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For Immediate ReleaseTHE WHITE HOUSE
 Office of the Press Secretary
 (Mexico City, Mexico)
 
 
May 6, 1997
 
 
 PRESS CONFERENCE OF PRESIDENT CLINTON
 AND PRESIDENT ZEDILLO
 
Los Pinos Presidential Palace
 Mexico City, Mexico
 
                PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  President Clinton, ladies and gentlemen 
from the media from the United States and from Mexico, once again I would like 
to express the satisfaction of my government and the people of Mexico for the 
visit of President Clinton.  We are truly very pleased that President Clinton 
is beginning his tour here in Latin America starting in Mexico.  We are also 
especially pleased by the results of the work of the Mexico-U.S. Binational 
Commission and by the agreement that will be materialized today.
                 
                President Clinton and I have heard the report of the trade 
relations between Mexico and the United States.  It is very encouraging that 
from the beginning of NAFTA our trade has increased over 60 percent, and now 
accounts for close to $150 billion U.S. dollars per year.  And this 
represents, above all, more and improved economic opportunities and more and 
improved jobs for Mexicans as well as for U.S. citizens.
               
                This is very encouraging in intensifying our efforts in order 
to reach agreement in the fields that are still pending.  This effort has also 
encouraged us to reaffirm the commitment to NAFTA and to work so that at the 
summit meeting in Chile next year we will provide an important impulse to a 
creation of free trade in the American continent.
                
                The Mexican government is very pleased with the agreements we 
have reached in order to promote educational, scientific and cultural 
exchanges, as well as to protect the environment and nature, particularly 
along the border area, our common border.  These agreements prove that we are 
united by interest in the conditions in which our communities live -- the 
conditions of the health and the safety of the families.  
                 
                We are particularly satisfied that President Clinton and I 
will be signing the Declaration of the Mexican-U.S. Alliance Against Drugs.  
Our alliance will be based on mutual 
,
trust and on our commitment as heads of state that the 
collaboration between our countries will progress in keeping with 
fundamental principles.  These principles include:  the absolute 
respect of sovereignty and territorial jurisdiction of Mexico and 
of the United States; shared responsibility in facing the problem 
of illegal drugs and related crimes such as money laundering and 
weapons trafficking; a comprehensive fight against drugs, 
attaching the same priority to all aspects of the problem;  
balance and reciprocity in actions, programs and guidelines to 
take on the threat of drugs in both countries; and effective law 
enforcement in both nations.
              
             Based on these principles and based on the joint 
assessments we received today -- President Clinton and I both 
received this -- Mexico and the United States now has a shared 
vision of the magnitude of the problem and we share the will to 
combat the problem with all of the resources within our reach.
              
             The declaration we will be signing contains specific 
objectives.  We have given instructions to our governments to 
prepare a common strategy in order to follow through with the 
objectives and to prepare plans for reciprocal implementation.  A 
particularly pleasing aspect is that the declaration includes the 
intention to work together, jointly, in order to have a 
hemispheric agreement against illegal trafficking of weapons, and 
also an agreement for the extraordinary U.N. Assembly on Drugs 
next year.
              
             The Mexican government appreciates the sensitivity 
of President Clinton in terms of the Mexicans' rights and the 
dignity of Mexicans in his country.  Thus, it is very pleasing 
that, today, we will also sign a Joint Declaration on Migration .
For the past two years, our governments have made important 
progress in dealing bilaterally with issues such as consular 
protection and the human rights of migrants, as well as the 
efforts to combat trafficking in human beings.  Today we have 
reaffirmed the commitment of both governments to strengthen 
bilateral cooperation in order to deal with the migration 
phenomenon.  
              
             We have agreed to base our work on three basic 
principles.  One, the sovereign right of every nation to apply 
its migration laws however it deems most appropriate for its 
national interests, always in keeping with international law and 
in a spirit of bilateral cooperation.  The second principle is 
that of absolute compliance with the objectives of the memorandum 
of understanding on consular protection of Mexicans in the United 
States, which was signed almost one year ago, particularly in the 
respect of human rights of migrants.  And the third principle is 
to deal with the migration phenomenon in a comprehensive view 
which is mutually beneficial and will make it possible to 
conserve family unity and to protect the dignity of human beings.
              
             Based on these principles, this establishes the 
commitments of our governments to protect the rights of migrants 
and to promote the procurement of justice for migrants, as well 
as the respect of due legal process in the application or the 
enforcement of migration laws.  There is also a shared commitment 
to ensure safe repatriation and orderly repatriation of migrants 
and apply new measures to reduce violence along the border, and 
to combat trafficking in human beings and falsification of 
documents.  
              
             In order to ensure a comprehensive view on 
migration, we will examine scientific analysis which will be the 
result of binational cooperation.  This reflects the cooperation 
and the goodwill of our governments to create a border whose 
communities are joined by friendship and cooperation, not by 
conflict.  We want appropriate, just and harmonious development.  
The visit of President Clinton and the agreements signed and to 
be signed are a firm step in our relationship of friendship, 
respect and cooperation which will benefit both Mexico and the 
United States.  
              
             Once again I would like to thank President Clinton 
for his visit and also ask him to address you at this time, 
before we take the questions from our friends from the media.
              
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  Thank you.  Thank you, Mr. 
President.  To all the members of the Mexican government here and 
our hosts, the members of the American delegation, the members of 
the Cabinet administration and the members of Congress.  This is 
my first trip to Mexico as President, my fifth occasion to be in 
your country in my lifetime, and I'm very pleased to be back.  As 
you know, I had planned to be here a month ago, but I literally 
got a bad break and couldn't come.  So I'm very happy that we're 
able to consummate this trip today.
 
             As President Zedillo has said just a short while 
ago, we heard the reports of the United States-Mexico Binational 
Commission, a remarkable Cabinet-level group that oversees the 
day to day interaction of our governments.  The presentations 
demonstrate vividly the remarkable depth and breadth of our 
relationship.  No two countries are working together on more 
important issues, with a more direct effect on the lives of their 
people than Mexico and the United States.
 
             The reports demonstrate that for the most part, we 
do agree on the opportunities and the problems before us, and in 
a few moments the President and I will sign joint declarations on 
drugs and migration.  They demonstrate that, more than in the 
past, we also agree on solutions and that we are prepared to 
carry forward our cooperation to a higher level.
 
             We share more than a 2,000-mile border, and, more 
importantly, we also share a vision of what the border should be 
in the 21st century -- a safe, clean, efficient model of 
prosperity and cooperation joining our people, not a barrier that 
divides them.
 
             The Joint Declaration on Migration makes clear that 
we both see our border as a dynamic living space, with complex 
problems to be sure and real opportunities, both of which require 
a comprehensive approach.  The declaration commits both our 
governments to improve how we manage the border.  We will ensure 
that the human rights of all migrants are respected, regardless 
of their status, expand public information campaigns warning 
migrants of dangerous crossings, reduce violence and criminality 
at the border, and combat the terrible practice of alien 
smuggling.
 
             The issue of immigration raises passions on both 
sides of our border.  I'm proud of our tradition of generous 
legal immigration.  I will do everything I can to preserve it.  I 
deeply believe that America's diversity is our greatest source of 
strength for the future.  There is no more powerful proof of that 
than the remarkable contributions Mexican Americans have made to 
our country in every walk of life and to my administration.
 
             But to maintain safe and orderly immigration and to 
do justice by the hundreds of thousands of people who legally 
immigrate to the United States every year, we must take effective 
action to stop illegal immigration.  Our new immigration law will 
help us to do that.  In applying the law and in our overall 
approach to immigration, we must balance control with common 
sense and compassion.  
 
             I am very pleased that the balanced budget agreement 
I reached with our Congress last week restores certain benefits 
to some legal immigrants.  I will continue to work with Congress 
to correct some aspects of the immigration law.  We will ensure 
respect for human rights and seek to apply the law humanely, with 
 
 
special concern for children and for families.  There will be no 
mass deportations and no discrimination.  But I am also 
determined to help our Southern neighbors make the most of their 
rich economic and social potential, because, ultimately, that's 
the best way to give people the confidence they need to make 
their futures at home.
 
             President Zedillo and I will also sign a Joint 
Alliance Against Drugs.  With this alliance, we recognize the 
dangers we both face, the responsibilities we both share.  
Illegal narcotics are not simply a Mexican problem -- far from 
it.  But neither are they simply an American problem.  They are 
our common problem and we must find a common solution.
 
             The alliance takes our already unprecedented 
cooperation to a new level.  It respects the laws and sovereignty 
of our countries, while committing us to 15 concrete goals, to 
put in place a shared strategy by the end of this year.  We've 
agreed to intensify our work on money-laundering investigations, 
to increase our cooperation on extraditions, to facilitate trials 
on both sides of the border, to apply profits seized from drug 
traffickers directly to law enforcement purposes, and to step up 
our fight against gun-running, including a hemispheric agreement 
outlawing the trafficking in illegal arms.
 
             These two declarations prove that we can work 
through our problems in ways that work for both of us.  But this 
relationship is about far more than resolving our problems.  It's 
about seizing the real opportunities to make our people more 
prosperous and more secure on the edge of a new century.  That's 
what we did with NAFTA, which has helped to raise our exports to 
Mexico to an all-time high and helped Mexico to bounce back from 
a wrenching recession that caused great hardship to people here.
 
             Now, as President Zedillo and I agreed, we must push 
forward on NAFTA's promise to help us clean up the environment, 
especially along the border, and to improve working conditions 
and safeguard worker rights on both sides of the border.
 
             I'm especially pleased with the new steps we have 
taken to protect the environment and to promote education.  The 
United States will provide $170 million in Environmental 
Protection Agency funds for border water projects.  We will work 
with Mexico to attract private sector investments and pollution 
prevention.  We will work to preserve endangered species and 
natural forests.  
 
             We have also agreed to expand the Fulbright 
Scholarship program -- a favorite one of mine because it was 
named for my mentor and one of the most outstanding people ever 
to come from my home state.  This will double the number of 
Fulbright scholars for Mexicans studying the United States, with 
a special focus on science and technology.
 
             Our partnership with Mexico for opportunity, 
security and prosperity is fundamental to the future of both our 
peoples.  Today we have strengthened that partnership.  Our 
prospect for shaping that future for the children are brighter, 
and I feel very, very good about what we have done and quite 
optimistic about what we will do in the days and years ahead.
 
             Thank you, Mr. President.
 
             (The declaration is signed.)    
 
             Q    I would like to address my question to 
President Clinton.  President Clinton, are you concerned by the 
elections which will take place here in Mexico next June, and 
particularly, can you imagine a congress in Mexico without a 
pre-majority?
 
 
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  I'm actually more concerned 
about the American Congress.  (Laughter.)  Let me say, I applaud 
the movement toward political reform and electoral reform in 
Mexico just as I have applauded and supported the movement toward 
economic reform.
 
             The judgments in the election are for the Mexican 
people to make and for all the rest of us who support democracy 
and freedom and human rights to support.  I welcome the fact that 
so many observers have been invited here to watch it take place, 
and I respect President Zedillo for supporting this process.
 
             Q    President Zedillo and President Clinton, a U.N. 
report out last month, just last month, said that the extensive 
focus on free-market economic reforms by themselves have failed 
to lift much of Latin America, including Mexico out of poverty -- 
the population out of poverty -- and it suggests that more 
attention needs to be spent on social spending as at least a 
complimentary action.
 
             I'm wondering if you agree with that assessment, if 
you feel that maybe your extensive focus on free-market reforms 
need to be balanced in any degree, and if you can offer any kind 
of prediction on how many years into the future it will be before 
the countries of Latin America and Mexico specifically reach the 
level of society-wide economic prosperity, that issues that 
you've been dealing with such as immigration and drug-trafficking 
largely dry up on their own or begin to dry up on their own.  
Thank you.
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  Thank you very much.  I will let 
others talk about the situation of other sister nations in Latin 
America and I'll refer to the case of Mexico.  One of the reasons 
why we Mexicans have been reinforcing our economic structure -- 
and this has taken place for just over 10 years -- is precisely 
being able to have a material base which arises from vigorous and 
sustained economic growth so as to be able to support more 
ambitious social policies which will make it possible to more 
effectively combat poverty and inequality, which are the problems 
that our nation is suffering from.
 
             I think it's very important to underscore the fact 
that many social problems, many of the problems of inequality and 
poverty in Mexico today -- and I think there are other countries 
of Latin America suffering them as well -- their basic source is 
found in government policies which in past decades stressed 
government control over economic processes too much.  The long 
period of stagnation in our economy cannot be tied to, nor should 
it be tied in any way, to the processes of economic 
liberalization -- quite the contrary.  
 
             I think that thanks to these policies of opening up 
towards foreign countries and the internal liberalization of our 
economies, and also adjusting the size of the Mexican government 
as far as the control of the economy is concerned means that we 
will now be able to open up a period of sustained growth, dynamic 
growth, which will make it possible for us to expand the reach, 
the objectives, the sense and the results of our social policies.
 
             Q    President Clinton, are you familiar with a list 
of Mexicans that are extraditable and would you be willing to 
review the extradition treaty?  
 
             President Zedillo, does this new relationship imply 
a new concept of sovereignty?
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  Well, let me say that we have 
enjoyed an unprecedented amount of cooperation related to common 
criminal and drug problems in a way designed to strengthen our 
sovereignty, not to undermine it.  So we have worked with Mexico 
in grievous cases on extraditions and I appreciate that, just as 
 
 
we are trying to work with Mexico in providing helicopters to 
support eradication, or computer technology to help Mexico work 
with us on money laundering, or working on the preventive aspects 
of the narcotics problem.  So I believe that extradition 
partnerships that are fair, equal and balanced reinforce a 
nation's sovereignty, they don't weaken it.  And it's an 
important part of our long-term strategy to work together on the 
drug issue.
 
             Terry.
 
             Q    Mr. President, I'd like to ask you about a 
question back in the United States.  The Whitewater prosecutors 
assert that Mrs. Clinton's testimony on several issues has 
changed over time or differs from that of other witnesses.  Do 
you have any idea of what the discrepancies might be?  And what 
does this suggest to you about the course of the investigation?  
Is it becoming more troublesome for Mrs. Clinton?
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  No and no.
 
             Q    Why is that, sir?
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  Well, you've been watching it 
for years -- if you don't know, I can't help you.
 
             Q    President, four years after NAFTA was signed, 
are the terms fully enforced, or do you believe that it is 
necessary to carry out any changes, amendments, or are some of 
the clauses obsolete?  Thank you.
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  I believe that the North 
American Free Trade Agreement has performed very clearly in 
keeping with the objectives that the three countries 
participating in the agreement had decided on.  And proof of this 
are the figures of the three countries, the trade figures of the 
three countries.  Just a moment ago I mentioned that in bilateral 
trade alone between the United States and Mexico during NAFTA 
trade has grown over 60 percent -- that is, almost close to 70 
percent.  And that is despite the fact that in 1995 in our 
country we had an economic recession.
 
             Thus, I believe that the terms under which NAFTA was 
negotiated were very good terms.  And I think that within the 
agreement we have very clear and transparent mechanisms to deal 
with any kind of dispute, and I believe that at this time there 
is no significant reason from the Mexican perspective to review 
the contents of NAFTA.
 
             If you'll allow me, because just a moment ago one 
question went unanswered, the second part of your question.  I 
would merely like to say that under no circumstances does this 
new understanding based on respect between Mexico and the United 
States, in no way does it mean that the concept of sovereignty 
has changed -- on the contrary.  It is very pleasing for me as a 
President and as a representative of the people of Mexico that in 
a document which we just signed, that President Clinton and I 
just signed, respecting this alliance against drugs, the first 
principle which we mutually recognize is -- and I will read it -- 
is the absolute respect for the sovereignty and territorial 
jurisdiction of both Mexico and the United States of America.  
 
             Q    Mr. President, as has been discussed a great 
deal in the last two days, the two nations have a long history 
together and sensitivities have grown up as a result of 
involvement with one another, including involvement during war.  
Later today, you will be laying a wreath at the tomb of Mexican 
cadets who were actually boys at the time that they died at the 
hands of American troops.  This is one of those issues in which 
the Mexicans have been very sensitive.  These boys are heroes, 
and are seen basically as children who died in war. 
 
 
 
             My question is, are you going there and laying that 
wreath in any way as a gesture of apology or atonement for action 
by the U.S. military?
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  I'm going there as a gesture of 
respect -- not only respect for their lives, but respect for the 
patriotism and the integrity of the people who have served this 
country.  
 
             President Truman went there as well when he was 
here, and it's my understanding that no one has gone since.  But 
I think other heads of states regularly go there, and I do not 
believe the President of the United States should decline to go 
because of what happened between our two countries a long time 
ago.
 
             You know, we are trying to heal the wounds of war 
with nations with whom we fought even more recently.  I'm sending 
Pete Peterson, who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam for over six 
years, to Vietnam as the new ambassador.  It seems to me that if 
the United States wants to lead the world in the direction we say 
we do, then it is imperative for us to respect our friends and 
neighbors especially, in countries around the world, and honor 
their symbols of national honor.  And I'm proud to be able to do 
this. 
 
             Let me just say, since the President clarified an 
answer he gave, let me say to Mr. Hunt I did not mean to be 
flippant.  What I meant to say was I know of no factual 
discrepancy, period.  I am unaware of one.  But if you took the 
four of you sitting there together on the front row and got you 
all together again, 13 to 19 years later and asked you precisely 
what happened on this day, you might have slightly different 
memories.  I have no idea that there is any such discrepancy, but 
I have no reason to be concerned about it whatever.  We've both 
done our best to answer all the questions that were asked of us, 
and already tens of millions of dollars have been spent on this, 
and I am just perfectly comfortable with where we are.
 
             Q    President Clinton, the question is regarding 
what you just mentioned, that is that you would be working with 
your Congress on some aspects of the migration law.  What aspects 
would these be, and how would they benefit our citizens in the 
United States?
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  Well, let me just say, first of 
all, we've cleared a big hurdle, I think, in the budget 
agreement, dealing with the eligibility of legal immigrants for 
public assistance when, through no fault of their own, they're 
put into some distress.  And then there are a number of other 
issues which have been raised about the administration of this 
law and the extent to which it might prompt in a way that 
Congress never really intended the virtual permanent breakup of 
families, especially the people who maybe had visas even there to 
come into the country in the first place.
 
             So I'm working with Congress on it.  But I hope you 
will understand when I tell you that since this is such a 
terrifically emotional issue, until we have a clear approach and 
I understand who is on what side here, the more I say about it, I 
might be endangering my chances to succeed.  I think we all know 
what the most significant potential problems of the law are.  I 
still support its fundamental traditions.  I support -- I'm glad 
I -- I would sign the law again tomorrow if I had to because it 
gives us the ability to control our borders better, to get 
illegal immigrants out of the workplace and to take illegal 
immigrants who come into the criminal justice system and remove 
them quicker.  So I think that's all to the good.
 
             I'm concerned about undue family breakup and 
 
 
disqualifying people who may not deserve it virtually permanently 
from applying for citizenship.  
 
             Q    A question for both men.  Have you resolved the 
issue of whether American drug agents operating in Mexico can 
carry sidearms for their own protection?  And if you have, given 
the level of trust -- or distrust -- between our two countries, 
such that it takes a presidential meeting to resolve an issue 
like that, why should anyone believe that the United States and 
Mexico would be able to cooperate, exchange highly sensitive 
intelligence information on drug trafficking or drug smuggling, 
or is the talk of cooperation just that -- talk?
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  If you will allow me, in the 
declaration that we've just signed, that President Clinton and I 
have just signed, it is very clear on two aspects.  The first 
aspect, having to do with the principles -- and I referred to 
them a moment ago, but I will refer to them again -- and that is 
the absolute respect for the sovereignty and territorial 
jurisdiction of both Mexico and the United States.  
 
             And the other aspect, which is very important for 
the Mexican government and is expressed as one of the specific 
tasks to be undertaken by both governments, and it reads, 
literally, "The governments will do whatever necessary to ensure 
the protection of the officials in charge of enforcing the law." 
And this naturally is on both sides of the border, applicable for 
both sides of the border.
 
             This principle and this recommendation which we've 
made to our governments must be translated into practical 
measures which obviously are in keeping with both of the 
previously mentioned principles.  I have already answered this 
question, the question that you've put me, in the past, and I can 
assure you that we will comply both with the principles that both 
governments have agreed to, as well as with the objective of 
providing these people with safety.  
 
             Naturally, it would not be appropriate for us to 
refer to the specific mechanisms with which within the principle 
for the respective sovereignty we will be protecting these law 
enforcement agents.  I am sure that President Clinton, nor 
myself, would ever make public the details which might jeopardize 
the safety of these people.  Yet our commitment in both areas is 
very clear.
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  -- the second half of your 
question.  You said why should anyone believe that we can work 
together.  And let's be frank here among friends.  On the 
American side the problems are we have less than five percent of 
the world's population and we consume about half the drugs.  And 
we're more than happy every year, American citizens, to give 
billions of dollars that winds up in the hands of narco 
traffickers.  That's our big problem.  Our second problem is that 
while we are increasing our capacity to deal with it, we have not 
succeeded in reducing the demand or completely controlling the 
border on our side.  
 
             Now, the Mexican problem is that narco traffickers 
can destroy the fabric of civil society.  They can undermine the 
integrity of any society.  And they go after places with open 
spaces and a vulnerability                         to organize 
money and violence.  And so they also have to worry about 
corruption, as anyone would targeted with that kind of money.
 
             But you say how can we rely on them to cooperate.  
Let me talk about some facts that we never -- that we 
under-report.  And I don't mean that as a criticism; I mean we 
do, too, we in public life.  We now have 202 cooperative 
money-laundering ventures going now; 54 of them are complete, 
joint investigations.  Last year, 200 law enforcement officers in 
 
 
Mexico lost their lives in the line of duty -- 200.  And 
extraditions, seizures, prosecutions and eradications are all up 
in the last year.
 
             So I believe that this government is trying to work 
with us.  And I believe that the chances of our succeeding in 
dealing with our problems, and the chances of their succeeding in 
dealing with their problems are dramatically heightened if we 
work together -- and be honest about our problems, but also not 
deny good-faith efforts when they exist.  All those 200 people 
had families that grieved for them.  They laid down their lives 
trying to fight -- roll back the narco traffickers, roll back 
corruption, roll back crime.  And it seems to me that their lives 
alone are evidence that we ought to be working to cooperate.
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  In view of the time constraints, 
we will take one last question.  
 
             Q    Thank you.  Good afternoon.  President Zedillo, 
in view of the magnitude of the fight against drug trafficking, 
is it possible that Mexico will accept the $6 million in cash 
offered by the United States to combat drugs as an additional 
resource to combat drug trafficking?
 
             And, President Clinton, how did your view or your 
vision of Mexico change when you arrived here after your meeting 
with President Zedillo, and particularly, what was your concept 
after having visited the Museum of Anthropology?  Thank you.
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  In terms of the principle of 
mutual respect and cooperation that the United States of America 
and Mexico have developed in fighting drug trafficking, there 
have been different occasions on which we have received material 
support for this struggle, which is a struggle that we all 
participate in.
 
             I am not informed of the details of the resources 
that you've mentioned.  I am sure that within the context of the 
agreement that we have reached we will examine in all detail this 
offer, and in keeping with the principles and objectives that 
I've mentioned we will reach a decision in this regard.
 
             PRESIDENT CLINTON:  Let me briefly say that I don't 
know that my view of our relationship has changed since I got 
here yesterday afternoon, but I have been reinforced in my 
conviction that we can make progress on all these fronts as long 
as we do it in a genuine atmosphere of mutual respect, and as 
long as we're completely honest about our differences and willing 
to work hard to overcome them, and we tell the people the facts 
about the progress we are making and the problems we have.  So I 
feel very much reassured.
 
             And in terms of going to the Anthropological Museum, 
I haven't been there since the 1970s.  I was a young man in a 
different line of work back then.  And I think the President can 
tell you that I think I kept him about an hour longer than I was 
supposed to, and I would probably still be there if it were up to 
me.  But I hope the Mexican people are very proud of that because 
it shows, even to an outsider like me, the remarkable cultures 
which were the foundation of modern Mexico.  And it certainly 
gave me a deeper appreciation for the richness and depth of this 
country's history and the incredible talents and gifts of its 
people.  
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:   Many thanks.
 
             THE PRESIDENT:  One more -- equal time?  (Laughter.)
 
             Q  Mr. President, you mentioned the responsibilities 
that the United States bears for the international drug problem 
because of the massive demand in the United States.  Can you give 
 
 
us some of your ideas -- ideas of new efforts that you might have 
to help to combat this big demand?
 
             THE PRESIDENT:  First of all, let me say, I have 
--we could talk all day about this, and I have to be brief.  But 
the first thing I would urge you to do is to never forget the 
plan that General McCaffrey has filed now, because General 
McCaffrey is a military man and when he files a plan, that's his 
mission and he intends to follow it.  And if you look at our 
budget, and if you look at our priorities, we're trying to 
implement it.
 
             But let me just mention two points, if I might.  
Number one, we are trying with the work of the Attorneys General 
of the two countries and our drug operations to intensify our 
cooperation with Mexico and to work more effectively with other 
countries to prevent drugs at their source or in transit.  
 
             Number two, we are focusing on our young people.  We 
know that we have -- and we thank God for it -- we know we've had 
a big decline in drug use among people between the ages of 18 and 
34.  So now we have to focus on the young.  And that means more 
education, more testing, more treatment.  And it means that we 
have to have a comprehensive juvenile justice youth development 
program in every community in the United States.  
 
 
 
             That's one of the reasons I strongly supported the 
Summit of Service in Philadelphia, because I believe if they 
really want to do the things that we all said we wanted to do, 
there will have to be a community-based initiative that the 
federal government supports in every community to keep our kids 
alive and keep them off drugs.  
 
             So we have to do our part.  And I'm firmly committed 
to doing it.
 
             Thank you.
 
             PRESIDENT ZEDILLO:  Muchas gracias.  (Applause.) 
 
 
President Clinton's Tour of Mexico, Costa Rica,
and Barbados        
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