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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release September 23, 1996
                     REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
              ON SIGNING DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION BILL

The Oval Office

12:45 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Today I have the privilege of signing legislation that will increase the security of our country and our families. Before I finish my statement I would like to say a special word of thanks to three legislators who are retiring from the Congress who have provided great leadership on national security issues for a very long time.

I thank my friend, Senator Nunn, who has been here since 1972, for many years was the Chairman of the Armed Services Committee. And since he has been here we have always had a defense authorization bill, many times only because of his persistent efforts.

I thank Senator Cohen for so many things that he's done, particularly in the area of national defense and security, for his willingness to work for a genuine bipartisan foreign policy, and especially in view of the events of the last several days, for his decisive votes with regard to the Saudi AWACs which was a critical decision which enabled us to contain Saddam Hussein.

And finally, I thank Congressman Sonny Montgomery, the father of the G.I.Bill, a great friend of the National Guard and Reserve and the veterans of this country, for more than 30 years of service here in the Congress.

So I thank them all for their role not only in this legislation, but for their entire careers, which will be ending shortly, and too shortly for many of us.

One of our central missions is to ensure that our country remains the strongest force for peace and freedom in the world. This bill makes good on our pledge to keep our Armed Forces the best trained, best equipped fighting force on Earth. It carries forward our modernization programs by funding crucial weapons systems, such as the F-22 and F/A 18-E/F fighters, the Comanche helicopters and the V-22 Osprey. It gives us the technological edge to prevail on the battlefields of tomorrow.

It builds on our progress in reducing the nuclear threat. It continues programs sponsored by Senators Nunn and Lugar to destroy thousands of nuclear weapons in the former Soviet Union and to prevent dangerous materials from these weapons from falling into the wrong hands.

This month our nation has again been reminded of the extraordinary skill and dedication of our Armed Forces. In Iraq our men and women in uniform have shown their strength in advancing our strategic interests. In Bosnia our troops and their IFOR counterparts have helped to make possible the elections which mark another milestone on the road of that nation's recovery.

Our servicemen and women go the extra mile, and we, in turn, should do the same for them. This bill does that by paying for improvements in family and troop housing, along with the new starts in military construction projects. It provides a pay raise of three percent, nearly one percent more than the law now provides. Our troops have more than earned that.

The legislation protects not only our national security, but also our security at home. The Interstate Stalking Punishment and Prevention Act of 1996, which is part of this legislation, dramatically toughens the law against stalkers -- those who would threaten, harass, and instill fear in others, especially women and girls. Though most states have strong anti-stalking laws, still there are big loopholes for those stalkers to slip through. We started to close those in the 1994 Crime Bill. Thanks to that law, stalkers now can be charged with violating restraining orders if they travel from one state to another to pursue their victims.

But many who are being stalked and harassed do not have protection orders and may not even know who is pursuing them. Until now they were not protected by federal law. Until now, those being pursued across state lines by a spouse or an intimate had to wait until they had suffered an act of violence before we could use federal resources to protect them. For the very first time, this legislation makes it a federal crime for any stalker to cross state lines to pursue a victim, whether or not there is a protection order in effect, whether or not they have committed an actual act of violence, whether or not they are a spouse or an intimate of the victim.

Today we say loud and clear, if you stalk and harass, the law will follow you wherever you go. And if you are the victim of stalking and want to build a new live somewhere else, you will have the full protection of federal law.

I want to say a special word of thanks to Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, the bill's sponsor, a victim of stalking who fought back; to Senator Dianne Feinstein, who's done so much to bring this legislation here today; to the victims and the families who are here today, including Bonnie Campbell, a survivor of stalking; Sherrie De Priest and her son Jesse -- Sherrie's stalker is currently behind bars -- Ricardo Wiggs, who lost his wife to a stalker and is here with their daughters, Jenine and Janelle. These are the true faces of this legislation and the reason we worked so hard for these new protections.

We have continued to work to make American life safer for women and children and families. We have more to do. I am calling for a constitutional amendment to guarantee victims' rights, legislation to extend the Brady Bill to keep guns away from people with a history of domestic violence.

This legislation is proof, I will say inclosing, of the progress we can make for the American people when we put the national security and the security of America's families first.

And I thank those who have done so much work on this. I'd like to thank the Vice President especially and ask him to now make just a few comments about the reinventing government aspects of this bill -- some of them are remarkable and important -- and then I will sign the legislation.

THE VICE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Mr. President. I want to add to your words a few words of thanks to the bipartisan leaders of some elements of this legislation of reinventing government that have been very important.

We've got nearly 120 reinvention proposals passed by Congress in the past three years, and most of the victories are small, but important. And this bill contains another one that is large enough to make special mention of. It's the biggest change in government travel rules in 40 years.

Over the years the General Accounting Office has highlighted the excessive costs of the government's travel systems. Last year it pointed out that while the Defense Department spent about $5 billion on its travel, it spent an additional 30 percent to just administer the travel system. Well-run travel systems in the private sector typically cost about six percent to administer, one-fifth as much.

This bill finally fixes the underlying legislative problems so that all agencies can reinvent their travel systems. This will save taxpayers about $800 million per year, while at the same time improving government travel services. It does this by adopting the best travel practices in the private sector. It requires the use of corporate charge cards to pay for travel expenses. This eliminates processing times for cash advances and associated costs. It repeals a 1939 telephone act which required that all long-distance telephone calls be certified by supervisors first as being in the interest of the government. It eliminates senseless red tape for employees who are required to transfer to another location.

I'd like to express gratitude for the bipartisan leadership on this issue shown by Senators Cohen and Levin, and House members Horn, Maloney, and Owens. And also, on behalf of the President, I'd like to express appreciation for the interagency efforts to develop this legislation and the implementing regulations led by the Joint Financial Management Improvement Program and the General Services Administration.

Thank you, Mr. President.

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.

Now I'd like to sign the bill.

(The bill is signed.) (Applause.)

Q Mr. President, are you supporting Perot's bid to participate in the debates?

THE PRESIDENT: We signed an agreement with the Dole campaign when it was obvious that there would be no debates if Mr. Perot was involved. And I thought the American people were entitled to a debate between Senator Dole and me, so eventually, the people that were negotiating for me told me -- I told them to go ahead and make the agreement.

Q Mr. President, are you concerned that Boris Yeltsin's health, his apparently deteriorating health, is creating a destabilizing situation in the Soviet Union?

THE PRESIDENT: I think they've come a long way in developing constitutional mechanisms of authority. They have worked out the relationships that will exist between President Yeltsin and Prime Minister Chernomyrdin. And we have regular contact with him, with Foreign Minister Primakov, with others in the Executive Office of the President, and I feel comfortable right now that our relationship will proceed on a normal course, and a positive one.

Q Mr. President, what's it going to be like to go to the U.N. tomorrow with your campaign to force out Boutros Boutros-Ghali, the $1.7 billion debt that the United States owes, and the questions about the Persian Gulf coalition? Is there any awkwardness there?

THE PRESIDENT: No. It's going to be a happy day because we're going to be the first country to sign the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. So it will be a milestone day for the United States and for the world. And that issue will -- and then what we now have to do to follow up on it is what I intend to talk about and will overshadow everything else.

I believe that things are proceeding reasonably well now in Iraq, based on what I know today. I feel good about that. I think the United State should pay its U.N. dues. We're going to pay our dues this year, and we'll start to pay our debts on a regular basis until we get our debt paid back. I think we ought to, and I've always felt that, as you know.

And our position on the future of the U.N. and the Secretary General, a man for whom I have great personal respect, has been clear for many months now. So nothing's changed there. That's not new -- not a surprise. And I expect it to be a good day.

Q Have you got a replacement for him? Do you have a successor in mind?

Q What do you think about Bob Dole calling you a closet liberal and hitting you so personally on the drug issue?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, let me -- I'll just answer the liberal thing. I'll save the other one. I've got to have something to say at the debate. (Laughter.)

But there's a real problem with that. One is my record. My record as governor, my record as President. If you look at what we did on the deficit, bringing it down four years in a row for the first time since before the Civil War; what we did with the crime bill, which had the death penalty for drug kingpins and people who kill police officers and three strikes and you're out and 100,000 police, and the assault weapons ban and the Brady Bill -- when you look at what we have done on welfare reform, starting in '93, that now has reduced the rolls on welfare by almost two million, the record doesn't support the charge. If you look at what I'm advocating for the next four years, it doesn't support the charge.

It is true that he and I had differences over the budget last year. And we will again in this campaign. And we have different tax cut plans. But I don't think that that qualifies me as a closet liberal.

Besides that, a President is too exposed. You can't be a -- I don't have a closet. (Laughter.)

Thank you very much.

THE PRESS: Thank you.

END 1:00 P.M. EDT