View Header

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release October 1, 1996
                      REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
                    AND PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU
                        IN PHOTO OPPORTUNITY
        WITH KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN, PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU
                       AND PLO CHAIRMAN ARAFAT
                                  
                           The Oval Office                           

1:10 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Wait, wait. Relax, everybody. We came here to end the violence, not aggravate it. (Laughter.) Let's get everybody in. Is everyone in? Let me say first that I am delighted to have King Hussein, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat here. I thank them for coming.

We have had some good conversations already. This is our first meeting, all four of us, together. But I think, with their presence here, it clearly symbolizes our commitment to end the violence and to get the peace process going again. We've come a long way in the last three years. No one wants to turn back. And I'm personally quite gratified by this opportunity to have the chance to visit with them, and I thank them for coming.

Q Mr. Prime Minister, are you ready to abide by your previous promise to abide by the peace agreements already made by Israel?

PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: Absolutely. And our commitment to peace is also evident in the fact that we took up the President's kind offer, important offer, to come here and to try to put the peace process back on track. This is what we're doing, together.

Q Mr. Prime Minister, is there any prospect at all of your accepting some sort of international commission of experts -- archaeologists, religious leaders -- to take a look at what you've done by opening up this tunnel, to simply reassure everyone that there is no potential violation of Moslem holy places?

PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU: You know our position, and I don't think it would be wise to open up a discussion here. But I have a question for you: Don't you have questions for the other --

Q Yes. Mr. President --

THE PRESIDENT: We don't want to do a whole press conference here, we're just trying to --

Q Mr. President, have you had a chance to consider the King's suggestion of an independent commission to look at this problem and possibly cool tempers that way and come up with some sort of a bridging proposal?

THE PRESIDENT: Let me say again, this is our first opportunity to all meet together, and one of the things that I have learned over the last several years is that anything any of us say publicly could undermine our ability to make progress, which is the ultimate objective of this meeting. So I don't want to make any premature comments here until we have a chance to visit with each other and do some more work. We're going to work today, we're going to work tomorrow, and then I'll be glad to answer any questions that you may have.

Q Thank you, Mr. President.


THE PRESIDENT: Let's get everyone in. Is everyone in? Let me begin by saying that I am delighted to have His Majesty, King Hussein, Prime Minister Netanyahu, Chairman Arafat here. I thank them for coming to Washington on short notice. I think it shows a common commitment to end the violence and get the peace process back on track. We are committed to that. We have been working this morning, but this is our first opportunity to be together, the four of us, and we'll be working the rest of the day and tomorrow, and then we'll have a statement to make and questions to answer.

But I'm very gratified that they have come here, and we are all committed to moving forward now.

Q Mr. President, with your permission I'm going to ask a question in Arabic.

(Question posed and answered by Chairman Arafat in Arabic.)

Q Mr. President, do you agree with His Majesty's proposal, which -- that establishing an international committee for Jerusalem?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, His Majesty and I had a chance to speak about this very briefly and we will be talking about it more. But as a matter of policy, I think I should not comment on anything relating to what we might be discussing today and tomorrow until we have finished, because I don't want to say anything that, even by accident, might make our task more difficult, I want to make our task easier.

The United States here, after all, our role is to try to help people get together and to move forward. The substantive decisions are decisions which have to be made by the people who live in the Middle East and who will share its future.

Q Mr. President, how do you assess the first round?


Q Mr. President --

THE PRESIDENT: Let everyone get in. Tell me when everyone is here.

Let me begin by saying that I am very pleased and honored to have His Majesty, King Hussein and Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat here. I compliment them all for coming. I think it's evidence of their shared commitment to end violence, restore order and invigorate the peace process and keep moving in the right direction.

We have been working this morning, but this is our first chance, all four of us, to be together. And I look forward to the rest of today and to tomorrow and to making some real progress here. I thank them for coming, and we're going to do our very best.

Q Mr. President, Senator Dole and Speaker Gingrich are calling you not to pressure Prime Minister Netanyahu. Is pressure really needed today for you to move these leaders ahead in the track of peace?

THE PRESIDENT: What the United States has done since I have been President is not to pressure anyone, but to get the parties together and to explore alternatives and to see what could be done to find common interests and shared values. And I think our approach has been reasonably successful, although ultimately, all the credit for the progress that has been made goes to the people who are living in the region; it is their future.

Our role is to try to help bring people together and create the conditions in which a successful resolution of these matters can occur. And that is what we will try to do.

Q Mr. President, are you expecting from this meeting a schedule for the implementation of the interim agreement, including, of course, the redeployment in Hebron?

THE PRESIDENT: First of all, as a matter of policy I do not comment on meetings before they occur. We are going to work together. I don't want to say anything. I don't want anyone in our administration to say anything that will make our difficult tax even harder. So what we're going to do is go to work, see how far we can go, see what we can produce and then we'll make a comment tomorrow and then answer questions about it. But I don't want to comment about it now. Nothing I say could do anything to help move forward what we're trying to do.

THE PRESS: Thank you.

END 1:10 P.M. EDT