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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

17 November 1997

TRANSCRIPT: CLINTON REMARKS ON IRAQ AT CESSNA FACILITY NOV. 17

(The President is trying to settle Iraq issue peacefully) (2970)
Wichita, Kansas -- President Clinton says he is "trying to settle" the
Iraq "issue peacefully," but notes "our diplomatic efforts must be
backed by our strong military capability.
"We cannot rule out any options," he said at the Cessna Training
Facility here the afternoon of November 17. "But the bottom line is we
have to understand this; it is essential that those inspectors go back
to work. The safety of the children of the world depends upon it. And
I ask for your support."
The President told the audience at Cessna that "it's important that
you understand what is at stake here. Since the end of the Gulf War,
for six years, inspectors, under the authority of the United Nations,
have been trying to find and destroy Saddam Hussein's capacity to
threaten his neighbors -- and, potentially, others around the world --
with nuclear or biological or chemical weapons.
The UN inspectors, Clinton said, "have found and destroyed more
weapons of mass destruction potential in the last six years -- these
quiet inspectors, whom no one knows -- they have destroyed more of
this potential than was destroyed in the entire Gulf War with all of
the air attacks.
"What they are doing matters," he said. "It matters to you, to your
children and to the future, because this is a challenge we must face
not just in Iraq but throughout the world. We must not allow the 21st
century to go forward under a cloud of fear that terrorists, organized
criminals, drug traffickers will terrorize people with chemical and
biological weapons the way the nuclear threat hung over the heads of
the whole world through the last half of this century. That is what is
at issue."
Following is the White House transcript:
(begin transcript)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
(Wichita, Kansas)
November 17, 1997
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE WORKERS AND TRAINEES OF CESSNA
Cessna Campus Building
Wichita, Kansas
THE PRESIDENT: I think we should give them another hand -- they were
fabulous, weren't they? Thank you, Tanya and Jodee. Thank you, Russ
Meyer. Thank my friend, Eli Segal, for doing such a great job in
getting other companies into this endeavor. Thank you, Michael
Starnes, for the incredible support that the United States Chamber of
Commerce has given to this effort.
I thank Secretary Glickman and Secretary Herman and Secretary Cuomo,
who is not here, for the work they have done in supporting this
endeavor and others like it around America. I'd also like to thank the
large number, the unusually large number of public officials who are
here today, proving that we come to celebrate a victory for America --
a victory of people, not party or politics, but an old-fashioned
victory for American dignity and possibility, for people succeeding at
work and succeeding in raising their children -- an old-fashioned
reaffirmation that our American Dream is still very much alive and
well if we all pitch in and do our part.
So thank you, Governor Graves, and thank you Senator Roberts and
Senator Brownback, Congressman Tiahrt, Congressman Ryan, Mayor Knight
and the other state officials and legislative leaders and council
members who are here. I am very grateful to all of you for being here.
The sign says it's all about people, and I would like to suggest that
you consider renaming the 21st Street Campus to the 21st Century
Campus, because you really are an embodiment of the future America has
to make.
Ladies and gentlemen, before I make the few remarks I'd like to make
on this issue, I think it is appropriate, since it's my first
appearance of the week, to just give you a brief update on the
situation in IraQ: Even when I was walking through here a number of
people asked me about it.
First, it's important that you understand what is at stake here. Since
the end of the Gulf War, for six years, inspectors, under the
authority of the United Nations, have been trying to find and destroy
Saddam Hussein's capacity to threaten his neighbors and potentially
others around the world with nuclear or biological or chemical
weapons. They have found and destroyed more weapons of mass
destruction potential in the last six years -- these quiet inspectors
who no one knows -- they have destroyed more of this potential than
was destroyed in the entire Gulf War, with all of the air attacks.
What they are doing matters. It matters to you, to your children and
to the future, because this is a challenge we must face not just in
Iraq, but throughout the world. We must not allow the 21st century to
go forward under a cloud of fear that terrorists, organized criminals,
drug traffickers will terrorize people with chemical and biological
weapons the way the nuclear threat hung over the heads of the whole
world through the last half of this century. That is what is at issue.
In his defiance of international community, Saddam Hussein has forced
the withdrawal of the inspectors. Now, I am trying to settle this
issue peacefully. But our diplomatic efforts must be backed by our
strong military capability. We cannot rule out any options. But the
bottom line is, we have to understand this. It is essential that those
inspectors go back to work. The safety of the children of the world
depends upon it. And I ask for your support.
I told Russ Meyer this morning that before I got my present job I
spent a lot of time flying around the farmland and the mountains of
Arkansas in Cessna airplanes. And it occurs to me that for a long time
now Cessna has helped a lot of people take to the air in your planes.
Today, we come to celebrate Cessna's efforts to help people fly higher
all by themselves. And it is a truly remarkable thing.
This program, the partnership between Cessna and HUD, the Labor
Department, the city of Wichita, the state of Kansas, provides
training because people need it to get good jobs; provides child care
-- and, by the way, I got to visit the child care facility today, so
in addition to my model airplane, I have a logo constructed giraffe.
And I think if it's all the same to you, I'll put them both up in the
Oval Office so people can see what's going on here.
It provides temporary housing, recognizing that a lot of people who
have been poor and who have children and don't have transportation to
go a long way to work. And, most important, it provides a job. Every
company in America ought to take notice of what Cessna is doing. It's
a model for the nation. It proves once again that the best social
program ever
devised is a job -- a good job with dignity that allows people to
support their children.
Six years ago when I ran for president I wanted to restore what I
always thought was the basic bargain in America that everybody had a
right to an opportunity in life if they exercised the personal
responsibility that goes along with it. That is the only way we can
keep the American Dream alive in the 21st century for everyone, and
it's the only way we can continue to lead the world for peace and
freedom. In the end, it's the only way we can come together across all
the differences in our increasingly diverse nation.
In the last 5 years, as Secretary Glickman said, the American people
have made a lot of progress toward restoring that basic bargain.
Unemployment is the lowest in 24 years. The deficit has been cut by 92
percent, and now that the balanced budget law is triggering, it will
be even balanced soon, for the first time in a generation. We see the
lowest crime rate in 24 years, the biggest drop in welfare rolls ever,
incomes rising and poverty dropping, the environment improving as the
economy advances -- something a lot of people didn't think was
possible. And families are getting more support not only in work, but
in raising their children and educating them and in meeting all their
obligations.
So there is a sense of confidence in this country that you can feel in
this room today that we really can make America work for everybody
again. You have earned that confidence -- you and all the America
people -- through hard work, a vision for the future, and a
willingness to embrace new ideas for new times.
But I will say again, as many on the program have said before, if
we're going to make America everything that we want it to be,
everybody has got to have the chance at the brass ring in life. And we
know that if our free enterprise system is going to work we're going
to have to be able to train people for the areas where there are job
shortages, where, by and large, are areas that pay more.
You already heard our chamber president talk about the shortage of
truck drivers. Whatever it's worth, when I was governor, I paid to
train a bunch of them and I'm proud of it. And we're going to get on
that and see what we can do.
We have literally hundreds of thousands of openings in
computer-related jobs in America -- literally. You've got people out
here dying to go to work, and jobs over here and a mishmash between
them because they haven't done what Cessna has done. Either the
training is not there or the child care is not there or the
transportation is not there. There's something keeping people who are
dying to do their part from getting there.
So that's why we're here to celebrate. The main reason I showed up,
apart from the sheer satisfaction of it and
the joy, is that sometimes when I show up it gets enough publicity
that people find out what you're doing. I don't care if they hear what
I say, I want them to see what you're doing so other people will do
it.
Now, when I took office I had already been involved with this whole
issue of welfare reform for a long time. I started -- I became
seriously concerned about this in 1980 when I realized what a problem
it was. And over the years I served as governor of my state I spent
quite a bit of time in welfare offices. I spent a lot of time talking
to people who had been on public assistance. I spent a lot of time
talking to employers who tried to hire people and when it didn't work
to try to find out why it didn't work out. And I think that I have
learned a fair amount about it and every good thing I've learned was
confirmed here today.
It was obvious to me that if we were going to ever break the cycle of
dependence in America we had to change our approach, and we had to
change our idea about what the role of government is. Some people
thought that it was inevitable that a certain number of people are
always going to be poor and in difficult circumstances. That may be
true -- misfortune happens to a certain number of people, and nearly
for all of us misfortune will happen to us in some way or another over
the course of our lives. But that doesn't mean that the answer was
just to keep the status quo, because the status quo wasn't working --
giving people a check that didn't even keep up with inflation was not
working. Neither was neglect an option.
So our governing philosophy has been to try to create the conditions
for good economy and then give people the tools to make the most of
their own lives, and whenever possible, to work in partnership with
the private sector. In the first couple of years I was in office we
did that by giving over 40 states permission to try their own hand at
moving people from welfare to work.
Eventually, we were able to agree -- the Republicans and the Democrats
together by an overwhelming majority in the Congress -- to reform the
present welfare system, saying that everybody who can work, must work;
but also providing support for employers who were willing to hire
welfare recipients, maintaining government support for children's
health care and nutrition where necessary, providing extra help to
communities with very high unemployment rates and, I think probably
most important of all, giving the states some more help to provide
adequate child care when people are working for employers that are
much smaller than Cessna and perhaps not able to provide that on their
own.
The budget I signed into law last summer included $3 billion for
welfare-to-work programs, increased tax incentives for businesses to
hire people off welfare. So we changed the role of government. But
that's only the first step. We also have to change the role of the
private sector. And, again, I
cannot say enough about your CEO and all the leaders of this company,
all up and down, everybody who has been involved in this program,
because you have shown what has to be done.
We know that almost all the jobs in America are in the private sector.
I'm very proud of the fact that way over 90 percent of the new jobs
created in America in the last five years have been in the private
sector. The capacity to train people for the jobs that are needed in a
given place is in the private sector. But most of all, the necessary
vision, mind and heart to do the job are here. That's why we started
the Welfare to Work Partnership. And I asked my friend, Eli Segal, who
left a very successful business career, first of all, to help us start
our national service program, AmeriCorps, to head up this Welfare to
Work Partnership.
Last May, we started with 105 companies at the White House who said
they would be a part of this. They pledged to enlist a thousand
companies between May and November. It's November. Now, how have they
done? In six months, more than 2,500 companies in America have pledged
to hire welfare recipients. These companies have over 5 million
employees. Some of them are big, like Cessna; 24 of them are in the
biggest hundred companies in America. But 75 percent of them are small
businesses. We need all of these companies.
In addition to that, Eli's got an advisory board of governors which
includes 10 Democratic governors, 10 Republican governors. Again, this
is not about politics or party, this is about people. This has to be
an American crusade. More and more businesses are realizing that this
can be a good thing not only for our families and our country, but for
businesses as well.
And again, let me say, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce launching a
campaign to convince every chamber in the country other join the
effort is the big next step, because you heard Russ say, we've got
2,500 companies; when we get 10,000 we'll really be talking turkey and
we'll be doing something that will make a big dent in this nationwide.
I am delighted that we've had almost 2 million people move off the
welfare rolls since the welfare reform law passed, almost 4 million
people in the last five years. But there are a lot more folks out
there, and we have to do it. We are going to strengthen the work
requirements of welfare reform, but we need to strengthen the support
we give to people to meet those work requirements.
Let me just say in closing that I think it was obvious to anybody who
was here today that the most popular speakers were Tanya and Jodee.
What I want to say to you is, I've been all over the country and I've
met a lot of people who had a setback in life, many of them have
terribly situations at home, almost every one of them passionately
devoted to the welfare of their children, who thought they would be
stuck on welfare forever, and somehow they made it out.
And the real idea behind all of this is, if some people can make it
but everybody wants to make it, it's up to those of us who have made
it, as Russ said, to create a system where everybody who wants to has
a shot. Because it's important that we understand, while Tanya and
Jodee are remarkable people -- and I might add, such good speakers
that they might consider public office as a career option -- they are
not alone. Their stories are mirrored by -- there is a story in every
one of these graduates who stood up here today. When they all stood up
and we clapped, every one of them has got a story like their two
stories. And what you have to know is, every person out there in
America who is in a difficult situation has also got a story and a
heart and a mind. And most of them aren't in a program like this now
and aren't even close to it.
That's why we're here. If you liked what you saw when they spoke, you
would love it if everybody with that story could be standing before a
microphone in the community in which they live making the same speech.
That is what we're here to ensure. And thanks to Cessna, we've got a
lot better chance than we had before.
Thank you and God bless you.
(end transcript)




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