For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
June 13, 2001
_______________________________________________________________________
Background Briefing to the Travel Pool by Senior Administration Official on the President's Meetings at Nato NATO Headquarters Brussels, Belgium
2:30 P.M. (L)
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: This was a very encouraging meeting of the
NAC. The President spoke first, after, of course, Lord
Robertson, and covered his agenda, which was followed almost exactly by
the other leaders. And it included -- and I'm not sure that
this is the order -- new strategic framework and missile defense,
strengthening the Alliance capabilities and ESDP, the Balkans, NATO
enlargement. Q This
was the opening -- his opening remarks?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Yes. His opening
remarks, which you will have. You've got -- yes, you've got
so far the public remarks, but we're going to be sending around an, if
not quite a text, pretty full excerpts of what he said. So
you will see what he said. The President made
his case in terms with which you're familiar. I'm not going
to go into that, because you will see the text and you're familiar with
the positions. I think it's more useful to characterize the
Allied discussions and the Allied reaction.
In the first place, there was, on a new strategic framework and missile
defense, all allies recognized that there is a real and growing threat,
caused by the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and means
for their delivery.
Q That's exactly the language they refused to
put into the communique -- SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I'm not trying to put language into
the mouths. I'm trying to characterize. Everyone
recognized that there was a threat. Everyone recognized that
the debate is an important one, and it is important for the Alliance to
deal with this. Now, some allies, some allies
were strongly, vocally for missile defenses. One ally spoke
of -- again, I don't want to quote, but to paraphrase, a sort of moral
imperative to develop defenses because, as he put it, this is, after
all, a defensive alliance, and it is better to rely on defenses to
protect ourselves.
Q Who was that? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I don't want to -- I believe the
NATO rules are we don't give away individual allies.
Q Is that an exact
quote, then? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: No, it is not an exact quote, but it is a very
close paraphrase.
Q This is a defensive alliance --
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: That's right. A defensive alliance and
developing defenses is morally -- it is morally
preferable. Other allies spoke in favor of missile defenses
as well. Q Can you
tell us who the allies were who spoke in favor of missile defense, just
overall? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Rather, I think the NATO rules are that we don't
identify particular countries with particular positions.
Q We heard they were
going to be Hungary, Italy, Poland and Spain, and maybe the UK,
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I
won't deny it. Q And
Britain? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I don't want to get into positively identifying
countries. Q What did
France and Germany have to say? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: There were a number of allies who
expressed appreciation for the consultations, recognizing that a
problem exists, but were more cautious. Yet, did not -- even
these more cautious allies did not rule out the possibility of moving
beyond the ABM Treaty to a new strategic framework. That
possibility was left in one case explicitly open. The
language in this case was something like, the ABM Treaty is important,
but -- and if one were to move beyond it, it should be a to a
comprehensive new framework. So that phrase
suggests, conceptually, the possibility of moving beyond what is
accepted. In short, it was very heartening to see the debate
structured in the way it was. The second
category of issues on which there was a strong alliance position was on
NATO enlargement. There were a number of allies who
expressed strong, even emotional support for continued NATO
enlargement. No allies spoke against it, and Lord Robertson summed up
a consensus which he then reiterated in his press remarks that the
Alliance, at its summit in Prague next year, hopes and expects to be
able to launch the next phase of NATO enlargement.
And Robertson then characterized that as
meaning that zero option is off the table. That was his
characterization. There was, again, strong support for NATO
enlargement. Q What do
you think he meant by zero option is on the table?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Sorry, that's a term of art meaning the option of
inviting nobody at Prague is off the table. Robertson said,
clearly, the Alliance -- well, his words speak for themselves -- but
indicated that the Alliance consensus seemed to be that there would be
invitations. Though what -- that was sort of an informal
remark. His more prepared statement was, hopes and expects
to launch the next phase of NATO enlargement.
Q So who are the most likely candidates?
Q Was anybody lukewarm
about it? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Lukewarm? There was nobody who was
lukewarm. A couple of allies, one or two, said we also have
to keep in mind Russian reaction. But no one suggested that
NATO enlargement had been a bad thing. One or two pointed
out that there were great fears before the '97 round of enlargement,
that it would cost the Alliance money, and it turned out it hadn't, or
the new allies wouldn't participate or contribute, and they
had. So there was -- sort of one ally or another got up and
said, this is a good thing.
Q Keeping in mind the Russian reaction, were
they talking about the specific countries that may be invited, or the
number of countries? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: There was not a couple of countries mentioned;
candidates whom they had a particular sympathy for, though no country
-- this wasn't a discussion of the who, but some countries mentioned
some of the southern tier -- Romania, Bulgaria -- others mentioned
Baltic countries. But this was -- there was
not a lot of discussion of the who; there was mostly discussion that
enlargement has proven to be a good thing, a stabilizing thing,
something which contributes to European security.
Q At this point, who do
you see as being the most likely candidates?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: We haven't done the who,
haven't started doing the who. We'll get to the who when we
get to the who. Q Is
there a limit on how many you can accept at the next round, then, or is
it sort of a -- SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: No, there are nine, or technically 10
self-proclaimed candidates. There is no technical
number. The Alliance will make its
decisions. But, again, in the U.S. government and in the
Alliance, there has been not even the beginning of a systematic
discussion of the who.
Q Is there a sense of NATO's capacity to absorb
a limited number of numbers in each go-around? It's not
likely that NATO would take all nine or 10?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: I don't want to speculate
what NATO might or might not do. I think it's fair to characterize the
discussion as emphasizing that the experience of enlargement had been
extraordinarily positive. Everybody felt, in retrospect, it
had been a good thing. And so those are two issues.
Third --
Q It's hard not to say that -- three NATO --
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Well, yes, but there is a way to do it politely
and not mean it, and then there's a way to say it and really mean
it. And what I was hearing was, damn, we really mean
it. Third issue was the Balkans, particularly
Macedonia. There was not, in fact, a great deal of
discussion. There may be more discussion later on today, and
Lord Robertson said at his press conference that he was going to be
meeting with foreign minister later today. But there was a
general -- there were strong concerns expressed about the deteriorating
situation in Macedonia, expressions of support for the Trajkovski
government, and for the Trajkovski government's efforts to facilitate a
political solution, a political track that the Trajkovski plan from
last week was referred to by quite a number of allies as something
that's important and worthy of support. But there was not a lot of
discussion of decisions or operational detail or what NATO does -- not
at the NAC. There was a discussion of ESDP,
and for those not versed in NATO wonkism -- excuse me -- ESDP is the
EU's military identity; in crude shorthand, the sort of Euro army which
would be compatible with NATO. It's part --
Q Rapid reaction
force? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The rapid reaction force. The rapid
reaction force. And the rapid reaction force is something
which is -- the real issue here is bringing NATO and the EU together
and working well together on this issue. The President said
-- and you'll see this in his statement -- that we welcome an ESDP
which is compatible with NATO, transparent with NATO, that adds to
NATO's capabilities, and doesn't involve ways to duplication.
That's a significant statement, because there
was a debate in the United States about whether ESDP was a good thing
at all. But ever since the President's meeting with Tony Blair in
February, this has been our position.
Q Can I go back to Macedonia briefly, because I
wasn't sure if I heard you say that there wasn't a great deal of
discussion on Macedonia, or not a great deal of discussion about
intervention in Macedonia? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: The latter. There was a
great deal of discussion of the Balkans and the problem in Macedonia;
there was not a great deal of discussion of what specifically one
does. I don't think the setting of the NAC -- you thought
right. Q The
indication was that foreign ministers would discuss this as the main
topic of their lunch, that they're having now.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Right -- which is a parallel lunch. So, ESDP was
discussed, there was -- most allies, in fact, almost all allies who
spoke to it said that ESDP could be a good thing if it is handled right
and if it is open in the right way to allies who are not members of the
EU. ESDP, NATO enlargement, the Balkans, new
strategic concept, missile defense --
capabilities. Robertson had, himself, expressed strongly the
need for allies to provide sufficient resources for their militaries to
modernize. He referred to the defense capabilities
initiative, which was launched in the Washington Summit in 1999, and
said that the allies had to bear down and do more to fulfill the
commitments they had made then. And there was
-- he made the strong statement and some of the allies indicated that
they were doing their best to meet them. I think that just
about -- that covers the highlights.
Q Did he use the capability as credibility line
that he used a couple of times -- SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Yes, as a matter of fact he
did. As a matter of fact, he did. What struck me
-- the two things I wanted to hear about, other than whether we would
get into a serious -- an operational discussion of Macedonia, the two
things I went into the meeting interested in were: new
strategic framework missile defense and NATO enlargement, and those
broke very well from an American perspective.
Q Can I go back to missile defense for a
second? Was there a sense among the allies, or at least the
ones who were sitting on the fence, or even among all of them, that
they need some more information, that they need more detail?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: On
missile defense? Not -- that wasn't actually the way allies
expressed it. If I could capture what we were hearing, it
was, we very much appreciate the President's decision to consult fully,
we understand that there is a threat, we want to work with the United
States as its thinking develops, and we're glad to be consulted.
Now, after this, there was a range of views
expressed. But what I just said was sort of the core common
themes. Again, without suggesting that there was a
straightjacket unanimity.
Q Lord Robertson said that the President is not
here to ask for any specific plan, because the United States does not
have a specific plan or proposal, which seems to suggest we need a lot
more details we can't decide on -- SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: But I would put it another
way. I would say that since the President has come forward
with a conceptual argument and a strategic direction, what we want is
understanding and appreciation of the conceptual argument, and signing
on to the strategic direction. If we don't
have an architecture, which we have said we don't have, then it's
pointless to say that allies haven't signed onto details when we
haven't offered any. The level of the discussion now is
about a conceptual approach. That's what the President has
said. He's outlined a goal where he wants to go, what the
problem is, what the constraints are, and he asked for Allied support
as he moves in this direction with them.
Q You still don't have the majority of the
countries; you only have four, right? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Four?
Q NATO allies --
Q Four countries you've just signed on to this.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: This was not a pledging session or a show of
hands. All of the countries recognized that the threat is
real, all of the countries recognize that the debate is
important. More than four countries suggested they already
believe missile defenses are the way to go. Other countries
clearly are interested in more discussion. But that's
actually doing very well.
Q If it's more than four, is it five or eight?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: No,
no. A good number of countries.
Q If all of the countries agree it's a common
threat, why didn't they agree on that language just a few weeks ago in
Budapest? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: I was the one who used "common threat," they talk
about threat. I think the problem is that there -- quite
frankly, there was much too much made by the press about that language
in the communique. The Budapest Communique was, from our
point of view, a more than satisfactory doctrine.
Q Without getting into
that, discussing how -- whether that whole day was characterized right
by the press, the fact is, they didn't agree on language that called it
a threat, right? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: The word allies -- the way -- remember, I'm trying
to describe what 18 other allies -- the words of 18 other
allies. They talked about threats, and they talked about
threats to the Alliance, and they talked about a problem of the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and means to deliver
them. That was just about
universal. I don't think there was an ally who suggested
that that threat is exaggerated or doesn't exist.
Q Did they discuss NATO
intervening in Macedonia? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: It did not come up. They
did not discuss it.
Q What about -- you said operational
details. What were you talking about?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: They didn't discuss -- they didn't have a
discussion of NATO intervening in Macedonia.
Q Okay, okay.
Q On what the ministers will be talking about
over lunch -- SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Well, they'll be talking about
Macedonia. They'll be talking about
Macedonia. But what we have in Macedonia is an insurgency
and a political track and a need to support that political track and
the government of Trajkovski. Now, what means
you use is something they'll be discussing. But this is not
-- you know, allies were talking about the need to engage, the need to
take it very seriously, and the need for NATO to play a
role. But there was not specific operational plans
discussed. Q On
missile defense, what is it then -- if you're not going to talk about
numbers, and this isn't a pledging session -- what is it you're looking
for? Is there a tipping point of generally positive support
from a relatively large portion of members that is going to make this
administration feel safe to go forward? Is it just the
Russians that matter in this, and they'll bring along
others? I mean, what's the point of the exercise?
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Do
you mean, what are we looking for?
Q Yes. SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: An allied -- what we're looking for
is allied thinking moving in a direction where they understand the
problem and want to work with us on common solutions. That's
a process. To expect, after just a couple of months, allies
to stand up -- the idea that allies would stand up and salute without
thinking about it is not only unrealistic, it's not to be -- it's not a
fair objective. What we want is for allies to keep an open
mind, think about this, work with us as we're moving forward.
Q But is there a
suggestion implicit in that that you're looking for permission of any
kind? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Permission?
Q Yes. SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: We would like to work with the
Alliance. The President has made it clear many times that he
intends to move forward --
Q Unilaterally --
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Well, he intends to move
forward, but wants to move forward with the Alliance.
Q If you didn't get any
of the top tier -- "top tier" -- like France, Germany, and Britain on
board, could you move forward? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: Speculative
question. The fact is, today we were -- I was very heartened
by the center of gravity of the debate.
Q How many agreed with Bush's statement
yesterday, the ABM Treaty is a relic of the Cold War and should be
scrapped, should be done away with? Were they agreeing with
that today? SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: They were actually -- I was counting the number of
allies who actually mentioned the ABM Treaty, and there weren't many
either way, which was curious. I want to think about what
that means. It was curious that -- that may indicate that
certainly there is not an allied view that the ABM Treaty is the
cornerstone of strategic stability. I didn't hear that as a
generally expressed allied view. What I heard generally
expressed is there's a problem and we have to work together in the
solutions, and the Americans are right to be consulting with us.
Q If I could ask just
one more question about the atmospherics. In talking about
this idea that we would like to work with the allies and that the
President has mentioned a number of times he wants to move forward, did
he in any way make the suggestion that "I'm going ahead with this plan,
love to have you folks on board, but if you don't, well, you've missed
the train, it's leaving the station"? SENIOR
ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL: He did not. He did
not. His emphasis was, we're committed to NATO; this is an
Alliance problem, let's deal with it as an Alliance. But
then, again, you'll be able to look at his remarks when they're
distributed. They will express it better than I could
characterize it. All right?
Q Thank you very much.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION
OFFICIAL: Sure.
END
2:53 P.M. (Local)
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