MEDIA AVAILABILITY WITH SECRETARY OF STATE COLIN POWELL AND JASWANT SINGH,
INDIAN FOREIGN MINISTER AND MINISTER OF DEFENSE, FOLLOWING THEIR MEETING AT
THE STATE DEPARTMENT
STATE DEPARTMENT, WASHINGTON, D.C.
2:36 P.M. EDT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2001
SEC. POWELL: Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.
It's been a great pleasure for me to receive my colleague, Mr.
Singh, the foreign minister and minister of defense of India. We have
had a good discussion, as we always do, of items of interest to both
of us.
On this occasion I took the opportunity to express condolences of
the American people and my personal condolences over the events that
took place in Kashmir yesterday, that terrible terrorist act, that
heinous act that killed innocent civilians and also struck at a
government facility. It is this kind of terrorism that we are united
against.
I also expressed my condolences to my colleague over the loss of
Indian citizens at the World Trade Center, reaffirming once again that
it was an attack not just against the United States, but against the
world.
I thanked him also for the support that India and the Indian
people have given to us in this time of difficulty. We're very
grateful for that support, and we're very grateful for the good wishes
of the Indian people and the expression of support that we have
received from the prime minister.
So, my colleague, it's again a pleasure to have you here.
MIN. SINGH: Thank you very much.
Really, I cannot improve on what my colleague has just said. As
always, it has been a great pleasure. We've had a very good
discussion.
India's commitment to values that we share with the United States
of America to democracy, to free speech, to freedom of individuals, to
a certain way of life, of which terrorism is the very antithesis, and
our commitment to stand shoulder to shoulder with the United States of
America for these values, in this fight against terrorism, is in no
fashion any less than anyone else's.
We deeply, deeply grieve at the great tragedy that visited upon
the United States of America.
And as a gesture of -- as a gesture of unity with the United States,
that therefore, the prime minister commissioned me to carry two urns,
and which I presented to the mayor of New York, one of nine -- of
waters from nine of the most famous rivers of India, and then soil of
India, with a request that whenever a memorial is built there, these
be placed at the memorial as a gift and a contribution of the people
of India, as between two natural allies we continue to fight this new
menace that the world is now confronted by.
Thank you.
SEC. POWELL: Thank you, sir.
Q Mr. Secretary, has the administration been working on and
come close to unveiling a new comprehensive plan for peace in the
Middle East, including the U.S. unequivocal endorsement of statehood?
Was that plan sidetracked by the events of September 11th? And is
that plan, or some new version of it, going to be unveiled soon?
SEC. POWELL: Well, you speak of a plan, but we've had a plan
since the administration came into office in January, and that plan
was to do everything we could to get violence down to the lowest
possible levels in the region, and then, once we had the Mitchell plan
completed, to embark upon the Mitchell plan, which would bring us to a
point, through confidence-building and a cease-fire, so that we begin
negotiations again between the Palestinians and the Israelis.
As the president said this morning, there has always been a
vision in our thinking, as well as in previous administrations'
thinking, that there would be a Palestinian state that would exist at
the same time that the security of the state of Israel was also
recognized, guaranteed and accepted by all parties.
That vision is alive and well, and we hope that it will come about as
a result of negotiations between the two sides.
So in that regard, there is nothing new, and in fact, as you
heard earlier, it reflects statements also made by Prime Minister
Sharon as recently as last week. We are always reviewing what we can
do, how we can make our statements clearer, and I'm always considering
what statements I can make in order to make sure people understand the
American position.
But the events of September 11th don't really play into this. We
were hard at work before the 11th of September on trying to help in
the region, and we are hard at work after the 11th of September. In
fact, immediately after the tragedy of 11 September, I was on the
phone the very next day, trying to reenergize activities, so we can
get into the Mitchell plan.
(Cross talk.)
Q Mr. Secretary, let me ask you, sir, a question. Do you
agree with the Indian Foreign Affairs minister, Mr. Jaswant Singh,
what he said yesterday at the White House, that this is the same group
here or the same kind of people, but running at different -- in
different names in all of the world, including in India?
Now as far as this bombing in India is concerned, some officials
in India blame Pakistan. If you agree with that, and also if you're
ready to close down -- or I would say that until you close down all
the terrorist centers, training centers, in Pakistan, we can never
have peace in the area.
SEC. POWELL: We are against terrorism. This clearly was an act
of terror. And as the president made it clear in his statements and
in his speech the week before last, we are going to after terrorism in
a comprehensive way, not just in the present instance of al Qaeda and
Osama bin Laden, but terrorism as it affects nations around the world,
to include the kind of terrorism that affects India.
Q Mr. Secretary, can I follow up on that? When you talk
about the initial war on terrorism and getting Osama bin Laden and his
network, do you include freedom fighters on the Pakistani side of the
line of control in Kashmir, many of whom train in Osama bin Laden's
camps in Afghanistan, as those who need to be eliminated? Will you
get tough on the Pakistani government to do something about that? And
is -- or is there a difficulty here because of Pakistan's role?
And Mr. Foreign Minister, as the U.S. is working very closely
with Pakistan right now in the war against terrorism, do you think
that President Musharraf can be trusted as a full partner in the war
against terrorism?
Thank you.
SEC. POWELL: We are going after the al Qaeda network in its
various manifestations and Osama bin Laden and his lieutenants who are
in Afghanistan, in the first instance. And as I said previously and
the president has said repeatedly, we are going to be conducting a
campaign that goes after terrorism. And we'll use many tools --
financial tools, intelligence, law enforcement, diplomatic and
political tools -- to accomplish the mission that the president has
set before us.
MIN. SINGH: If the leadership of Pakistan and if Pakistan were
to abandon the path of violence and of terrorism and join the rest of
the international community in its fight against this evil, it would
be a development that India would welcome. Why not?
SEC. POWELL: Thank you.
MIN. SINGH: Thank you very much.
END.