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11 February 1998

TEXT: CLINTON TRANSMITTAL TO SENATE OF PROTOCOLS TO NATO TREATY

(Requests advice and consent to the ratification of them) (1820)



Washington -- President Clinton transmitted to the U.S. Senate
February 11 Protocols to the North Atlantic Treaty of 1949 on the
accession to NATO of Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic.


"These Protocols," the President said, "were opened for signature at
Brussels on December 16, 1997, and signed on behalf of the United
States of America and the other parties to the North Atlantic Treaty.
I request the advice and consent of the Senate to the ratification of
these documents, and transmit for the Senate's information the report
made to me by the Secretary of State regarding this matter."


Following is the White House text:



(begin text)



THE WHITE HOUSE



Office of the Press Secretary



February 11, 1998



TO THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES:



I transmit herewith Protocols to the North Atlantic Treaty of 1949 on
the accession of Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic. These
Protocols were opened for signature at Brussels on December 16, 1997,
and signed on behalf of the United States of America and the other
parties to the North Atlantic Treaty. I request the advice and consent
of the Senate to the ratification of these documents, and transmit for
the Senate's information the report made to me by the Secretary of
State regarding this matter.


The accession of Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic to the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) will improve the ability of the
United States to protect and advance our interests in the
transatlantic area. The end of the Cold War changed the nature of the
threats to this region, but not the fact that Europe's peace,
stability, and well-being are vital to our own national security. The
addition of these well-qualified democracies, which have demonstrated
their commitment to the values of freedom and the security of the
broader region, will help deter potential threats to Europe, deepen
the con-tinent's stability, bolster its democratic advances, erase its
artificial division, and strengthen an Alliance that has proved its
effectiveness during and since the Cold War.


NATO is not the only instrument in our efforts to help build a new and
undivided Europe, but it is our most important contributor to peace
and security for the region. NATO's steadfastness during the long
years of the Cold War, its performance in the mission it has led in
Bosnia, the strong interest of a dozen new European democracies in
becoming members, and the success of the Alliance's Partnership for
Peace program all underscore the continuing vitality of the Alliance
and the Treaty that brought it into existence.


NATO's mission in Bosnia is of particular importance. No other
multinational institution possessed the military capabilities and
political cohesiveness necessary to bring an end to the fighting in
the former Yugoslavia -- Europe's worst conflict since World War II --
and to give the people of that region a chance to build a lasting
peace. Our work in Bosnia is not yet complete, but we should be
thankful that NATO existed to unite Allies and partners in this
determined common effort. Similarly, we should welcome steps such as
the Alliance's enlargement that can strengthen its ability to meet
future challenges, beginning with NATO's core mission of collective
defense and other missions that we and our Allies may choose to
pursue.


The three states that NATO now proposes to add as full members will
make the Alliance stronger while helping to enlarge Europe's zone of
democratic stability. Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic have
been leaders in Central Europe's dramatic transformation over the past
decade and already are a part of NATO's community of values. They each
played pivotal roles in the overthrow of communist rule and
repression, and they each proved equal to the challenge of
comprehensive democratic and market reform. Together, they have helped
to make Central Europe the continent's most robust zone of economic
growth.


All three of these states will be security producers for the Alliance
and not merely security consumers. They have demonstrated this through
the accords they have reached with neighboring states, the
contributions they have made to the mission in Bosnia, the forces they
plan to commit to the Alliance, and the military modernization
programs they have already begun and pledge to continue in the years
to come at their own expense. These three states will strengthen NATO
through the addition of military resources, strategic depth, and the
prospect of greater stability in Europe's central region. American
troops have worked alongside soldiers from each of these nations in
earlier times, in the case of the Poles, dating back to our own
Revolutionary War. Our cooperation with the Poles, Hungarians, and
Czechs has contributed to our security in the past, and our Alliance
with them will contribute to our security in the years to come.


The purpose of NATO's enlargement extends beyond the security of these
three states, however, and entails a process encompassing more than
their admission to the Alliance. Accordingly, these first new members
should not and will not be the last. No qualified European democracy
is ruled out as a future member. The Alliance has agreed to review the
process of enlargement at its 1999 summit in Washington. As we prepare
for that summit, I look forward to discussing this matter with my
fellow NATO leaders. The process of enlargement, combined with the
Partnership for Peace program, the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council,
the NATO-Russia Founding Act, and NATO's new charter with Ukraine,
signify NATO's commitment to avoid any new division of Europe, and to
contribute to its progressive integration.


A democratic Russia is and should be a part of that new Europe. With
bipartisan congressional support, my Administration and my
predecessor's have worked with our Allies to support political and
economic reform in Russia and the other newly independent states and
to increase the bonds between them and the rest of Europe. NATO's
enlargement and other adaptations are consistent, not at odds, with
that policy. NATO has repeatedly demonstrated that it does not
threaten Russia and that it seeks closer and more cooperative
relations. We and our Allies welcomed the participation of Russian
forces in the mission in Bosnia.


NATO most clearly signaled its interest in a constructive relationship
through the signing in May 1997 of the NATO-Russia Founding Act. That
Act, and the Permanent Joint Council it created, help to ensure that
if Russia seeks to build a positive and peaceful future within Europe,
NATO will be a full partner in that enterprise. I understand it will
require time for the Russian people to gain a new understanding of
NATO. The Russian people, in turn, must understand that an open door
policy with regard to the addition of new members is an element of a
new NATO. In this way, we will build a new and more stable Europe of
which Russia is an integral part.


I therefore propose the ratification of these Protocols with every
expectation that we can continue to pursue productive cooperation with
the Russian Federation. I am encouraged that President Yeltsin has
pledged his government's commitment to additional progress on nuclear
and conventional arms control measures. At our summit in Helsinki, for
example, we agreed that once START II has entered into force we will
begin negotiations on a START III accord that can achieve even deeper
cuts in our strategic arsenals. Similarly, Russia's ratification of
the Chemical Weapons Convention last year demonstrated that
cooperation on a range of security matters will continue.


The Protocols of accession that I transmit to you constitute a
decision of great consequence, and they involve solemn security
commitments. The addition of new states also will entail financial
costs. While those costs will be manageable and broadly shared with
our current and new Allies, they nonetheless represent a sacrifice by
the American people.


Successful ratification of these Protocols demands not only the
Senate's advice and consent required by our Constitution, but also the
broader, bipartisan support of the American people and their
representatives. For that reason, it is encouraging that congressional
leaders in both parties and both chambers have long advocated NATO's
enlargement. I have endeavored to make the Congress an active partner
in this process. I was pleased that a bipartisan group of Senators and
Representatives accompanied the U.S. delegation at the NATO summit in
Madrid last July. Officials at all levels of my Administration have
consulted closely with the relevant committees and with the bipartisan
Senate NATO Observer Group. It is my hope that this pattern of
consultation and cooperation will ensure that NATO and our broader
European policies continue to have the sustained bipartisan support
that was so instrumental to their success throughout the decades of
the Cold War.


The American people today are the direct beneficiaries of the
extraordinary sacrifices made by our fellow citizens in the many
theaters of that "long twilight struggle," and in the two world wars
that preceded it. Those efforts aimed in large part to create across
the breadth of Europe a lasting, democratic peace. The enlargement of
NATO represents an indispensable part of today's program to finish
building such a peace, and therefore to repay a portion of the debt we
owe to those who went before us in the quest for freedom and security.


The rise of new challenges in other regions does not in any way
diminish the necessity of consolidating the increased level of
security that Europe has attained at such high cost. To the contrary,
our policy in Europe, including the Protocols I transmit herewith, can
help preserve today's more favorable security environment in the
transatlantic area, thus making it possible to focus attention and
resources elsewhere while providing us with additional Allies and
partners to help share our security burdens.


The century we are now completing has been the bloodiest in all of
human history. Its lessons should be clear to us: the wisdom of
deterrence, the value of strong Alliances, the potential for
overcoming past divisions, and the imperative of American engagement
in Europe. The NATO Alliance is one of the most important embodiments
of these truths, and it is in the interest of the United States to
strengthen this proven institution and adapt it to a new era. The
addition to this Alliance of Poland, Hungary, and the Czech Republic
is an essential part of that program. It will help build a Europe that
can be integrated, democratic, free, and at peace for the first time
in its history. It can help ensure that we and our Allies and our
partners will enjoy greater security and freedom in the century that
is about to begin.


I therefore recommend that the Senate give prompt advice and consent
to ratification of thse historic Protocols.


WILLIAM J. CLINTON



The White House

February 11, 1998



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