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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

27 July 1998

EXCERPTS: CLINTON COMMENTS ON INDIA, PAKISTAN JULY 26

(Trip later this year is "still under review")  (1060)
Aspen, Colorado -- The May nuclear testing carried out by India and
Pakistan has "awakened the West -- and Americans, in particular -- to
the idea that a lot of our children's future will depend on what
happens in the Indian subcontinent," President Clinton said July 26.
He said he has spent "a lot of time" on trying to find ways to get the
two nations to improve relations. "And I'm still hopeful that before
the year is over, we'll be able to put them back on the right path
toward more constructive relations," he said.
Clinton spoke about about the importance to the world of India and
Pakistan in a question and answer session following remarks in Aspen
to Democratic campaign supporters.
After he spoke, Deputy White House Press Secretary Barry Toiv told
reporters that a Clinton trip to India and Pakistan that had initially
been planned for the end of this year "is still under review."
Following are the totality of the President's remarks relating to
India/Pakistan, taken from a DNC speech:
(begin excerpts)
Q: Mr. President, I've got a question about foreign policy. Do you
have any concern about India and Pakistan, South Asia, what's
happening over there? And what kind of leadership role you can take to
bring peace over there, or even float the idea of creating an
independent country of Kashmir, because that's the biggest problem
there -- what can you do about it?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, one of the problems we've had -- I thought -- I
actually feel bad about this because I had a trip set up for the fall
to India and Pakistan. And in 1993, when I took office, I got all of
our people -- actually, before I took office -- and I said, let's look
at the major foreign policy challenges this country faces and figure
out how we're going to
deal with them and in what order. And as you might imagine, we went
through the Middle East and Bosnia, and then we had Haiti on the list.
We went through the idea that we had to build a trade alliance with
Latin America; that we needed a systematic outreach to Africa; that
the big issues were how were Russia and China going to define their
future greatness and could we avoid a destructive future. And we
worked hard on that.
But I told everybody at the time, I said, one of the things that never
gets in the newspapers in America is the relationship between India
and Pakistan and what happens on the Indian subcontinent, where they
already -- India already has a population of over 900 million, in 30
years it will be more populous than China, it already has the world's
biggest middle class. And Pakistan has well over 100 million people
and so does Bangladesh. So it's an amazing place.
So I had planned to go there with plans to try to help resolve the
conflicts between the two countries. One big problem is India
steadfastly resists having any third party -- whether it's the United
States or the United Nations or anybody else -- try to mediate on
Kashmir. It's not surprising. India is bigger than Pakistan, but there
are more Muslims than Hindus in Kashmir -- the same reason that
Pakistan, on the flip side, is dying to have international mediation
because of the way the numbers work.
What I think we have to do is to go back to find a series of
confidence-building measures which will enable these two nations to
work together and trust each other more and to move back from the
brink of military confrontation and from nuclear confrontation. And we
have to find a way to involve the Russians and the Chinese because the
Indians always say they're building nuclear power because of China
being a nuclear power and the border disputes they've had with China.
And, oh, by the way, we happen to have this Pakistani problem.
So I have spent a lot of time on that, even though it hasn't achieved
a lot of notoriety in the press. And I'm still hopeful that before the
year is over, we'll be able to put them back on the right path toward
more constructive relations. I mean, India, interestingly enough, is a
democracy just as diverse, if not more diverse, than America. Almost
no one knows this. But most -- most, but not all -- the various
minorities groups in India live along the borders of India in the
north.
And it would be, I think, a terrible tragedy if Hindu nationalism led
to both estrangement with the Muslim countries on the border and the
minorities -- Muslim and otherwise -- within the borders of India,
when Ghandi basically set the country up as a model of what we would
all like to be, and when India's democracy has survived for 50 years
under the most adverse circumstances conceivable and is now, I
believe, in a position to really build a level of prosperity that has
not been possible before.
I feel the same thing with the Pakistanis. I think if they could
somehow -- they're much more vulnerable to these economic sanctions
than the Indians are. If they could somehow ease their concerns which
are leading to such enormous military expenditures and put it into
people expenditures, we could build a different future there. I don't
know if I can do any good with it, but I certainly intend to try
because I think, whether we like it or not, I think that the one good
thing that the nuclear tests have done is that they have awakened the
West -- and Americans, in particular -- to the idea that a lot of our
children's future will depend on what happens in the Indian
subcontinent.
Q:  How about if you called their prime ministers here?
PRESIDENT CLINTON: Well, I can't force a settlement on them, but I can
-- that's why I say because of their relationships with Russia and
China, we need their help as well. And so far the Russians and the
Chinese have been very helpful to me in trying to work out a policy
that we can pursue. But I'm working on it. Believe me, if I thought it
would work, I would do it tomorrow, and I will continue to explore
every conceivable option.
(end excerpts)




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