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THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary


For Immediate Release December 5, 1997
                       REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
            IN PHOTO OPPORTUNITY WITH EUROPE UNION LEADERS 

The Oval Office

10:56 A.M. EST

THE PRESIDENT: Let me say very briefly that we are delighted to have another one of our EU summits, and it's particularly interesting because we now have two Luxembourgers here instead of one, which gives them I think the highest percentage of world leadership compared to population of any country in the world by a good long ways. (Laughter.) And we have a lot to discuss, but I just want to thank President Santer and Prime Minister Juncker for the work that we have done together with the EU in the last six months under the presidency of Luxembourg, and I look forward to the discussions today.

Q Are you changing your position, softening on global warming?

THE PRESIDENT: Softening or toughening?

Q Whichever. You tell us.

THE PRESIDENT: Well, we're working in Kyoto to try to get an agreement, and we'll see if we can. We hope we can.

Q Is a compromise impossible considering the distance between the two positions -- the EU on one side, the U.S. on the other side?

THE PRESIDENT: Not if everybody wants an agreement. Our position is that it's a global issue, we want to get global involvement and we want this to be the beginning of a process which eventually will have everyone in the world involved in dealing with this issue. And I think that the chances that we can get an agreement are reasonably good if everybody there really wants an agreement and we want to see countries bound to targets which will lead us to reduced greenhouse gas emissions. That's the real test.

Q Did you give Secretary Albright any new marching orders on the Middle East?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, we had a good meeting on things that we think will move the ball forward. And she's going with the instructions that I gave here to talk to Prime Minister Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat, and I'm very hopeful. I think it's in the nature of this process that the less I say, the better chance we have of making progress, so I don't think I want to talk about it too much.

Q But these are new ideas?

THE PRESIDENT: Oh, yes, we have some new ideas at least about the process, about where to go from here, or at least the different approaches. And we hope that it will move the ball forward. I think that they both understand that this is a time when something needs to be done to show concrete progress. I'm encouraged by that. We'll just have to see what happens.

Q Are you planning to make a recess appointment of Bill Lee?

THE PRESIDENT: I don't have anything to say about that now.

Q How about your conversation with Gephardt? Did you fight?

THE PRESIDENT: I had a good talk with him, and we had a good visit. We agreed that we needed to focus on 1998, not only in terms of the politics of '98, but also in terms of the substance of what we can do to serve the people here. It was a very satisfactory talk.

THE PRESS: Thank you.

END 11:59 A.M. EST