotiations?

MR. RUBIN: You must have not been here on Wednesday.

QUESTION: No, I was. But I want to raise it again.

MR. RUBIN: What I said on Wednesday was, we are not precisely sure where the construction would involve the dam being placed. There are obviously a variety of interests involved here. We are encouraging all the parties to think long and hard about the steps that they take and to make sure that if it were placed in the way that it's reported it might be placed, to make clear that we don't think that's particularly helpful.

QUESTION: (Inaudible) days and you haven't been able to determine where that dam is going?

MR. RUBIN: We have been talking to the government in Israel about this. It is still unclear the extent to which it would fall into the disputed territory. I think these plans probably emerged publicly a little bit before they were finalized. For whatever reason, I don't know. But we are still trying to determine exactly the extent to which it would cause the kinds of problems the original reporting suggested it might. Any more on this? Yes.

QUESTION: Jamie, you didn't address the timing. Is there any reason why September 9th, rather, say, a week ago is the timing for the trip? I mean, is something falling into place? Or do you hope to have something falling into place by that point that will assist? It is seven months into her term in office.

MR. RUBIN: Ambassador Ross is not going to the region before her just in case somebody was about to ask that question. The trip is not designed as closing a deal that is pre-cooked or worked out through diplomatic channels. On the contrary, we are at a moment in the Middle East peace process where the basic peace process channels have been not operating because of this crisis in confidence and most recently because of the bomb that killed so many innocent Israelis.

So what we have said and what she said during her speech was that we wanted to make the decision to go, and she had made the decision to go in principle. But that in order for a trip to be productive and to not spend the entire time talking about detailed security issues that should be resolved prior to her trip, she wanted to give some space and some time to see whether the trilateral mechanism that we created could work. We believe it's working.

The trend is in the right direction. Progress has been made, and enough progress has been made to justify going forward. We hope that additional progress will be made before we get there so that the Secretary doesn't find herself focused on important but detailed issues of infrastructure for terrorists and arrest lists and that kind of subject, but can focus on what a Secretary of State can bring to the table here, and that is giving the leaders a reality check of what is possible and what is not possible in the peace process, explaining to them the direction that things are heading and the American interests in the region and our interest in peace and our broader interest in the region.

So that's the role of a Secretary of State's trip. So the timing is now ripe. The Secretary will be on a private visit out of the country tomorrow, starting next week. She will not be available during that week. So the week after that, she will be going to the Middle East.

QUESTION: The Secretary will be leaving from here, not from there?

MR. RUBIN: Leaving from here, correct.

QUESTION: New subject.

QUESTION: Jamie, one more, Middle East.

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: Can you detail the progress? I mean, you have talked about the assistance on the explosives and the security cooperation, but just for the - as a sort of update, can you detail where you think - why she thinks there has been progress.

MR. RUBIN: Again, I can't. In answer to David's question, I think I gave the reason why. I can tell you to look at her speech and see the four substantive points she made about arrests not being a revolving door, about information being provided about what had happened, information being provided about what might happen in the future, and about infrastructure for terrorist cells. Those are the waterfront when it comes to security cooperation and fighting terrorism. I did say in response to, I believe it was David's question, that there had been some work done on explosives and additional work had been done in other areas.

QUESTION: You may have seen the reports about the Russians supposedly having engaged in some nuclear testing, notwithstanding promises to the contrary. The Russians are now saying it was an ordinary earthquake and not a nuclear test. Do you have anything on that?

MR. RUBIN: We have information that a seismic event with explosive characteristics occurred in the vicinity of the Russian nuclear test range at Novaya Zemlya on August the 16th. The information we have is still under intensive review. We are currently engaged in a dialogue with Russia and with other countries regarding this event.

Let me point out that the information we have is not conclusive. We are not able to confirm that a nuclear test has taken place, thus we cannot rule out an earthquake or another natural explanation like the one the Russians provided to you. So that's the situation. The information is not conclusive. We haven't been able to confirm that a nuclear test has taken place. But obviously information came to our attention that was troubling. There were some early indication of its explosive characteristics. Now what we're doing is what we are supposed to be doing, which is talking to the Russians about what they know and what information they have, expressing our concern about the matter, and talking to our allies who may have additional information, and assessing what is complicated science, which is trying to determine what this event was.

QUESTION: Just a follow-up. Did the Secretary discuss this issue with Foreign Minister Primakov this morning when she talked to him?

MR. RUBIN: She spoke to him yesterday. I do not believe this came up other than in passing because it was deemed to be something the experts had to work on. But I would be surprised if she didn't mention it. The purpose of the call was focused on Bosnia in advance of Ambassador Gelbard's visit there and the Middle East trip.

QUESTION: Mr. Rubin is there currently a crisis in confidence? Was there a serious loss of face by the North Koreans over the defector, and the timing of the talks, and that fact that we didn't call the talks off? And what is being done by the U.S. Government - I understand we visited the North Koreans today routinely in New York - what is being done to, let's say, gain confidence, gain trust in this relationship and get them to the four-party talks?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I would point out that I welcome your attempt to link analogies. But in the Middle East, there were peace agreements, and in the Korean peninsula there have not even been replacements of armistice agreements. So we are a long way from the same base from which the crisis could be created. However, let me say this, in the first preparatory talks in August, the four parties agreed to hold another preparatory meeting to take place the week of September 15th.

To date the DPRK has said nothing further to us related to the question of whether they will arrive the week of September the 15th. So far, so good. We see no linkage between the case and the four-party peace process. I can't speak for the DPRK, but we believe they have made clear in the past that the four-party process is something that's in their interest. The talks are clearly in their interest, in our view. They are in the interest of all the people on Korean Peninsula. They are a way to bring stability and, hopefully, prosperity to the region.

I can't get into the practice of detailing publicly every time we talk to the North Koreans. I can say that we do have regular working-level contact with them, and we are hoping that, during the course of the coming weeks, that they will make clear they are prepared to set a date for the missile talks that were postponed. We're hoping that, when September 15th rolls around, we will be in a position to discuss this important negotiation. But we're quite cognizant of the fact that, in the past, some cases like these or similar to these have temporarily interfered with the diplomatic process, and that has interfered with the scheduling of negotiations. So that's certainly a possibility, but so far, so good.

QUESTION: What would you say to Selig Harrison's comment that what happened this week with the North Koreans strengthens hard-liners in North Korea who want confrontation with the U.S. instead of engagement?

MR. RUBIN: I guess what I would say to Selig Harrison is that he writes interesting op ed pieces.

QUESTION: Another North Korea question?

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: Have the North Koreans officially communicated to the United States about their demand to send back the ambassador and his family?

MR. RUBIN: Well, again, without breaking the confidentiality of diplomatic discussions, there was a working-level meeting recently, and given the timing of what had transpired, I leave you to draw your own conclusions.

QUESTION: I have some questions on Northern Ireland. In the light of the British Government's announcement today that Sinn Fein will be able to join the talks on September the 15th, , can we first have your reaction to that? And then a second question, looking at the visit next week of Gerry Adams, what you expect to achieve through that? And also, what specific, if any, American involvement do you see from now on in, in the peace process?

MR. RUBIN: The British government has announced that the cease fire declared on July 19th by the IRA is genuine in word and deed. The British and Irish governments have long held that Sinn Fein may join in the all- party talks in Belfast only when the IRA ceased all violent operations. The United States has strongly supported this position and welcomes both the cease-fire itself and the inclusion of Sinn Fein in the talks, which we consider to be the best means of achieving a lasting overall settlement in Northern Ireland.

As far as the American role in the talks, I believe Senator George Mitchell is an American, and Secretary Albright and he know each other extremely well. I observed Senator Mitchell working very closely with President Clinton during some political events in the United States last fall, and I am sure that Senator Mitchell will be keeping in touch with the United States during the course of these talks.

Again, these are, like many negotiations around the world, where the hard choices, the real decisions, the ultimate success will depend on whether the parties themselves have come to a conclusion that peace through the negotiating table is better than conflict through the streets. That's their decision. All we can do in this kind of a case is try to make ourselves available to assist in the process. That's what Senator Mitchell is doing.

As far as your third question is concerned, I don't know that we have an objective for Gerry Adams' visit. You'll have to ask Gerry Adams what his objective is. We provided the visa under the normal restrictions we've provided in the context of a cease-fire, and those restrictions are the same; namely, no restrictions except we will, obviously, be interested to know what kind of fundraising goes on.

QUESTION: On Bosnia.

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: Could you bring us up to date on the developments on the ground there? Also, specifically, NATO issued a statement today threatening the use of force in the case of incendiary radio and television broadcasts. I think there was one overnight that might fit that category. The prime minister of the Bosnian Serb Republic is quoted as encouraging the Brcko riders to carry on. So should we expect the use of force against TV and radio in the Republika Srpska?

MR. RUBIN: According to SFOR, the situation today has been relatively calm. We believe that the violence yesterday was orchestrated; it wasn't spontaneous. The RS prime minister broadcast an incendiary message to citizens, urging them to resist SFOR. There was clearly a coordinated use of media to incite violence. Pale media falsely accused the international forces of murder. Sirens were used to call out the population in Brcko, who descended upon the bridge where SFOR troops were stationed.

Let me say that we condemn this call to violence by an elected official. As far as what SFOR will or won't do, SFOR's mandate is to ensure a secure environment, and SFOR will take action when necessary to carry out its mandate. There will be a zero tolerance for violence. As far as what use of force might be expected in the future, I think I'd be surprised if anyone pre-details the use of force. That would be dumb, and I'm hoping not to start off my career at the podium by being stupid.

QUESTION: But does the prime minister's statement on the radio constitute a violation of the zero tolerance for violence or the incitement of violence?

MR. RUBIN: Yes, it does. As far as what steps we will take, that is up to NATO and SFOR to determine. Let me say this: There have been some surprising commentaries in recent days around the idea that because there was a relatively modest incident yesterday involving stones and bricks -- Secretary Albright was herself was the subject of such an incident not that far away -- Roy, I think you were with us - in the Serb part of Croatia. Contrary to the perception that some have given to this, we're at a turning point, and this turning point in the Republika Srpska shows that large numbers of residents have been rejecting Karadzic and his cronies and the Pale faction's leadership, which has been against Dayton and has led to their economic and political isolation.

Increasing numbers of residents seem to be siding with President Plavsic, who has stated her support for full implementation of Dayton. The crowds supporting Mrs. Plavsic have numbered 5,000 in recent days, while the crowds in support of Pale have dwindled. They are in a situation where the tide of history is turning in favor of the supporters of peace in Bosnia, and there are some bad apples who continue to try to spoil it for the rest of the people of Bosnia.

That will continue there for a long time, but the momentum has clearly shifted in favor of the supporters of peace, in favor of Mrs. Plavsic. There are increasing numbers of police who are seeking to join the new police force that the international community is setting up. I gather the numbers are up to 800 police who have sought to join this restructured police. There are increasing numbers of towns that have pledged their loyalty to the constitutionally elected government.

So things are moving in the right direction. That doesn't mean there aren't going to be some bad apples who are going to try to use this kind of intimidation, but SFOR is well equipped to defend itself. As you know, SFOR is prepared to use force in a variety of circumstances, if that proves necessary.

QUESTION: May I follow up on one bit of this? Yesterday, Holbrooke said - I believe it was on ABC or - yeah, I think it was on ABC - that if the Serbs continue their action and their non-willingness to work and their confrontational manner, that NATO will deal with them swiftly and severely. However, yesterday, also, General Shalikashvili said that he doesn't want any U.S. troops endangered, and there's only so far they could go.

Could you just tell us, once again - I know you've probably repeated this before - but how far will NATO go?

MR. RUBIN: I'd urge you, when quoting General Shalikashvili, to be more accurate. What he said yesterday was that NATO forces were not in the business of hunting down war criminals. That is a position that spokesmen for this government have taken for months and months. There's nothing new there. He made clear that that is not their mission, hunting down war criminals, and we have made clear for some time that they have the authority, and if circumstances permit, where the tactical commander makes a decision to do so, he has the authority, but the idea that their mission ought to be running around and seeking war criminals is not the position of the United States. That's all that General Shalikashvili said, as far as I can tell.

QUESTION: Comments on Holbrooke's remarks, though, the "severe" comments, I mean, that NATO troops would take severe --

MR. RUBIN: I mean, you keep characterizing -

QUESTION: -- and swift action.

MR. RUBIN: I don't understand. I've said the same thing, which is that NATO troops, SFOR troops, are prepared to use force to support the Dayton agreements. They will make the decisions when. It would be a grave mistake for people to test their willingness to defend themselves or to defend the agreement.

QUESTION: What was Mr. Gelbard's message to the Russians vis-&agrave;-vis the elections? What was the Russian response to it? What is Mr. Gelbard's message for Milosevic today?

MR. RUBIN: One of the reasons I was eight and a half minutes late is that I was on the phone with Ambassador Gelbard. He had just finished a two and a half hour meeting with President Milosevic in which he had followed up on the Secretary's conversation, in which she had said to him, to President Milosevic, that the time has come for him to get off the fence, to get with the program, and to get on the side of those who are supporting the very peace agreement that he signed, and that it's long past due for him to do what he can to stop the invective coming out of Pale radio, to make sure the interior minister, Mr. Kijac is indeed taken out of the picture, in terms of his government role, and that he should get off the fence.

Ambassador Gelbard is an able diplomat, and he was being careful on an open line. I don't have anything to report other than to say that I think that President Milosevic fully understood the seriousness with which we attach to this current moment, and the fact that we will judge him and his country, and his country's future, by the steps he takes in the coming days and weeks. I don't think he has any illusions about that after Ambassador Gelbard's presentation.

As far as the Russia piece is concerned, he told me that his meetings went extremely well in Moscow and that he is going to be following up on them next week, and that we're going to be working closely with Russia to try to see that the elections that are scheduled for later this year, in September and October, have the full support of the OSCE, so that they can be held in as free and as fair a situation as possible.

QUESTION: Is the election to occur in September and October?

MR. RUBIN: That is the current plan, yes.

QUESTION: Mrs. Plavsic founded her party yesterday. Do you expect it to win any seats in September?

MR. RUBIN: Well, she also got a radio station and a TV station that will broadcast a different view to most of the people of western Bosnia. We're realists when it comes to how free and how fair these elections will be, but again, we had an election and Mrs. Plavsic was elected. And lo and behold, soon thereafter, some months thereafter, she began to support the Dayton agreement. So even when you don't always get the right situation for free and fair elections, moving in the direction of democracy, more elections are better than fewer elections. Again, we want to see what we can do to get as much work done between now and September and October, to see whether we can make it as free and fair as possible.

QUESTION: Jamie, just to follow on that and go back to Milosevic, what's the current understanding of his possible travel plans to Republika Srpska?

MR. RUBIN: I don't have that information in front of me, but as far as I recall from yesterday, we did not believe that neither he nor one of his deputies was intending to go to Bosnia, pursuant to the news accounts. Is that correct? I saw something to that effect. So we're not sure, but I think, if I were leaning in a direction today, as opposed to two days ago, I would be leaning - no, but I think President Milosevic can announce his travel schedule all by himself.

QUESTION: Back on the Russians.

MR. RUBIN: Yes.

QUESTION: Are they now acquiescing in the use of OSCE observers for the October parliamentary election in Republika Srpska?

MR. RUBIN: I think they agree with us on the need to try to do what we can to make the elections work. They had some concerns. That is what Ambassador Gelbard was working on with them. He, again, on an open line, was reluctant to get into a lot of details but did say that he was very encouraged and thought the meetings in Moscow had gone extremely well. So I leave you to draw your own conclusions from that.

Yes. I know what we're going to do here. Let me see. One, two, three. Cyprus.

QUESTION: Can we stick with Bosnia for a minute?

QUESTION: After the Italian foreign minister --

MR. RUBIN: One more on Bosnia.

QUESTION: There was a decision earlier this month that the specialized police surrounding Karadzic and guarding various people would be treated as a military force. The agreement apparently has not yet come into effect, and I was wondering why and when it will?

MR. RUBIN: Well, I don't think that's quite accurate either. SFOR has three stages for bringing special police under their control. They have identified special police units, inspected these units, and these units must comply fully with SFOR by August the 31st . And the issue is not whether the police are dismantled, but rather that they come under the control of SFOR, under Annex 1-A. We understand the process is proceeding on track. All units will be under SFOR control by the deadline of August 31st.

QUESTION: Now, what does that mean, in real terms, to the guard that is protecting Karadzic himself?

MR. RUBIN: Well, to the extent that any guards protecting Karadzic are part of the special police, they would no longer be permitted to guard indicted war criminals. To the extent that Mr. Karadzic's guards are civilians, the Dayton accords wouldn't apply. But, again, I would remind all indicted war criminals that they should not be sleeping well, that SFOR is determined to maintain a secure environment, that the international community has conducted operations in the past to bring them to justice. I suspect that, without the special police, he's going to feel a little less comfortable sleeping at night.

QUESTION: Have they, in fact, been protecting him up until now? Has this been a major force protecting him?

MR. RUBIN: Again, our knowledge and information about who protects Mr. Karadzic, how they protect him, and what they will do for him in the future would be foolish for us to discuss publicly.

Let's go to Cyprus. And you know what, they didn't even give me anything today, so I'm going to have to do it on memory.

QUESTION: You know the answer, of course. After the Italian foreign minister, the European Union, leaked to the press a non-paper saying that it has been recognized that there are two republics in Cyprus, two entities, two governments, something against your policy. Any comment?

MR. RUBIN: Yes. Today is Friday. On Wednesday, the question was almost identical. Whatever answer I gave you on Wednesday still holds.

QUESTION: Despite - on the Aegean issue -- despite the Madrid agreement you initiated, the Department of State, the last few days Turkish war planes are brutally violating the Greek air space over the Aegean, crossing even the Greek islands. Could you please comment on that?

MR. RUBIN: I'll try to get you - Mr. McClenny will be available later this afternoon to go through , in great detail with you, that information. Yes.

QUESTION: Jamie, about Mr. Vedrine's statement, he made --

MR. RUBIN: Mr. Vedrine?

QUESTION: Yes, Vedrine.

MR. RUBIN: Foreign Minister Vedrine. Yes.

QUESTION: Forgive my French.

MR. RUBIN: Pardon my French, very good.

QUESTION: He made -- Europe One Radio, Reuters has reported from Paris at 4:00 yesterday, in the morning. Anyway, you don't want to comment on that, I understand. My question is, now, do you have any information about the identity of the two suicide bombers in the market?

MR. RUBIN: No new information today.

QUESTION: Mr. Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi, the Hamas leader who embraced Arafat, remember?

MR. RUBIN: Right.

QUESTION: Yes. He made an interview with The Guardian newspaper, the British Guardian newspaper correspondent in Jerusalem, claiming that his organization is responsible for the suicide?

MR. RUBIN: I haven't seen that report.

QUESTION: You haven't seen that?

MR. RUBIN: We don't have any information to conclude that.

QUESTION: Mr. McCaffery, who has reported increasing violence on the border, a low-grade war, has himself been threatened with a rocket attack. There have been 200 U.S. agents - or, yes, 200 U.S. agents attacked in the last year and 200 Mexican agents dead. Can you comment, Jamie, about this increasing violence?

MR. RUBIN: General McCaffery has made it clear that he is aware of the threat that law enforcement officers on both sides of the border face. We do not want to speak to the details on any specific security issue, but we are aware of the threat. As far as attacking law enforcement officers is concerned, we consider this a grave situation, and we will be wanting to see what we can do to improve their security.

Thank you. (The briefing concluded at 1:28 P.M.).


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