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  • can make this commitment this in a bipartisan fashion. That's how we . balanced the budget, and that's how we're strengthening American leadership in the post-Col~. War era. The debate ove~NATO enlargement has been a model o~partisa ~Iogue tmd.' tA
  • , Belgium, Colombia, Sweden,. Switzerland and Germany. Its membership is comprised of the very largest chains in the nation as well as hundreds of independent theatre owners. Headquartered in the greater Los Angeles are·a, NATO operates in close proximity
  • . European Command. As Supreme Allied Commander of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, he led NATO to victory in Kosovo. Admiral William Crowe, USN, Ret. Four times the recipient of the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, Admiral Crowe has more than
  • needs of the future, we must work together to see that NATO, the most successful military · alliance in all of history, adapts to this new ~ra. That means that we must make certain that the inevitable process of NATO expansion proceeds smoothly
  • that joins NATO and the Russian Federation in practical cooperation. In Helsinki, President Yeltsin and I agreed to pursue even deeper cuts in our nuclear arsenals. And in Denver, where I hosted the annual summit of the world's industrialized democracies, we
Commencements (Item)
  • will be with the new Democratic Party instead of the right wing of the Republican Party which is driving their agenda. And we saw it again tonight when they rejected on a party-line vote the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, after. it had been ratified by 11 of our NATO
  • to talk to you today about that stewardship, and the ways we can strengthen it as we enter the 21st century. • But first. let me say a few words about the situation in Kosovo. We are working with our 18 NATO allies to: --strike at Serbia's machinery
  • Albania and' Zimbabwe." Now, under President Bush, America has an unpleasant economy stuck somewhere between Germany and Sri Lanka. And for most Americans, Mr. President, life's a lot less kind and a lot less gentle than it was before your Administration
  • Medical Care AG·af Germany. a The whistle-blowers who will get about two-thirds of that money include Key West, Fla., infusion pharmacy that was a competitor and a former employee who worked in a Missouri . office of National Medical's home care division
  • Secretary (Cologne, Germany) .. June 18, 1999 For Immediate Release FACT SHEET The Cologne Debt Initiative The G-7 leaders have endorsed ~ new Initiative to enable Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPCs) to.receive deeper, broader and faster debt relief
  • crime. Until NATO's simple conditions are met, therefore, the military campaign will continue. But again, I want to say to the Chinese people and to the leaders of China, I apologize; I regret this. But I think it is very important to draw a clear
  • inside the U.S. and among its NATO allies. The goal was to force abandonment of Pershing-missile deployment in Europe as well as development of Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative. But despite a well-organized nuclear-freeze campaign in the United
  • must expand NATO by 1999, so that countries that were once our adversaries can become our allies. At the special NATO summit this summer, that is what we will begin to do. We must strengthen NATO's Partnership for Peace with non-member allies. And we
  • mtensi.fied. pated an onslaught by goverrunent security forces once NATO bombing TIRANA, Albania, April 29--At 11:15 began on March 24, but nothing p.IIL on April1, a night of hard rain, Serbian could have prepared them for the forces swept
  • me I had to. My legal . team advised me not to. My national, security team I . . suggested I hold a Gridiron town meeting . . By the way; Albright, Cohen and Berger may have to . leave early. The NATO Expansion Bus Trip leaves first . thing
  • there is unmistakable -- but it is not yet irreversible. To take firm root, Bosnia's fragile peace still needs the support of American and alli~d troops when the current NATO mission ends in June. I think Senator Dole actually said it best. He said, "Tliis is like being
  • a ' brutal campaign of ethnic cleansing. The stakes were monumental. Success would save lives, strengthen NATO, and advance the cause of a ~urope whole and free. Failure would leave much of that continent awash in a sea of refugees; it would end the 20th
  • Union. S~,. subsequently·, s~veral years later, President · Eisenhower, a Republican, recommended the authorization and the appropriations for NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, which was an o~ganization to provide for We~tern Europe
  • - accepting NATO's terms- began their withdrawal from Kosovo~ Today, troops from 39 nations- including 5,500 Americans- are working to bring Kosovo back to life. The sound of gunfire has been replaced by the sound of jackhammers- as roads, homes, and schools
  • insist that the American Commander of NATO be in charge of whatever forces wind up as peacekeepers in Kosovo? THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think the best thing for me to say now is what -- I think it will work best if we have a system like we had in Bosnia
  • accord~ being implemented, and genuine engagement on peace bet~een Israel and both Syria and the Palestinians. at the same time. The defeat of ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, with NATO united, Russia helping us make and keep the peace, and. Balkan integration
  • !.Ete.Gi~ Barshefsky's office published a list of those concessions, allowing Chinese opponents of WTO to lobby the Chinese leaders to back down. Anti-U.S. sentiment ignited by NATO's bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Yugoslavia in May made accommodating
  • and raise tobacco taxes Restrict future NATO expansion Allow vote on campaign finance overhaul 1997 y N Allow vote on bill to give president fasttrack trade negotiating authority Allow Jote on bill to let companies offer comp time instead of overtime pay
  • a cooperative relationship with NATO, joined us in peacekeeping missions .in· Bosnia and Kosovo and made some -- though n9t yet sufficient -~ progress in controlling the export oflethal techncilogy'to rogue states. We have agreed to begin discussions 'this year
  • ~ U~tv. c.kl>+. : I am confident we can do this in a._bipartisan fashion. The debate over NATO enlargerp.ent has been a model of bipartisan action!.· I thank Senators Lott, Daschle, Helms and Biden for their leadership on this . . 'issue, and I hope
  • are doing. The refugees must go home with security and self government. The Serbian forces must leave Kosovo. An international security force with NATO at its core must deploy to protect people of every ethnicity and faith in Kosovo. On this, our country
  • , and the differences of opinion we have. The second is the general Russian view with which I take very strong exception that no one should, in effect, commerit on or interfere with any internal affair of any other nation. And you heard him refer to American-led NATO
  • on expanding NATO to ensure our partnershi~ in security in Europe. We've passed the Chemical Weapons Cdnvention, a big issue. One of the big disputes we're having with Saddam Hussein now and these inspectors is that these inspectors in Iraq have found enough
  • said. They understood at the start of what has .been called the American Century, Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman understood when they created the U.N. and NATO and the Breton Woods Institution, that the United States simply cannot be partly
  • , chemical and biological weapons, cut thousands of nuclear weapons in the arsenals of Russia and th~ United States, expanded NATO,. increased our debt relief and ~conomic assistance to the poorest. countries ·of the world. We have helped to minimize economic