President calls for action on treaty that has been 'bipartisan from the beginning'
President Clinton highlighted in his State of the Union address the need for swift
action on the Chemical Weapons Convention, which will outlaw the production, acquisition,
stockpiling, transfer and use of chemical weapons.
The President’s remarks are excerpted: “Now we must rise to a new test of leadership -- ratifying
the Chemical Weapons Convention. Make no mistake about it, it will make our troops safer from
chemical attack. It will help us to fight terrorism. We have no more important obligations,
especially in the wake of what we now know about the Gulf War.
“This treaty has been bipartisan from the beginning, supported by Republican and Democratic administrations, and
Republican and Democratic members of Congress, and already approved by 68 nations. But if we
do not act by April the 29th, when this Convention goes into force -- with or without us -- we
will lose the chance to have Americans leading and enforcing this effort. Together we must
make the Chemical Weapons Convention law so that at last we can begin to outlaw poisoned gas
from the Earth.” |
The President’s strong remarks in support of the treaty earned a standing ovation. Members
of the President’s new national security and foreign policy team were in the audience,
including Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Secretary of Defense William Cohen.
Both have championed the Convention in their first weeks on the job.
Secretary Cohen, in his first appearance before the Pentagon press corps, said of the treaty,
“I’m going to continue to work with the Senate on ratification of the Chemical Weapons
Convention. During the Reagan administration, the United States decided to eliminate its
stockpile of chemical weapons, and ratification of the Chemical Weapons Convention is going
to give us a leadership role in determining how that Convention is going to be implemented
and enforced.”
Secretary Albright spoke out forcefully in her confirmation hearing,
saying, “The CWC ... is supported by many in both parties, by the business community and
by our military. ... It is absolutely essential that the U.S. be an original party to the
CWC. Our military does not wish to use chemical weapons and the CWC is the single best
way to ensure that others don’t have the military capability to use chemical weapons.
This is totally in U.S. interests.” |