News

14 March 1998

TEXT: CLINTON LETTER TO SENATOR DASCHLE ON NATO ENLARGEMENT

(President urges Senate to support ratification) (1030)



Washington -- In a March 14 letter to Democratic Leader Senator Thomas
Daschle, President Clinton urged members of the Senate to support
ratification of NATO enlargement. "The Alliance's enlargement will
make America safer by making NATO stronger, adding new forces and new
allies that can share our security burdens," he said.


President Clinton said NATO's "open door" commitment "has played a
vital role in ensuring that the process of enlargement benefits the
security of the entire region, not just these first three new
members," adding that the NATO allies agreed during the Madrid summit
last summer to examine enlargement of the Alliance at the next summit.


"For these reasons," he said, "I strongly urge the Senate to reject
any effort to mandate a pause on the process of enlargement. Such a
mandate is unnecessary and unwise, for it would reduce our own
country's flexibility and leverage, fracture NATO's open door
consensus, and draw a new and potentially destabilizing dividing line
in Europe."


(Begin text)



THE WHITE HOUSE

Washington



March 14, 1998



Dear Mr. Leader:



The Senate will soon act on the proposed accession of Poland, Hungary,
and the Czech Republic to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. I
want to thank you for the energetic and bipartisan leadership that
you, Majority Leader Lott, and many others have demonstrated on this
historic initiative. The enlargement of NATO directly will benefit
America's security, and I urge all members of the Senate to support
its ratification.


The addition of these countries to NATO is an essential part of our
effort to consolidate the stability and security that resulted from
the end of the Cold War. The Alliance's enlargement will make America
safer by making NATO stronger, adding new forces and new allies that
can share our security burdens. NATO's core mission will remain the
collective defense of the territory of its members, and neither the
addition of new members nor NATO's other adaptations to Europe's new
security, environment will change that.


The accession of these three countries also will help make Europe more
stable; already the prospect of membership has encouraged states
throughout the region to accelerate reforms, resolve disputes, and
improve cooperation. In addition, adding these states to NATO --
combined with other efforts to reach out to all of the region's new
democracies -- will help to erase the Cold War dividing line and
contribute to our strategic goal of building an undivided, democratic,
and peaceful Europe.


The addition of these states to NATO, which will yield tremendous
benefits to our own security, is also affordable. After extensive
review of this proposal by NATO, our administration, and the Congress,
we now have strong basis to believe that the costs to the U.S. will be
about $400 million for the United States over the next ten years, and
that the total costs will be equitably shared with our current and new
allies.


There are other steps we will need to take together in order to help
ensure the security of the transatlantic area. We are moving ahead
with efforts to increase cooperation with the Russian Federation and
to build on the openings for constructive dialogue created by the
NATO-Russia Founding Act. I am committed to continue efforts with
Russia and other countries to reduce our nuclear stockpiles, combat
the dangers of proliferation, and stabilize arms levels across Europe.
We must continue working together to create the opportunity for a
lasting peace in Bosnia and the Balkans. We will continue working with
the European Union, which also is adding members, and which makes its
own important contribution to Europe's stability.


NATO is the cornerstone of our transatlantic security. The Alliance
has proven its value -- through the Partnership for Peace program and
many other efforts -- in projecting stability throughout Europe. For
that same reason, we must leave the door open to the addition of other
qualified new members in the future. The "open door" commitment made
by all the allies has played a vital role in ensuring that the process
of enlargement benefits the security of the entire region, not just
these first three new members.


At last summer's summit in Madrid, NATO agreed to examine the process
of the Alliance's enlargement at our next summit. At this point,
however, neither NATO nor my administration has made any decisions or
commitments about when the next invitations for membership should be
extended, or to whom. I consulted broadly with Congress on decisions
about admission of these first three countries, and I pledge the same
pattern of consultation before any decisions on these matters in the
future. In any case, any future addition of members will require the
advice and consent of the Senate.


For these reasons, I strongly urge the Senate to reject any effort to
mandate a pause on the process of enlargement. Such a mandate is
unnecessary and unwise, for it would reduce our own country's
flexibility and leverage, fracture NATO's open door consensus, and
draw a new and potentially destabilizing dividing line in Europe.


I am gratified by the outstanding cooperation between our two branches
of government, and between both parties, that has been a part of the
ratification effort. I commend you for the creation of the Senate's
NATO Observer Group, which has worked closely with the administration
in development of this policy, and I commend Senators Helms and Biden
and the Foreign Relations Committee, as well as other committees, for
their thorough examination of the complex questions involved in NATO's
enlargement.


That kind of bipartisan cooperation was indispensable to our
successful efforts throughout the Cold War to sustain a strong
Alliance, to defend our security, and to pursue the goal of freedom
and democracy across Europe. In the same spirit, I hope the Senate
will draw together on the question of NATO's enlargement. By doing so,
the Senate can help signal America's continuing engagement in Europe,
our commitment to a strong NATO Alliance, and our determination to
build a foundation for transatlantic security into the next century.


Sincerely,



/signed/ Bill



The Honorable Thomas A. Daschle

Democratic Leader

United States Senate

Washington, D.C. 20510



(End text)