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April 2001
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For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
April 2, 2001
Remarks by President Bush and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in Photo Opportunity
The Oval Office
12:14 P.M. EDT
PRESIDENT BUSH: I'm going to start off with a statement; the President will make a statement. We'll have two questions from the American press, two questions from the Egyptian press. And then you'll be asked to leave in a prompt fashion. (Laughter.)
Of course, it is my honor to welcome the President of Egypt here to the Oval Office. I had the honor of meeting the President a couple of years ago. I found him to be an engaging, charming, strong leader then; my opinion hasn't changed after our good, frank discussion today.
We're friends. We will remain friends. And we will work together to bring peace to the Middle East. And we'll work together to try to convince all parties involved to lay down their arms, so there would be less violence. I'm also committed to working with the President on relations -- economic relations that will be to the advantage of both our countries.
And so it is my high honor to welcome President Mubarak here to the Oval Office and to the United States.
Mr. President.
PRESIDENT MUBARAK: Thank you. I'm so pleased to come here for the first time to meet with my friend, President Bush, in the Oval Office. He's a friend. I know him some time ago. And I'm very keen to work with him on all issues concerning the Middle East, especially the Middle East problem.
We are working very hard and we are going to cooperate very hard in the direction of peace because our main concern is peace and stability in the area of the Middle East, which is in the interest of the United States, of Egypt, Jordan and all countries in the area. We are going to do our best, we are going to cooperate with the main players, with the United States. And I have great hopes that President Bush will do the maximum effort of that so as to reach lessening the tension and resume negotiations, which is vitally important.
Q Mr. President, on China, do you consider the American service personnel hostages? And, secondly, is it true that the Chinese have already boarded our Navy spy plane, and how do you react to that?
PRESIDENT BUSH: My reaction is, is that the Chinese must promptly allow us to have contact with the 24 airmen and women that are there and return our plane to us without any further tampering. I sent a very clear message and I expect them to heed the message.
Q Have they boarded the plane, sir?
PRESIDENT BUSH: My message stands for itself.
Q Will you be more involved sir --
Q The Middle East situation is deteriorating --
PRESIDENT BUSH: Yes, ma'am?
Q Actually, sir, I had another question, altogether, but the point is --
PRESIDENT BUSH: Did Gregory steal your question? That's very inhospitable of you. (Laughter.)
Q The Middle East situation, sir, is deteriorating day by day. The press is speculating the American administration is disengaging itself from the area. Can the Middle East afford this vacuum by the absence of an active American role? And have you formulated a new approach, if any?
And, President Mubarak, please comment afterwards.
PRESIDENT BUSH: Well, we're very engaged in the Middle East and will remain so. As a matter of fact, the Secretary of State has been involved on the telephone this morning with Prime Minister Sharon. I have had numerous telephone conversations with leaders in the Middle East. I'll continue to be actively engaged at promoting a peaceful resolution of the issue. After all, most of our conversation today was talking about how to bring peace in the Middle East.
I understand that we can facilitate peace. We can't force a peace. And we will use our prestige and influence as best we can to facilitate a peace. Part of it is to build a strong foundation for peace in the Middle East. It's important for us to build strong relationships with countries such as Egypt, and Jordan, and other countries in the Middle East who have got a stake in peace. But we will remain very actively engaged. And, hopefully, there will be positive results.
It is very important for people to realize that the United States will not set a timetable that meets our specific needs. The only lasting peace is one in which the parties involved come to the table. And the role for strong countries like ourselves and Egypt is to encourage, first, the violence to end; and, secondly, for discussions to begin again. And I'm very optimistic and hopeful that we'll be able to achieve that.
Q Mr. President --
Q Mr. President, your comments --
Q A comment from President Mubarak --
PRESIDENT BUSH: Hold on. AP man. AP man. Excuse me. Oh, sorry.
PRESIDENT MUBARAK: I think the President told you everything about that. He is committed to work for peace. We are not going to impose any solution on the parties. We are going to facilitate the situation so that they can sit together, negotiate, and we will help them to reach a final conclusion for peace. Because all of us need stability in the area.
Q The U.S.-Egypt relation is bigger than just the peace --
PRESIDENT BUSH: Of course.
Q Is that true?
PRESIDENT BUSH: Oh, absolutely. The U.S.-Egyptian relation is about economic commerce; it's about cultural exchanges. Absolutely. But one of the key things is that we can use our historic relationship to work together to bring peace in the Middle East. It's an important part of our relationship, but not the only important part.
Q Mr. President, do you see this accident as a provocation on the part of China or a true accident? And what will it do to U.S.-Chinese relationships, especially your decision on selling arms to Taiwan?
PRESIDENT BUSH: Well, I made a very clear statement about how I viewed the incident. It is clear that we had a plane flying in international -- over international waters, that was damaged. It landed. And we expect there to be contact as soon as possible with our crew members. And we expect that plane to be returned to us.
END 12:21 P.M. EDT