UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

                           THE WHITE HOUSE
                    Office of the Press Secretary
______________________________________________________________
For Immediate Release                              June 19, 1994     
                            PRESS BRIEFING
                                  BY
             ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE ROBERT GALLUCCI
	     
                          The Briefing Room
	     	  
1:10 P.M. EDT
	     
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  Good afternoon.  I'd like 
to begin with a comment or two on this morning's meeting.  President 
Carter met this morning with the National Security Advisor and some 
other officials, including myself.  We met for about two hours.  It 
was a good meeting.  It provided more detail on his visit to DPRK --
to North Korea.  We learned more about the message that he is 
carrying back.  I'd say the talks were very constructive and very 
useful.
	     During the course of that meeting, President Clinton 
also spoke with President Carter for over a half an hour.  And I'd 
say, on balance, we now are in a position to do as we said we would, 
which is to follow up on the results of President Carter's trip in 
diplomatic channels.  And we plan to do that just as soon as 
possible.
	     I'd be prepared to answer questions now.
	     Q	  Do you agree with the former President that the 
crisis is over?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  We have never said that 
this was a crisis.  Our view of this is that we are working very hard 
to avoid a crisis from materializing.  And it may well be that 
President Carter has brought back something upon which we can build 
and defuse the situation.
	     Q	  Do you agree with his assessment, whatever it was, 
whether it was a crisis or not, that the serious situation has been 
ameliorated or mitigated to some extent?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I think what we have here 
-- I think you're looking for a characterization of what has 
happened.  And I think the characterization I'm comfortable with is 
that there may be an opening here.  Certainly we're very appreciative 
of President Carter's good efforts.  If they do in fact lead to 
practical results, we'll be extremely pleased, obviously.  But at 
this point, we're -- our posture is one in which we really do need to 
follow up on what he has brought back to see just exactly how much is 
there.
	     Q	  Did you get precise detail from President Carter 
about what the North Koreans mean by a freeze in their nuclear 
program?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  We spoke at some length 
with President Carter about his understandings of what the North 
Koreans had told him.  I will tell you that our view is as we stated 
it last week, that what we are looking for at this point is for the 
North Koreans to agree that they really will not reprocess any of 
that spent fuel, not separate any more plutonium; that they will not 
refuel the reactor -- that is to say, not produce any more plutonium; 
that they will maintain the presence or permit the IAEA to maintain 
the presence of the inspectors and, generally, to maintain the 
continuity of safeguards.  
	     And when I say we're going to follow up in diplomatic 
channels, that's what we're going to do.
	     Q	  If I could just follow up on that -- is it your 
understanding from what he has told you so far, is it your 
understanding that the North Koreans are willing to meet those three 
specific conditions?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  What I can tell you at 
this point is we have a better appreciation of the position of the 
DPRK, but our intention to get a precise and official view is to do 
that in a diplomatic channel.  And I really can't go beyond that.
	     Q	  Could you give us your reaction to his statement 
that there are no unanswered questions?  And tell me, if you would, 
what the step is.  Do you go to New York?  Do you talk to the U.N. 
delegation?  What is your --
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  Sorry, I need for you to 
help me here -- "there are no more unanswered questions" -- can you 
give me a context?
	     Q	  He just says, as far as I'm concerned, there are no 
unanswered questions.  
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I'm sorry, I can't 
explain what President Carter meant by that, and I would really ask 
you to ask him what the context is for that.  
	     Is there another question there that I --
	     Q	  Yes.  Do you go to New York now?  What happens now?  
Tomorrow --
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  The modality, as 
diplomats like to say, for following up in diplomatic channels I 
really can't comment on at this point.  What I can tell you is, we 
will follow up, we'll follow up just as quickly as we can.
	     Q	  Are you reconsidering, sir, the need for sanctions?  
Are sanctions, indeed, held in abeyance, as he suggested?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  Our position on sanctions 
is, as we have said it is, and that is that we are pursuing 
consultations in New York.  Certainly, our hope is that if as a 
result of the follow-up in a diplomatic channel, we can agree on the 
pursuit of a settlement through a diplomatic means, through a third 
round, that in that context, certainly once that is agreed we would 
suspend their effort at sanctions.
	     Q	  Do you generally agree with Mr. Clinton just that 
you can generally trust what they're telling you at this point, what 
the North Koreans are saying that they will agree to do?  Do you feel 
that?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I think what I would 
prefer to say is that we will be going back to the DPRK.  We will try 
to be precise about exactly what they are prepared to do, and if what 
they are prepared to do will meet our needs with respect to a basis, 
then we'll go to a third round.  I think at this point, as we have 
been for some time, we've taken the position that what happens on the 
ground in North Korea at the nuclear facilities is something that 
needs to be monitored by the IAEA.  We need to have verification.  
That's a standard international condition; it's nothing special in 
this case, and it's something we hold to.
	     Q	  What is there in Mr. Carter's report to you this 
morning that leads you to the conclusion that, quote, "there may be 
an opening here."  What makes you think there is an opening?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  President Carter reported 
when he was in the DPRK and, indeed, gave us more detail this morning 
about the interest of Kim Il Sung and others in the DPRK government 
to, in the first instance, be willing to freeze the nuclear program, 
an interest in genuinely decommissioning and putting aside a graphite 
technology, which is, from a proliferation perspective, very 
troubling, and move to light water reactors; generally an interest in 
improving relations and meeting international standards; and in the 
context of an overall settlement, in fact, even settling questions of 
the past of special inspections, which was the issue, you will 
recall, over which this current situation materialized over a year 
ago.
	     So there's much that could be there, and the issue, 
again, to say it over again is, we need to determine whether it is 
there.
	     Q	  What was there at Camp David today that was so 
important that President Clinton can come here to the White House and 
meet with President Carter in person?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I'm sorry, I cannot 
answer that.  I simply don't know what was going on at Camp David 
today, so I can't speak to that.
	     Q	  What was the reaction to the offer by Kim to allow 
joint searches for men missing from the Korean War through the U.S. 
and North Korea?  And this is something that's been hanging fire for 
a long time and he's now professed to offer agreement on it.
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  Yes.  I can't speak to 
this in any detail, but the preliminary assessment of this, like much 
else, is very positive.  If, indeed, this is a new position by the 
DPRK, if, indeed, they are offering to have joint efforts and 
locating and then executing the return of remains, it would be very 
welcome.  But exactly what's involved here and what is the DPRK 
position I can't say at this point.
	     Q	  Will it be pursued through the same channels as the 
verification on the nuclear issue, or is there a separate channel on 
that?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  It will be a separate 
channel.  It will be a separate channel.  
	     Q	  Can you tell us about that?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I'm afraid I can't speak 
to that.  It will be a separate channel in Korea, I'm certain, but 
not in the same context as we're pursuing the nuclear issue.
	     Q	  I understand that you want to hear from the North 
Koreans directly precisely what they're willing to do.  But from what  
President Carter reported, are they willing to meet the conditions 
you've laid out?  Or, alternatively, was there anything that he had 
to report that gives you pause?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I think that really goes 
back to the same question, and I can't go beyond what I said before.  
We have substantially more detail as a result  of today's meetings, 
and they were very useful, but for an official in an authoritative 
position of the DPRK, it is reasonable to expect that we would get 
that in diplomatic channel.  And that's exactly what we're going 
after.
	     Q	  Did you express any concerns, or did Mr. Lake, to 
President Carter about mixed messages?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  There is no question that 
all of us read the newspapers over the last few days. 
	     Q	  But was there any direct concern expressed to him 
in this meeting today?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I think we all agreed in 
the course of this meeting that U.S. policy was stated by President 
Clinton.  I don't think President Carter had any problem with that 
whatever.  And I think we are all on the same sheet of music.
	     Q	  All on the same sheet of music?
	     Q	  You are now?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  That is my understanding, 
yes.
	     Q	  Were there some dissonant chords on that sheet of 
music?  (Laughter.)
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I love the metaphor, but 
I can't go any further with it.
	     Q	  How are you going to coordinate with South Korea as 
to North and South Korean summit?  That's another message that 
President Carter brought up.
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  Obviously, we welcome the 
concept of a summit meeting between the two Presidents as a step we 
hope would ultimately lead in a reduction of tensions between North 
and South Korea.  And, obviously also, we will be talking to the 
Republic of Korea about their plans, as we will be describing to them 
our plans with respect to following up on the matters that President 
Carter brought back from him.  Consultations, in short, with the 
Republic of Korea will continue across the whole range of these 
issues.
	     Q	  How can you say that you're all on the same sheet 
of music when President Carter just told us that the agreement is a 
done deal, that there's no need for sanctions, we should go directly 
into a third round?  And you're saying something quite different --
that it's not a done deal, you need to have clarification through 
diplomatic channels, you need verification of what Kim Il Sung said? 
We're getting a message from Carter even today that is totally at 
variance from what you're giving us.  Can you reconcile those two?
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  What I can do for you is 
tell you that by saying that we're on the sheet of music I did not 
mean to say that everything that President Carter thinks and 
everything that President Clinton thinks are exactly the same about 
all matters.  What I meant to say by that is, on the issue I thought 
was before us, whether President Carter had a different view about 
what we were doing in New York, I did not think he did based upon our 
conversations today.  
	     My own view, having listened to President Carter, is 
that he understands that we are indeed continuing to consult on 
sanctions.  And President Carter has views about the utility of 
sanctions; he has views about the North Koreans, and those are the 
views of President Carter.  And I invite you to explore them with 
him.  I can't say to you that at every point, this administration 
will agree with President Carter.  But he certainly has a right to 
those views.
	     On the substance of what we are doing right now, I don't 
detect any difference in principle or important difference whatever.  
He well understands that our intention is to take advantage of this 
opening that he may well have created here.  And I think he's 
certainly extremely supportive of that.  That's what we talked to him 
about in detail, as well as the message he was bringing back.  So I 
say again, I don't think there is any substantive difference, and I 
think the characterization as it being otherwise is incorrect.
	     Q	  So overall, you view the trip as helpful to forming 
U.S. policy.  You view the Carter mission as an assist rather than as 
something negative.
	     ASSISTANT SECRETARY GALLUCCI:  I would like to answer 
that unambiguously and clearly -- yes, we welcome President Carter's 
efforts, and we intend on following up on them immediately.
	     Q	  Dee Dee, will we hear from the President today or 
do you have a statement from him, a written statement on this?
	     MS MYERS:  No.
	     Q	  Is there any reason why he has nothing to say?
	     MS. MYERS:  Secretary Gallucci just spoke on behalf of 
the administration, and we don't have anything else planned for 
today.
	     Q	  Do you expect him to talk when he gets in?
	     MS. MYERS:  No.
	     Q	  Do you know when he's coming back?
	     MR. STEPHANOPOULOS:  I think sometime between 6:30 p.m. 
and 7:00 p.m.
	     Q	  A 30-minute telephone conversation within the two-
hour meeting?
	     MS. MYERS:  No.  The meeting lasted two hours.  The 
phone conversation was an additional half hour.
	     Q	  You mean after the two hours?
	     MS. MYERS:  I think it was actually before.
	     Q	     just before 10:00 a.m.  The meeting broke up 
just after noon.
	     MR. STEPHANOPOULOS:  Yes.  He met with Tony and a couple 
of others.  Then they took the phone call for about half an hour.  
Then he continued meeting.
	     Q	  The total overall time was two hours.
	     Q	  When Carter met with these guys, was it one-on-one, 
or was it like a round robin meeting, or how was it?
	     MS. MYERS:  It was Tony one-on-one for a while, and then 
the expanded group that included Win Lord, Sandy Berger, Bob Gallucci 
and Dan Poneman.
	     Q	  Do you care to characterize the phone conversation 
he had with the President?
	     MS. MYERS:  I t was a very good conversation.
	     Q	  Where was it in the meeting?  Was it the end, 
middle-end?
	     MS. MYERS:  Middle.  (Laughter.)
	     Q	  You mean it was close to either the beginning or 
the end?
	     MS. MYERS:  Correct.  It was neither the beginning, nor 
the end.
	     Q	  What I'm really trying to ask, Dee Dee or George, 
is was there something the President wanted to hear before he'd get 
on the phone?  Was there something they wanted to elicit?
	     MR. STEPHANOPOULOS:  He just wanted a briefing.
	     Q	  Okay.
                                 END1:23 P.M. EDT



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list