Copyright 2000 www.cosmopolis.ch Louis Gerber All rights
reserved.
The statement by Colin Powell, the future
Secretary of State, December 16,
2000
Article added on December 16, 2000
Thank you so very much, ladies and gentlemen, Mr.
President-elect and Mrs. Bush, Mr. Vice President-elect Cheney, ladies and
gentlemen, citizens of Crawford, Texas. It's a great pleasure to be with you
this afternoon and I'm honored, honored, to be given the opportunity to return
to public service as the 65th secretary of state of the United States of
America. Mr. President-Elect, I thank you for the confidence that you have
placed in me and I look forward to serving you, the American people, and the
cause of peace and freedom around the world. And it is a special privilege for
me to once again to serve with Vice President-elect Dick Cheney. We have been
through many adventures together and many more adventures await us in the future.
Mr. President-elect, during your administration
you'll be faced with many challenges, and crises that we don't know anything
about right now will come along. But I believe that these challenges and these
crises will pale in comparison to the wonderful opportunities that await us:
Opportunities that have been brought about by the end of the Cold War; by the
spread of democracy and the free enterprise system around the world;
opportunities that come to us because we held steadfast in our belief in
democracy; opportunities that will come to us become of the information of
technology revolutions that are reshaping the world as we know it, destroying
political boundaries and all kinds of other boundaries as we are able to move
information and capital data around the world at the speed of light, able to
move knowledge around the world at the speed of light; opportunities that will
come to us because the old world map as we knew it of a red side and a blue
side, that competed for something called the third world is gone, and the new
map is a mosaic, a mosaic of many different pieces and many different colors
spreading around the world, a world that has seen that communism did not work,
fascism did not work, Nazism did not work.
If you want to be successful in the 21st century,
you must find your path to democracy, market economics and a system which frees
the talents of men and women to pursue their individual destinies. And at the
center of this revolution, America stands, inspiration for the world that wants
to be free and we will continue to be that inspiration by uniquely American
internationalism, as President-elect Bush has stated it. Not by using our
strength and our position of power to get back behind our walls, but by being
engaged with the world. By first and foremost, letting our allies know that we
appreciate all we have been through over the last 50 years, and our alliances
are as strong now as they every have been, and they are as needed now as they
ever have been, and we'll work with our allies to expand and make those
alliances the center of our foreign policy activity. We will work with those
nations in the world that are transforming themselves, nations such as China and
Russia. We will work with them not as potential enemies, and not as adversaries,
but not yet as strategic partners, but as nations that are seeking their way.
We will have areas of agreement and areas of
difference and we will discuss them in rational ways, letting them know of our
values, letting them know of the principles that we hold dear. For those nations
that are not yet on this path of democracy and freedom, for those nations who
are poorly led, led by failed leaders pursing failed policies that will give
them failed results, we will stand strong. We will stand strong with our friends
and allies against those nations that pursue weapons of mass destruction, that
practice terrorism. We will not be afraid of them. We will not be frightened by
them. We will meet them. We will match them. We will contend with them. We will
defend our interests from a position of strength. That strength comes to us from
the power of our system, the democracy and free enterprise system. It comes to
us from our economic power. It comes to us from our military power. And as we go
into this new century, and as we begin this new administration, we have to make
sure that all of those elements of power are protected and allowed to thrive
even more. With an economy that is strong, growing, part of the now
international system, global trade, with military power, we are the best on the
face of the earth. We're going to keep it that way. And we're going to take
actions early on to ensure that our young men and women who might be called to
go in harm's way have what they need to be successful. We owe that to them.
I spent a good part of my life helping those GIs
get ready for battle, and I spent a good part of my life up on Congress, before
Congress, working hard to get those troops what they needed. Well, I don't have
to do that quite anymore, but I will certainly be there with the secretary of
defense, assisting the secretary in getting what he needs for the military. But
I now will be up before the Congress, letting them know, in the most powerful
terms that I can muster, that the dedicated men and women of the State
Department need that same kind of support. They are in the front lines, they are
part of this contest, they are part of the battle, and we must make sure that
when they go to do the work of the American people they not only have the
support that they need, but they have the resources that they need, and that
will be a priority of my stewardship as Secretary of State. So I think these are
promising times, times of great opportunity, but times, also, of challenge and
danger. We are up to the task.
President-elect Bush has given us the guidance we
need. We are going to pull together a great team. We're going to communicate
with the American people to make sure that we are crafting a foreign policy that
reflects their values and their will. We will work with Congress in a bipartisan
fashion, so that we can arrive at consensus and that the world can see us united
behind our foreign policy. Exciting times, and I'm so proud to be a part of
those times, and I thank the president-elect for giving me this opportunity.
I'm especially pleased that he chose to hold this
ceremony in a school in Crawford, Texas. I was, frankly, glad it wasn't at the
ranch. Nothing wrong with ranches, but I don't yet do ranch-wear very well. Hey,
I'm from the South Bronx, and I don't care what you say, those cows look
dangerous. But the real reason I'm so happy that we're doing this in a school is
because for the last several years of my life, I've been working with young
people, young people such as the students who come here everyday to be prepared
for the future. I have been working hard as the Chairman of America's Promise,
the alliance for youth, a great crusade that we have been conducting for the
past few years. It was a mission that was given to me by former President Bush
and President Clinton, and former President Carter, President Ford, and Mrs.
Reagan.
We've accomplished a lot over the last three
years, and as I now take on new duties as secretary of state, I want to say to
all of the partners who have worked with us on America's Promise that I'm not
leaving it. I'm going to find a way to continue to play an important role in the
work of America's Promise, and the president-elect has encouraged me to do just
that.
I go around the country telling people, no matter
how busy you are, you have time to give back to young people, and that's what
I'm going to do as secretary of state, not only to encourage other cabinet
officers to do likewise, but hopefully to take this Promise message around the
world so that all nations realize that we have nothing more valuable as a
national asset in anyone's country than the young people, and we have to prepare
them. So the little red wagon will still be a part of my life.
And, finally, I would just like to note that in
the newspaper stories that will be written about this occasion, they will say
that Colin Powell, first African-American to ever hold the position of secretary
of state. And I'm glad they will say that, and I want it repeated. I want it
repeated because I hope it will give inspiration to young African-Americans
coming along, but beyond that, all young Americans coming all, that no matter
where you began in this society, with hard work and with dedication and with the
opportunities that are presented by this society, there are no limitations upon
you. And I also want to pay tribute to so many people who helped me reach this
position in life: African-Americans who came before me, who never could have
risen to this position because the conditions weren't there, and they had to
fight to change those conditions. For me, this isn't history. It's my lifetime.
I was exposed to these things in my lifetime. And I will work with
President-elect Bush and with Vice President-elect Cheney to do everything I can
do to help them, to show to America, as President-elect Bush said the other
evening, that this will be an administration, he will be a president for all the
people, all the time. I know that is the deepest emotion in his heart. The
American people will see that in due course. We'll get over these difficulties
that we have seen in recent days, and we'll come through this a stronger,
greater nation on the way to that more perfect union that we always dream about.
Thank you, very much.
Questions followed. Here some of the answers
given by Colin Powell:
Under a Bush administration, America will remain very much engaged in the Middle
East. I expect it to be a major priority of mine, and of the department. It will
be based on the principle that we must always ensure that Israel lives in
freedom, and in security and peace. But at the same time, we have to do
everything we can to deal with the aspirations of the Palestinians and the other
nations in the region who have an interest in this. And so I think America will
continue to be a friend to all sides. America will continue to put forward
ideas. America will remain engaged until we can find that solution to this most
difficult problem. But at the end of the day, it's going to be the parties in
the region who will have to find that solution and come into agreement. They are
going to have to live with each other, and hopefully, in the near future, we can
find ways that they can accommodate their differences, and find that elusive
solution. It is elusive, but it is out there somewhere, and hopefully, if it
doesn't happen in the very near future and becomes something for us to manage,
you can be sure that we'll be fully engaged in trying to find a solution to that
problem.
We're in a different situation now than we had in
1991 and 1992. At the end of the Gulf War, your acting regime agreed to the
conditions that brought an end to the conflict, that they would fully account
for all the weapons of mass destruction and other evil technologies that they
were working on. They have not yet fulfilled those agreements, and my judgment
is that sanctions in some form must be kept in place until they do so. We will
work with our allies to re-energize the sanctions regime. And I will make the
case in every opportunity I get that we're not doing this to hurt the Iraqi
people, we're doing this to protect the peoples of the region, the children of
the region, who would be the targets of these weapons of mass destruction if we
didn't contain them and get rid of them. Saddam Hussein is sitting on a failed
regime that is not going to be around in a few years' time. The world is going
to leave him behind, and that regime behind, as the world marches to new
drummers, drummers of democracy and the free enterprise system. And I don't know
what it will take to bring him to his senses, but we are in the strong position,
he is in the weak position. And I think it is possible to re-energize those
sanctions, and to continue to contain him, and then confront him should that
become necessary again.
Our plan is to undertake a review right after the
president is inaugurated, and take a look not only at our deployments in Bosnia,
but in Bosnia and Kosovo and many other places around the world, and make sure
those deployments are proper. Our armed forces are stretched rather thin, and
there is a limit to how many of these deployments we can sustain. So, we're
going to take a look at that. We're going to talk to our allies. We're going to
consult. We're going to make on-the-ground assessments of what we're doing now,
what's needed now, but also, what is really going to be needed in the future,
and see if we can find ways that it is less of a burden on our armed forces, not
as a way of running out, but as a way of substituting others, or substituting
other kinds of organizations and units and perhaps police organizations to
handle the remaining missions. So, we're not cutting and running. We're going to
make a careful assessment of it in consultation with our allies, and then make
some judgments after that assessment is completed.
The president-elect has made a commitment to a
national missile defense. I have watched the debates on national missile defense
for many, many years. And I think a national missile defense is an essential
part of our overall strategic force posture, which consists of offensive
weapons, command and control systems, intelligence systems and a national
missile defense. And I still hearken back to the original purpose of such a
defense, and that is to start diminishing the value of offensive weapons. We
have been pursuing the technology. I'm quite confident that when a secretary of
defense is named, that person will go into the Pentagon and make a full
assessment of the state of technology - where are we, what can we accomplish -
and structure a plan that is consistent with the approach that then Governor
Bush gave in Washington early this year. So, we're going to go forward. We have
to spend time discussing it with our allies, discussing it with other nations in
the world that possess strategic offensive weapons and don't yet understand our
thinking with respect to national missile defense. These will be tough
negotiations; I don't expect them to be easy. But they will have to come to the
understanding that we feel this is in the best interests of the American people,
and not only the American people, the people of the world, to finally start to
move in the direction where we can take away the currency associated with
strategic offensive weapons, and the blackmail that is inherent in some regime
having that kind of weapon and thinking they can hold us hostage.