President Clinton on Kosovo
Tuesday, March 23
This is a press release from the White House.
Tuesday, March 23, 1999
PRESIDENT CLINTON:
A COMMITMENT TO ENDING THE CONFLICT IN KOSOVO
What is our interest in whether some innocent family in Kosovo can stay in their home or speak
their language or elect its leaders?...We have an interest in seeing bitter ethnic problems in
Europe resolved by the force of argument, not the force of arms. We have an interest in
preventing a wider war in Europe. And we know that every big European war in this century
started as a small war that the world did not care enough to stop.
President Bill Clinton
March 23, 1999
Today, President Clinton addresses the biennial convention of the American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) in Washington. The President discusses America's
stake in Kosovo, and our determination--along with our NATO allies--to use military force if
necessary to achieve a durable peace that protects the Kosovar Albanians from further Serb
oppression and restores to them the self-government they deserve.
Working To Find A Peaceful Solution To The Conflict In Kosovo. President Clinton has led the
international efforts to seek a peaceful solution to the conflict in Kosovo, which lies in the heart of the
Balkans and is a region of strategic importance to the United States and Europe. The source of the
problem is the Serbian President Milosevic, who is repressing the people of Kosovo, which is 90
percent Albanian, and deny them their constitutional right to self-government--a right that they have
historically enjoyed. The United States and our NATO allies have proposed a peace agreement that
would end the fighting. The Kosovars signed the agreement last week, but President Milosevic has
refused to even discuss key elements of the agreement.
Securing Peace In Kosovo Is In The U.S. National Interest. The President is committed to
achieving peace in Kosovo because continued violence threatens the stability of Europe and U.S.
national interest in two ways:
The threat of spreading conflict. The United States has a strong interest in preventing the
conflict from spreading to neighboring Albania and pushing massive numbers of refugees into
Macedonia, which would undermine that fragile new democracy. Also, Greece and
Turkey--both NATO allies--could be drawn into the conflict resulting in a wider war that we
would be forced to confront.
An ongoing humanitarian crisis. Over 200,000 Kosovar Albanians have been driven from
their homes in recent weeks, highlighting the potential for a humanitarian crisis that could spill
over into neighboring countries. The United States has a strong interest in seeing that
Milosevic is prevented from burning towns, massacring Albanians and terrorizing civilians with
impunity.
President Clinton Is Ready To Act. The United States has sought to end the violence and
promote a peaceful solution through diplomatic means. In the face of continued Serb intransigence
and aggression, the United States and our NATO allies are prepared to act militarily if necessary.
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