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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

USIS Washington File

02 December 1998

TRANSCRIPT: CLINTON, SHARIF REMARKS DURING PHOTO OP, 12/2

(President is "encouraged" by Pakistan and India talks) (2710)
Washington -- President Clinton says he is "very encouraged" that
India and Pakistan have resumed direct talks on many of the difficult
issues that have kept the two nations at bitter odds during the last
five decades.
Speaking to reporters during a photo opportunity in the Oval Office
with visiting Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, Clinton said he
"applauds" Sharif for supporting the resumption of direct talks with
India, and hopes that the people of Pakistan will also support their
leader in this regard.
Asked if he is willing to help settle the two nations' armed conflict
over Kashmir, Clinton said he is ready to "do anything" he can to
resolve it.
"You know, that's the work that I always like to do," Clinton said.
"I've enjoyed my opportunities to work with the parties in the Middle
East and in Northern Ireland, but it only works when both parties wish
the United States to be involved."
Clinton also said he "very much hopes" it will be possible for him to
renew plans to visit both India and Pakistan next year. "I've looked
forward to it for a long time and I hope I will be able to go," he
said, adding that he also hopes Pakistan will soon sign the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty.
For his part, Sharif thanked Clinton for inviting him to the White
House and said he looked forward to working with the President on the
full range of issues that Pakistan and the United States have "in
common," including nuclear non-proliferation, terrorism and the
situation in Afghanistan.
Sharif also said another objective of his three-day visit to the
United States is to "remove all the misperceptions" surrounding
U.S.-Pakistani bilateral relations.
Following is the White House transcript:
(Begin transcript)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
December 2, 1998
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
IN PHOTO OPPORTUNITY WITH
PRIME MINISTER SHARIF OF PAKISTAN
The Oval Office
THE PRESIDENT: Let me begin by saying I am delighted to welcome Prime
Minister Sharif and his group here to the White House and to the Oval
Office. The United States values its long friendship with Pakistan
very, very much.
We have a very full agenda today. All of you know of my concern to do
everything we can to end the nuclear competition in South Asia, which
I believe is a threat to Pakistan and India and to the stability of
the world. We also want to work with Pakistan to promote economic
growth there, to continue our mutual concern to fight terrorism, and
deal with some of the other regional issues. So we have a great deal
to discuss and I'm very much looking forward to it.
Would you like to say anything?
PRIME MINISTER SHARIF: Thank you, Mr. President. I am also very
delighted to meet you, and thank you for inviting me to America. We've
had meetings -- also. I am sure that you are taking interest in the
affairs of Pakistan, which, of course, also concern the United States
of America. And we hope to work together. And you are doing your best,
and of course, it is also my endeavor to remove all the misperceptions
which are there in our bilateral relations.
And I look forward to working together with you, and strengthening our
relations with the United States of America.
Q: Mr. President, New Zealand has said that it has agreed to lease the
28 F-16s whose sale was blocked to Pakistan in 1990. Has that received
the U.S. blessing?
And, Mr. Prime Minister, would you accept or find acceptable such a
deal which would only give you about $105 million, much, much less
than you originally paid for the plans?
THE PRESIDENT: Let me say that I don't presume to answer for the Prime
Minister, but we have -- I have a report to make on this issue which
is somewhat more extensive, and after we have a chance to discuss it,
then we will make available, obviously, to the public where we are on
this. And so I'd like to have a chance to discuss it with him, and
then we'll have a statement to make on it.
Q: Mr. President, what about the direction of the Judiciary
Committee's investigation, the expansion into campaign fundraising
irregularities? What should you and the White House be doing to deal
with that new turn in the investigation?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, you know, I have a group of lawyers handling that
and I presume they'll -- we'll find some time to talk about that. But
the Congress in the end has to make its own decisions about what it
will do and how it will conduct itself. It's important for me to get
on with the work of the country and that's what I'm doing here and
that's what I intend to continue to do.
Q:  Mr. President, why have you decided not to --
Q: -- on the signing of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, and would
you consider anything short of that that would allow you to go ahead
with the visit to Pakistan and India next year?
THE PRESIDENT: I hope it will be possible for me to go next year. I've
looked forward to it for a long time and I hope I will be able to go.
Obviously, I hope that the treaty will be signed.
Q:  But is it a condition?
Q: Mr. President, are you ready to bring both Prime Ministers from
India and Pakistan here in Washington for further talks or to solve
the problems of 50 years between the two countries?
PRIME MINISTER SHARIF:  That is --  (Laughter.)
THE PRESIDENT: You know, that's work that I always like to do. I've
enjoyed my opportunities to work with the parties in the Middle East
and in Northern Ireland, but it only works when both parties wish the
United States to be involved. Otherwise we can't be effective.
Let me say that I have been very encouraged that the two governments
have resumed their direct conversations; I think it's very hopeful.
And I think Prime Minister Sharif has been very forthcoming in this
regard. And I think he deserves a lot of credit, and I hope the people
of Pakistan support his decision to continue this dialogue with India.
I think it's very important.
At any time there's anything that I can do that both parties will
agree to our doing, of course I will be happy to do it.
Q: Sir, can I ask you a question on the -- could I ask you an economic
question, please? Could I ask you a question on the economy, please?
Thousands of people are losing their jobs at Boeing plants. Kellogg
today announced a similar move. The Exxon-Mobil merger is going to
cause people to lose their jobs. What's your concern about the
economic impact, and is there anything that the administration can do
for these people?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think on the merger question -- let's deal with
that one first. Of course, you've heard what Exxon and Mobil have
said, you know where the price of oil is, you know what the facts are.
My position on mergers has always been that if they increase the
competitiveness of the company and bring lower prices and higher
quality service to the consumers of our country, then they're good.
And if they don't, they aren't. And you know we've got the National
Economic Council reviewing this whole merger issue.
On this specific one I have to be very careful in what I say because
of the way our law works and the judgment that might have to be made
by independent people in the federal government about that.
On the Boeing and the economy generally, this is -- particularly with
Boeing, which I am very concerned about because I've worked so hard to
help Boeing and our aerospace industry generally and to get employment
up -- I think it is clearly a result of the global financial crisis
and in particular the economic problems in Asia. And that's why I have
given such a high priority for the better part of a year now to trying
to -- actually slightly more than a year now -- to trying to stabilize
the situation there, limit the spread of the financial contagion, and
then reverse conditions in Asia and restore economic growth there.
I can't tell you how important it is from my point of view for the
United States to be actively involved in trying to restore the
conditions of growth in Asia. We can only maintain our leadership in
the whole aerospace area if there are countries beyond our borders
able to purchase the airplanes we produce. And this, I think, is
purely and simply a function of the downturn in Asia. We saw it first
in our farming communities, where the price of grain dropped because
Asian purchases dropped so much. And if we can -- that's why I went to
Korea and Japan. And if we can make progress there and see some growth
coming back in Asia, then you'll see these orders -- the countries
will be able to make good on these orders, they'll start buying the
airplanes again, production lines will start up again, and they'll
call the workers back.
And that's my goal before it affects other industries, to try to get
that growth going back in Asia. It's very, very important to the
American people to do that.
Q:    Thank you.
(American reporters leave)
(Pakistani reporters and photographers enter for photo op)
THE PRESIDENT: Let me say, if everyone is here, I would like to just
make a brief remark. I am delighted to have the Prime Minister and
members of his government here in the Oval Office today. We value our
friendship with Pakistan very much.
We have a very full agenda to discuss. All of you know of my concern
to limit nuclear proliferation in South Asia. I don't believe it's
good for the peace and stability and security of Pakistanis or Indians
or the world. And I hope we can make some progress there.
But I also want to be supportive in any way that we can to help the
economy of Pakistan to grow, to benefit ordinary citizens of your
country. And I hope we can discuss our common interest in fighting
terrorism, and a number of our other interests in the region.
So I am delighted to have the Prime Minister here, and I'm looking
forward to our conversation.
Would you like to say something?
PRIME MINISTER SHARIF: I have already said, Mr. President, I am
delighted to be here, too. I thank you very much for extending this
invitation to me. I'd like to work with you, Pakistan would like to
work with the United States of America. And there are a lot of issues
on which we have common interest and we will be very happy to extend
all the help and assistance as far as we are concerned especially on
the issue of terrorism. And we have been fighting terrorism and you
know that we've been cooperating with the United States of America
also.
And all the other issues, as the President has mentioned, we have a
full agenda today. We will discuss -- each and everything that
concerns America and Pakistan.
Q: Pakistan has been a victim of unilateral Pakistani specific
sanctions, whereas India, the -- country of Pakistan has been let
loose to tear up all their nuclear programs. India was the one who
started the first proliferation there, but still Pakistan has been a
victim of the U.S. sanctions. Don't you think it was unfair, and if it
was unfair, what is your administration going to do to compensate for
what Pakistan has already suffered?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, we have, as a part of our dialogue
on nonproliferation, we have actually lifted a large number of the
sanctions that were applied against Pakistan to try to get economic
activity going there again. And we will continue to discuss with the
Prime Minister what we can do to make further progress.
In terms of the test, what we were required to do was mandated by an
act of Congress, there was no discretion in the Executive Branch about
it. I have worked very hard to put our relationships back on a more
normal path, and we have lifted a number of these sanctions already.
And I look forward to making further progress on that.
Q:  Mr. President, that's not --
Q: -- you have been very effective in resolving the Palestine dispute
in the Middle East, and would you also --
THE PRESIDENT:  That's a --
Q: I mean, to some extent. Would you also be using those good offices
to resolving the Kashmir dispute which has festered in threatens a war
in the subcontinent?
THE PRESIDENT: Well, that is work that I think is important to do.
I've worked, as you pointed out, in the Middle East and Northern
Ireland. But the United States can be effective in that role only when
both parties want us to do so. There is no case in which we have
injected ourselves into a dispute in the absence of the agreement of
both sides, because otherwise, it doesn't work.
I will say this. I want to applaud the Prime Minister for supporting
resumption of direct talks with the Indians. I think that is very
important. I think if you look at, if you imagine what the world could
be like in, let's say, 20 years if the dispute over Kashmir were
resolved, and South Asia -- India and Pakistan were both reconciled to
each other and focused on a positive future, I think the potential for
increased prosperity among ordinary citizens and increased global
influence that both have is virtually unlimited. I think this conflict
is holding both nations back and diminishing the quality of life of
ordinary citizens.
So I would do anything I could to help to resolve it.
But the most important thing is that the leaders are discussing it
again, they're working on it. And I think what they need, what both
leaders need, is a little elbow room from the political forces in
their country and from ordinary citizens, because we see in place
after place after place, when people can resolve old differences, then
they can look to new possibilities.
And if you look at the potential that Pakistan and India have for
economic growth and for solving a lot of the personal problems that
ordinary people have, it's absolutely staggering. There's no place on
Earth with a greater potential for development in the next 30 years
than South Asia, no place. And if this thorn can be taken from the
sides of the people, that will occur. So I would support that in any
way I could.
Q:  Can I have a follow-up?
Q:  Mr. President --
THE PRESIDENT:  Yes, yes, one more.
Q: Will you renew your plan to visit the subcontinent -- that you
canceled last year?
THE PRESIDENT: Let me say two things before you go. First of all, on
the question -- I very much hope it will be possible for me to go next
year. I have looked forward to going for many years. As I think you
know, my wife had a wonderful trip not very long ago, and I want to go
and I hope it will be possible for me to go.
One other thing, Prime Minister, if you'll indulge me before the
Pakistani press leaves, I think I would like to say to the people of
Pakistan on behalf of not just myself personally, but the United
States -- our country has been enormously enriched by the presence of
Pakistani American citizens and immigrants. And we are a stronger,
better place today because of the people who have come from Pakistan
to the United States, and that makes me all the more determined to try
to be a positive force and a good friend and a good partner. And I
hope we're going to make some progress today.
Q:  Thank you.
(End transcript)




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