إرشادات مقترحات البحث معلومات خط الزمن الفهارس الخرائط الصور الوثائق الأقسام

مقاتل من الصحراء

         



I'm asking all people of goodwill, of honesty and candor, I'm asking all of them to join us in support for this important step for a secure future, a future of peace.

We are more secure today because, for the first time since the signing of the Oslo accords, we will see concrete and verifiable commitments carried out.

Our Palestinian partners will join us in fighting terrorism. They will follow a detailed and systematic plan to fight terrorists and their infrastructure, to jail killers that have so far roamed at large, to stop vitriolic incitement, and, above all, finally, after 35 years, to cancel the articles in the Palestinian charter which call for the destruction of Israel. This means that our world today will be safer for our children and for our neighbors' children.

But it has been said here -- and it's true -- that we are just at the beginning or maybe in the middle of the road to a permanent peace.

We will soon embark on negotiations for a permanent peace settlement between our two peoples. Now, I guarantee you it will not be easy, and it will not be simple, and it will be, Mr. President, despite your best wishes, sleepless. I guarantee it. Mr. Chairman, I guarantee that to you, too.

But I am today brimming with some confidence, and not overconfidence, simply because we have overcome tremendous challenges and achieved success for both sides. Not at the expense of one side and the benefit of the other, but success and advantage and progress for both sides. And that fills me with the confidence that we are able to tackle the larger challenges that still await us and that still await our two peoples.

There are so many people that I could thank in the American delegation -- it's a wonderful one, headed by the secretary of State and Sandy Berger and George Tenet and the team that was there, Dennis and Gemal ( sp ) -- a provider of cigars and good humor. And so many others.

But I want to especially thank President Clinton. He is, if I can borrow a cliche, he is a warrior for peace. I mean, he doesn't stop. He has this ability to maintain a tireless pace and to nudge and prod and suggest and use a nimble and flexible mind to truly explore the possibilities of both sides, and never just on one side. That is a great gift, I think a precious and unique one, and it served us well.

So I thank you, Mr. President, for serving us and the cause of peace well. And I thank you, too, for your boundless optimism, without which these qualities cannot come into effect. You needed a lot of optimism.

I want to thank Chairman Arafat. Mr. Chairman, your cooperation was invaluable. And I want to thank you personally once again for the kind wishes you extended me on a birthday that I shall never forget. Thank you very much.

I want to thank Minister Sharansky. Mr. Sharansky is in Israel. He is celebrating now his daughter's bat mitzvah. I'm sure you all send him the best and excuse him for not being here. But he and Defense Minister Mordechai and Foreign Minister Ariel Sharon brought to Wye their patriotism and their commitment. They are great patriots. They are people who have put themselves in line for their country and their people. And they have brought all that experience, all that courage and all that perseverance, all that skill, and they assisted me and the state of Israel in ways that I think should be recounted and probably will repeat themselves, I hope in the near future, in a successful bid for peace.

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