President Clinton's Weekly Radio Address
September 7, 1996
Good morning. Let me begin by saying our thoughts and
prayers are with those in the Southeastern part of our nation
who have been affected by Hurricane Fran.
Our FEMA director, James Lee Witt, and other officials from
our administration are in the region, and we'll do everything
we can to help the people build back from this terrible
storm.
This week, our nation's armed forces once again have shown
their extraordinary skill and strength, this time in a
critical mission in Iraq. I ordered our military to take
strong action after Saddam Hussein, in the face of clear
warnings from the international community, attacked and
seized the Kurdish-controlled city of Irbil in northern Iraq.
Our missile strikes against Saddam's air defense sites in
Southern Iraq made it possible for us to expand the "no-fly
zone" that has been in place over southern Iraq, the staging
ground for the Kuwait invasion in 1990 and the area where
Saddam massed its troops and menaced Kuwait again in 1994.
We have denied Saddam control of the skies from the suburbs
of Baghdad to the Kuwaiti border. Our action has reduced his
ability to strike out against his neighbors and increased our
ability to prevent future acts of violence and aggression.
As a result of our efforts, Saddam is now strategically worse
off than he was before he crossed the lines imposed by the
international community. Once more, we have seen that at
home and abroad, our servicemen and women go the extra mile
for us.
And we must go the extra mile for them. Today, I am
announcing that I intend to sign the defense authorization
bill for 1997 now before the Congress. This bill makes good
on our pledge to give our armed forces the finest equipment
there is so that they have the technological edge to prevail
on the battlefields of tomorrow.
It also carries forward our commitment give our troops the
quality of life they deserve by funding family and troop
housing improvements that we want and by providing a raise of
3 percent, nearly 1 percent beyond what the law automatically
provides now.
The dangers our troops face every day underscore the
importance of continuing our work against the forces of
destruction. In particular, we must redouble our efforts to
stop the spread of weapons of mass destruction, including
chemical weapons such as those that Iraq and other rogue
nations have developed.
This effort has taken on new urgency now that terrorists can
also turn to chemical weapons, whose terrible impact we saw
in the sarin gas attack last year in the Tokyo subway.
In the week to come, the Senate faces an historic opportunity
to take chemical weapons out of military arsenals and help
keep them out of the hands of terrorists. The Senate will
vote on ratification of the Chemical Weapons Convention.
By voting for this treaty, the Senate can help to banish
poison gas from the earth and make America's citizens and
soldiers much more secure. The convention requires all who
sign it to destroy their chemical weapon stockpiles and to
forswear developing, producing or acquiring chemical
weapons.
It will dramatically reduce the chance of American troops
facing such weapons on the battlefield, which is why our
military leaders strongly support the treaty. What's more,
the treaty provides a strong system of verification,
including inspections of suspicious facilities on short
notice.
I ask the leaders of both parties in Congress, to pull
together and pass this treaty. It will make life tougher for
rogue states like Iraq. Those few nations that refuse to
sign will find themselves increasingly isolated.
Tough new trade controls will prohibit anyone from selling
them ingredients for chemical weapons, making it more
difficult for them to build the weapons.
The treaty will increase the safety of our citizens at home
as well as our troops in the field. The destruction of
current stockpiles, including at least 40,000 tons of poison
gas in Russia alone, will put the largest potential sources
of chemical weapons out of the reach of terrorists, and the
trade controls will deny terrorists easy access to the
ingredients they seek.
Of course, these controls can never be perfect, but the
convention will give us new and vital tools for preventing a
terrorist attack involving chemical weapons. By tying the
United States into a global verification network and
strengthening our intelligence sharing with the international
community, this treaty can be an early warning that is
essential for combating terrorism.
Congressional action on the Chemical Weapons Convention will
also strengthen the hand of our law enforcement officials
while protecting our civil liberties. Right now, we have a
limited ability to investigate people suspected of planning a
chemical attack.
Today, for example, there is no federal law on the books
prohibiting someone from actually cooking up poison gas. The
legislation that is needed to put the treaty into place would
change that and give us the most powerful tools available to
investigate the development, production, transfer or
acquisition of chemical weapons, as well as their actual use.
We in America have been very fortunate in never experiencing
a terrorist attack with chemical weapons. Japan, the only
country that has suffered such an attack, saw the value of
the Chemical Weapons Convention instantly. Within one month
of the sarin gas attack in Tokyo, Japan completed
ratification of the convention.
Let's not wait. For the safety of our troops and to fight
terror here and around the globe, the Senate should ratify
the Chemical Weapons Convention now.
Thanks for listening.
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