I. Articles
The following are key highlights of the speech Secretary of State Colin Powell gave on the Middle East on November 19, 2001. The text of the speech follows.
Secretary Powell reaffirmed America’s commitment to Israel and her security, stating "...the United States has had an enduring ironclad commitment to Israel’s security."
America will remain engaged in bringing about a resolution to the conflict: "The Middle East has always needed active American engagement for there to be progress, and we will provide it."
Powell called for a "100-percent effort" by the Palestinian leadership to end the terror. The PA must "arrest, prosecute and punish the perpetrators of terrorist acts."
The Palestinians must end the anti-Jewish and anti-Israeli incitement in their media. This continued incitement helps to feed a "culture of hatred" that is not conducive to peace making.
Powell called upon the Palestinians to "accept the legitimacy of Israel as a Jewish state." In so doing, he implicitly recognized the danger of implementing the full right of return of refugees demanded by the Palestinian leadership. At the same time, his speech recognized the need for a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza must end. Powell called it the "defining reality of Palestinian’s lives there for over three decades."
Powell called for settlement activities to end. He stated that settlement activity "preempts and prejudges the outcome of negotiations and cripples chances for real peace and security."
Powell stressed the need to use the Mitchell Committee report and the security plan developed by CIA Director George Tenet as a way to end the violence and begin negotiations.
Retired Marine Corps General Anthony Zinni will become a senior adviser on this issue and will be heading to the Middle East shortly. His mission is to help bring about a cease-fire and the implementation of the Tenet and Mitchell plans.
The U.S. would be willing to be a part of a "third-party" mechanism if it is acceptable to both parties.
Secretary Powell's Speech on the Middle East
NOV 19, 2001
Following is the text of U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell's speech delivered at the University of Louisville in Louisville, KY.
POWELL: Thank you so very much, ladies and gentlemen, for that warm welcome
and I thank you, Senator McConnell, for that very kind and generous
introduction.
It is a tribute to you, Mitch, my friend, that we are all here today. The
McConnell Center for Political Leadership carries more than your name; it
carries your vision, it carries your passion for educating the leaders of
tomorrow. With the McConnell Center you have inspired a new generation with
the same reverence for civic participation and community conscience that you
have exemplified during your own quarter century of service to your state
and to your nation. Thanks to you the McConnell scholarships have provided
over $1 million to help prepare Kentucky's and America's future leaders to
meet the challenges of the 21st century.
And I have to pause, Mitch, and thank you especially for the support that
you and your committee and your colleagues in the Congress have given me
over the last 10 months to help me equip the State Department to carry out
the foreign policy of the American people in the 21st century. That support
has been an enormous inspiration to me as well as an inspiration to the
department.
Ladies and gentlemen, I've got to tell you that it has been my privilege to
work with Senator McConnell for many years. He's time-tested, battle-ready.
I have admired throughout all those years his tireless support for democracy
around the world. Indeed, America has no greater ambassador for democracy
than Mitch McConnell, and you should be proud of his service on your behalf.
Thank you once again, Senator.
(APPLAUSE)
President Schumaker, Provost Garrison, Professor Gregg (ph), McConnell
scholars, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen. I would like to thank
the faculty of the University of Louisville, the board of trustees,
President Schumaker and those who nominated me for honoring me with this
degree.
The slogan of the University of Louisville is "Dare to be Great."
President Schumaker you and your faculty are instilling in your students the
drive for excellence that underpins our success as individuals in life and
as a nation. And I am proud now to be a Louisville Cardinal along with all
the rest of you here today.
(APPLAUSE)
And by the way, congratulations to all of us Cardinals for another
Conference USA Championship, and now on to the Liberty Bowl.
(APPLAUSE)
And you whopped-up on those folks 92-38 last night? That ain't right.
(LAUGHTER)
It's also great to be back in Louisville, a city that I have always enjoyed
visiting. Before I became secretary of state, I was chairman of America's
Promise, the Alliance for Youth, an organization that has as its mission to
build the character and confidence of America's young people, and I came to
Louisville four years ago in that capacity to congratulate Mayor Abrahamson
and the city for the great work that Louisville had been doing for its young
people. It was one of our very, very best communities of promise.
I especially remember at that time Jerry gave me one of those huge
over-sized Louisville Slugger baseball bats and I was deeply appreciative of
that. I still keep it in my office, and believe me it comes in handy late at
night...
(LAUGHTER)
... when I've had enough diplomacy for one day and I want to hit somebody.
So I thank you, Jerry, and it's good to see you here in the audience.
Ladies and gentlemen, the McConnell Center is all about leadership and
that's why I'm here today, to talk to you about American leadership in
today's world. We don't need reminding that America's leadership in the
world today is vitally important. It is now 69 days since September 11 when
cold-blooded terrorists turned civilian airliners into flying bombs and used
them to kill 5,000 innocent people. That's four or five times the number of
people who are assembled here today.
Every one of us was affected by what happened on the 11th of September. Some
of us lost loved ones, like your great basketball coach, Rick Patino, who
tragically lost his brother-in-law in the World Trade Center. Others of us
merely lost our innocence. We can never look at a jetliner flying in a clear
blue sky the same way again.
Under President Bush's leadership we have responded to this outrage against
civilization. We quickly assembled a remarkable coalition of countries;
almost every country in the world except for one or two are part of this
coalition and that coalition came together and launched a full-scale
campaign against Al Qaeda, the terrorist conspiracy that attacked us and its
ring leader, Osama bin laden.
To get to terrorists, we had to go after the Taliban regime in Afghanistan
that was protecting them. We warned them. We warned the Taliban to turn over
bin Laden or we would make them pay. They refused, and we have now made them
pay.
(APPLAUSE)
We have driven them from power, and I know that all of you are as proud as I
am of the brave men and women of our armed forces and our intelligence
services who made that success possible. Those kids are just great and we
all need to be proud of them.
(APPLAUSE)
But this war is not over and our troops will carry on the fight until Al
Qaeda is destroyed. I hope that all of you will keep those wonderful GIs in
your prayers this thanksgiving week.
As we continue our campaign against the terrorists of September 11, let me
make one point crystal clear: these murderers did not act on behalf of
Muslims or on behalf of the poor and downtrodden of the world, or on behalf
of Palestinians. Their terror was indiscriminate. The murderers of September
11 killed people of all faiths; Muslims and Jews, Christians and Hindus.
Muslim leaders around the world have condemned these attacks. Leading
Islamic groups have joined distinguished Muslims scholars in rejecting bin
Laden's efforts to cloak himself in Islam. Nor do the terrorists speak for
the Palestinians whose leaders have rejected bin Laden's attempt to hijack
their cause for his murderous ends.
No, these criminals have no religion and they have no human cause. Their
goal and the goal of all like them is to divide and embitter people. They
are evil merchants of death and destruction.
To understand the true faith of Al Qaeda and the Taliban, all we have to do
is look at the way they hijacked Afghanistan. The Taliban squeezed the life
out of Afghanistan--no music, no soccer, no education or jobs for women,
nothing--nothing but total support to Osama bin Laden and his gang of Al
Qaeda murderers.
Now, in recent days, as the curtain has been lifted, we have seen on
television the joyous pictures of liberated Afghans, of women throwing off
their burqas, children--children happily flying kites. Last night we saw the
television station start broadcasting again with two women and a man not
only giving out the news, but reading the Koran to those who could listen
for the first time in years.
Compare the Taliban's depredations with the response of the international
community to the plight of the Afghan people. We are feeding millions of
Afghans put at risk by drought, famine and Taliban misrule. Before we were
able to go in on the ground, we dropped food from the air; now we are using
airplanes, trucks, barges, even donkeys, anything that will get food into
these destitute people before the winter arrives in force.
We should be proud that the United States, our country, is the largest
contributor to this effort to help the desperate Afghan people, and we will
do more. We are not stopping there. We are working with the international
community and the Afghan people to help them rebuild their country.
Tomorrow, back in Washington, I will kick-off the first international Afghan
reconstruction meeting to achieve this purpose.
We are also working with the United Nations to help the Afghans form a new
government--one that represents all geographical and ethnic backgrounds, one
that will end Afghanistan's role as a haven for terrorist and drug dealers,
one that will permit reconstruction and allow these millions of refugees to
return home in peace and security.
One message that leaps out from the events of September 11 is very clear:
American leadership in foreign affairs has never been more important, and
job-one for American leadership in this period is the fight against
terrorism. As President Bush told a joint session of Congress September 20,
Our war on terror will not end until every terrorist group of global reach
has been found, stopped and defeated."
My friends, we know it will take time. It will take effort. We will be
patient. We will be persistent. And I can assure you that under President
Bush's leadership, we will not rest until the job has been done and
civilization is safe again.
While the fight against the terrorists is our top priority, it is not our
only priority.
In these first years of the 21st century, we have other interests too
important to ignore.
In fact, as President Bush just said, winning the war against terrorism will
create new opportunities to use American leadership and power to make the
world safer, freer and more prosperous. Whether by bolstering free trade,
dealing with problems in the Middle East and other regions or strengthening
relations with key countries, we will seize these opportunities for the
benefit of the American people and for the benefit of the world.
We saw an example of that last week when President Bush hosted Russia's
President Putin at the White House and then down at his ranch in Crawford,
Texas. Those two places, the two presidents built on the unprecedented
cooperation Russia has given us since September 11.
President Putin was the first foreign leader to call President Bush and not
just to offer sympathy and condolences, but to offer help, to align Russia
with us in this new campaign against terrorism.
President Bush and President Putin are creating a new U.S.-Russia
relationship based on finding areas for more cooperation on
counterterrorism, of course, but also on reducing the number of nuclear
weapons in our inventories and by taking steps to strengthen the Russian
economy to allow them to draw more to the West and became part of the
Euro-Atlantic partnership.
And notice the two--security and economic development--because with security
must come economic development and prosperity. I believe that, in this new
century, American economic leadership has the potential to lift tens of
millions of people out of poverty.
When I was in China a few weeks ago accompanying President Bush to a meeting
of Asian and Pacific leaders, I was amazed at the city of Shanghai had grown
compared to the Shanghai I had visited some 30 years earlier.
China's remarkable growth of the past two decades has come from investing
the savings of the Chinese people, from the capital of foreign business
people and from the profits earned by Chinese exporters.
At the same time, China's growth benefits American consumers, the average
American citizen who can find good value in a Chinese product at a local
store.
This kind of two-way trade helps everyone, benefits both societies, and
that's why free trade is so important, and that's what free trade is all
about.
In this same way, freer trade will help other economies in Asia, in Africa,
in Europe, in our own hemisphere, in the Americas, all of them being given
the opportunity to create the jobs needed to lift more of their people out
of poverty and out of despair.
Trade is good for all of us, producers and consumers alike, and that is why
we were so pleased to see China, as well as Taiwan, become members of the
World Trading Organization earlier this month. And that is why American
leadership in launching a new round of global trade negotiations was so
important.
At a meeting last week in Doha, Qatar, United States Trade Representative
Bob Zoellick and his team did a magnificent job in clearing the way for new
talks on global trade. President Bush is totally committed to free trade.
But to conclude the trade agreements that benefit us, the kind of trade
agreements that we need, we very badly need Congress to pass trade promotion
authority as soon as possible.
With trade promotion authority, the president's team negotiates an agreement
with another country, which Congress then votes to accept or reject as a
whole. That way, our negotiating partners are more willing to make the hard
compromises and choices they need to make, knowing that the agreements they
do make with us will not be reopened when those agreements go before
Congress.
So we want more and more of these kinds of agreements and more and more open
trade in order to take advantage of this 21st century time of hope and
opportunity, a time where determined American leadership, political
leadership, diplomatic leadership and economic leadership, the kind of
leadership that President Bush is giving to the nation and giving to the
world.
It is also a time of danger and a time of challenges, requiring American
leadership. And nowhere are the challenges greater than in the Middle East,
a region where we have fought long for our most basic values and principles,
a region where we have stood by our friends, Arab and Israeli, in war and in
peace for over half a century.
Since Israel's establishment over 50 years ago, the United States has had an
enduring, an ironclad commitment, to Israel's security.
The United States-Israeli relationship is based on the broadest conception
of American national interest in which our two nations are bound forever
together by common democratic values and traditions. This will never change.
One of my proudest moments as a soldier and as an American came in 1991 when
American troops lead the international coalition of forces that liberated
Kuwait from Saddam Hussein's invaders.
Later that year, though, I watched with equal pride as Arabs and Israelis
gathered together in the aftermath of the Gulf War; they gathered together
in Madrid to take advantage of the opportunity created by the successful
war. They took the opportunity to launch a historic process of negotiations
aimed at ending their conflicts once and for all. They, too, were supported
by an American-led coalition; one focused this time on peace rather than on
war.
But the Middle East is a region facing enormous problems. The hope created
in Madrid has faded. Last month marked the 10th anniversary of the Madrid
conference, a time to look forward as well as look back. We are looking
forward now as we try to capture the spirit of Madrid and create a renewed
sense of hope and common purpose for the peoples of the Middle East.
America has a positive vision for the region, a vision that we want to share
with our friends in Israel and in the Arab world. We have a vision of a
region where Israelis and Arabs can live together in peace, security and
dignity.
We have a vision of a region where two states, Israel and Palestine, live
side by side within secure and recognized borders.
We have a vision of a region where all people have jobs that let them put
bread on their tables, provide a roof over their heads and offer a decent
education to their children.
We have a vision of a region where all people worship God in a spirit of
tolerance and understanding.
And we have a vision of a region where respect for the sanctity of the
individual, the rule of law and the politics of participation grow stronger
day by day.
Such a vision seems far away today. Throughout much of the Middle East the
economic challenges are daunting.
Too little economic growth creates too few jobs for burgeoning populations.
And too much red tape in government control stifle private enterprise and
initiative. Throughout much of the region, political systems do not provide
citizens an adequate say in how they are governed. They do not offer a way
for people to peacefully work out competing needs and visions for their
future.
The solutions to these challenges will come about only through hard work,
common sense, basic fairness and a readiness, a readiness to compromise. But
it will not be created by teaching hate and division, nor will they born
amidst violence and war.
To help America recognize its positive vision, we will stay engaged. America
wants to recognize its positive vision and help all in the region to achieve
this positive vision. America will continue to strongly support expansion of
economic opportunity in the region, political openness and tolerance. We'll
support efforts to find regional solutions to security challenges, and we
will conduct serious diplomacy aimed at resolving regional conflict.
The Middle East has always needed active American engagement for there to be
progress, and we will provide it, just as we have for over half a century.
The central diplomatic challenge we face in the Middle East is to obtain a
just and lasting peace between Israel and its Arab neighbors. Until Israel
and all of its neighbors are at peace, our vision of the Middle East at
peace will only be a distant dream.
President Bush and I are convinced that the Arab-Israeli conflict can be
resolved, but that will only happen if all of us, especially Israelis and
Palestinians, face up to some fundamental truths. To begin with,
Palestinians must accept that if there is to be real peace, Israelis must be
able to live their lives free from terror as well as war. The Palestinian
leadership must make a 100-percent effort to end violence and to end terror.
There must be real results, not just words and declarations.
Terrorists must be stopped before they act. The Palestinian leadership must
arrest, prosecute and punish the perpetrators of terrorist acts.
Palestinians must live up to the agreements they have made to do so. They
must be held to account when they do not.
Whatever the sources of Palestinian frustration and anger under occupation,
the intifada is now mired in the quicksand of self-defeating violence and
terror directed against Israel. Palestinians need to understand that,
however legitimate their claims, they cannot be heard, let alone be
addressed through violence.
As President Bush has made clear, no national aspiration, no remembered
wrong can ever justify the deliberate murder of the innocent. Terror and
violence must stop and stop now.
(APPLAUSE)
Palestinians must realize that the violence has had a terrible impact on
Israel. The lynching of Israeli soldiers in Ramallah, the assassination of
the cabinet minister and the killing of Israeli children feed Israeli's
deepest doubts about whether Palestinians really want peace. The endless
messages of incitement and hatred of Israelis and Jews that pour out of the
media in so much of the Palestinian and Arab worlds only reinforce these
fears. No one can claim a commitment to peace while feeding a culture of
hatred that can only produce a culture of violence. The incitement must
stop.
Palestinians must accept that they can only achieve their goals through
negotiation. That was the essence of the agreements made between Israelis
and Palestinians in Madrid and again in Oslo in 1993. There is no other way
but direct negotiations in an atmosphere of stability and nonviolence.
At the same time, Palestinians must also be secure and in control of their
individual lives and collective security. In the absence of peace, Israeli's
occupation of the West Bank in Gaza has been the defining reality of
Palestinian's lives there for over three decades, longer than most of the
Palestinians living there have been alive. The overwhelming majority of
Palestinians in the West Bank of Gaza and Gaza have grown up with
checkpoints and raids and indignities. Too often they have seen their
schools shattered and their parents humiliated.
Palestinians need security, as well. Too many innocent Palestinians,
including children, have been killed and wounded. This, too, must stop. The
occupation hurts Palestinians...
(APPLAUSE)
The occupation hurts Palestinians, but it also affects Israelis. The sad
truth is that it is the young people who serve on the front lines of
conflict, who are at risk. Embittered young Palestinians throw stones and
the young Israeli soldiers on the other side learn only that Palestinians
are to be feared, seen as enemies.
One thing I've learned in my life is that treating individuals with respect
and dignity is the surest path to understanding. Both sides need to treat
the other with respect. Humiliation and lack of respect are just another
path to confrontation.
Israeli settlement activity has severely undermined Palestinian trust and
hope. It preempts and prejudges the outcome of negotiations and, in doing
so, cripples chances for real peace and security. The United States has long
opposed settlement activity. Consistent with the report of the committee
headed by Senator George Mitchell, settlement activity must stop.
For the sake of Palestinians and Israelis alike, the occupation must end and
it can only end through negotiations. Israelis and Palestinians must create
a relationship based on mutual tolerance and respect, so negotiations can go
forward.
My friends, it should be clear from these realities that the way back to a
political process will be neither quick nor easy. That's the bad news. The
good news is that a framework for a solution exists. It is based on the core
principles of the United Nations Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338,
which are rooted in the concept of land for peace.
Madrid also calls for a comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace, including
agreements with Syria and Lebanon. Rejectionists say that there has been no
progress over the years trying to achieve those objectives.
They are wrong.
Over the past decade, Arabs and Israelis have proven that negotiations can
work and can achieve results--at Madrid in October of 1991 to the Oslo
process, beginning in 1993. In the 1994 Israeli-Jordanian peace treaty and
last year there was hope, as Israelis and Palestinians negotiated on
permanent status issues. The questions proved excruciatingly difficult, but
issues long avoided were finally addressed.
After a year of violence and trauma, finding a way forward will not be easy.
It will take time. It will take trust. But the tools to rebuild confidence
and revive a political process are available, and they're available now.
They are found in the security work plan negotiated by CIA Director George
Tenet and the Mitchell Committee report, which both the government of Israel
and the Palestinian Authority have accepted, and which the entire
international community has strongly endorsed.
The steps they outline offer Israelis and Palestinians a road map to a
cease-fire and an end to the violence. Such steps must include an end to
closures in order to bring tangible improvement in the daily lives of
Palestinians and the rapid restoration of economic hope into every
Palestinian home. Implementation of the Mitchell report shows the way to
restoring trust and confidence and moving rapidly to the resumption of
negotiations.
We will do all we can to help the process along. We will push. We will prod.
We will present ideas. For example, there are a number of economic and
political steps in existing agreements. They are there now, which if we
implemented could contribute to a momentum toward peace. But notwithstanding
everything we do, at the end of the day it is the people in the region
taking the risks and making the hard choices who must find the way ahead.
The only lasting peace will be the peace the parties make themselves. Both
sides will need to face up to some plain truths about where this process is
heading as they turn to the challenges of negotiating permanent status
issues.
Palestinian must eliminate any doubt once and for all that they accept the
legitimacy of Israel as a Jewish state. They must make clear that their
objective is a Palestinian-state alongside Israel not in place of Israel,
and which takes full account of Israeli's security needs.
The Palestinian leadership must end violence, stop incitement and prepare
their people for the hard compromises ahead. All in the Arab world must make
unmistakably clear their own actions, their acceptance of Israel and their
commitment to a negotiated settlement. Israel must be willing to end its
occupation consistent with the principles embodied in Security Council
Resolutions 242 and 338 and accept a viable Palestinian state in which
Palestinians can determine their own future, on their own land and live in
dignity and security. They, too, will have to make hard compromises.
Ultimately, both sides will have to address very, very difficult permanent
status issues. The future of Jerusalem is a challenge which the two parties
can only resolve together through negotiations, taking into account the
religious and political concerns that both will bring to the table. Any
solution will also have to protect the religious interests of Jews,
Christians and Muslims the world over. On Palestinian refugees the two
parties must strive for a just solution that is both fair and realistic.
Again, if there is to be a lasting peace, both sides will have to embrace
negotiations on these and the other tough issues before them. The goal can
be nothing less than an end to their conflict and a resolution of
outstanding claims. As we have for half a century, the United States is
ready to play an active leadership role in helping the parties along the
road to a more hopeful future. Toward the end, President Bush and I have
asked Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, Bill Burns, to
return to the region later this week for consultation.
I am also pleased to announce this morning that retired Marine Corps General
Anthony Zinni has agreed to serve as a senior advisor to me with the
immediate mission of helping the parties achieve a durable cease-fire and to
move along the lines of the Tenet security plan and the Mitchell Committee
report. Tony Zinni is a good friend of mine. He is a distinguished soldier,
Marine, with long experience in the Middle East, particularly on security
issues.
He will be an invaluable addition to our team. I heard from Prime Minister
Sharon this morning that Israel is forming a senior-level committee to work
with the Palestinians on the negotiation and implementation of a cease-fire
and what follows from that. I also understand that Chairman Arafat remains
ready to do likewise and to engage on these issues through a similar
senior-level committee.
I have asked General Zinni to go to the region and remain in the region to
work with these two committees and to lend our strongest efforts to the
establishment of a cease-fire. Get that cease-fire in place and other things
can start to happen. Without that cease-fire, we are still trapped in the
quicksand of hatred.
I expect these new committees with General Zinni's participation, to begin
working in the very, very near future. To help this process, the United
States remains ready to contribute actively to a third-party monitoring and
verification mechanism acceptable to both parties. With a successful
cease-fire and as we move forward on the Mitchell report and Tenet work
plan, we will work urgently with our international partners on an economic
reconstruction effort to help rebuild the Palestinian economy.
(APPLAUSE)
We cannot hope to turn the current situation around by acting alone, nor
should we want to. As in Madrid, so, too, does our current quest for a
better future for Israelis and Palestinians depend on the support of our
friends. We look forward to continuing to work closely with Egypt and
Jordan, with the European Union, the United Nations secretary general, with
Russia and our many other partners in this effort. They have been so
helpful. They all stand behind the Mitchell committee report.
My friends, mistakes in our effort are enormous. It would be a tragedy to
divert the energies and tolerance of another generation of young people from
peace and prosperity to war and survival. It will be a tragedy to sacrifice
so many more potential presidents and prime ministers and peacemakers and
poets to this cruel conflict. It is time--now it is past time--to end this
terrible toll on the future.
It is time--past time--to bring the violence to an end and to seek a better
day.
(APPLAUSE)
Today is the 24th anniversary of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat's historic
visit of peace and reconciliation to Jerusalem. As we work to make our
vision a reality, we should recall the vision and courage of President Sadat
and of the region's other great peace-makers--Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin and Jordan's King Hussein. They are no longer with us, but their
legacy lives on and inspires us.
President Bush and I are determined to pursue this quest and, with the
peoples of the Middle East, to make the vision of a region at peace a
reality. History--history--fate and success have combined to compel American
leadership in the Middle East and around the globe. We welcome the
challenge. We welcome the opportunity to use our power and influence to make
the world a better place for all of God's children.
Thank you very much.
Transcript care of eMediaMillworks.