[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton (1995, Book II)]
[August 31, 1995]
[Pages 1273-1275]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]



Remarks on Arrival in Honolulu, Hawaii
August 31, 1995

    Thank you very much. Sergeant May, thank you for that introduction, 
and more importantly, thank you for your service. Governor Cayetano, 
Senator Inouye, Mayor Harris, General Lorber, Admiral Macke, members of 
the armed service, distinguished guests, honored veterans, Senator 
Akaka, Congressman Abercrombie, ladies and gentlemen: It is wonderful 
for our family and for me personally to be back in Hawaii. It is a great 
honor to be here to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the end of World 
War II.
    We come to celebrate the courage and determination of the Americans 
who brought us victory in that war. But as we do, our thoughts and 
prayers must also be with the men and women of our Armed Forces who are 
putting their bravery and their professionalism on the line in Bosnia.
    I want to restate to you and to all the American people why our 
forces and their NATO allies are engaged in the military operation 
there. The massacre of civilians in Sarajevo on

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Monday, caused by a Bosnian Serb shell, was an outrageous act in a 
terrible war and a challenge to the commitments which NATO had made to 
oppose such actions by force if necessary. The United States took the 
lead in gaining those commitments by NATO, and we must help NATO to keep 
them.
    The NATO bombing campaign and the related artillery campaign against 
the Bosnian Serb military in which our forces are taking part skillfully 
is the right response to the savagery in Sarajevo. The campaign will 
make clear to the Bosnian Serbs that they have nothing to gain and 
everything to lose by continuing to attack Sarajevo and other safe areas 
and by continuing to slaughter innocent civilians. NATO is delivering 
that message loud and clear. And I hope all of you are proud of the role 
that the members of the United States Armed Forces are playing in 
delivering that message.
    The war in Bosnia must end, but not on the battlefield, rather at 
the negotiating table. Just 2 weeks ago, we lost three of our finest 
American diplomatic representatives in a tragic accident in Bosnia as 
they were working for a negotiated peace. Today our negotiating team 
continues its work as well. And in the skies above Bosnia, our pilots 
and crews and their colleagues from other NATO countries are risking 
their lives for the same peace. We are proud of those who fly and those 
who are seeking to negotiate the peace.
    Ladies and gentlemen, it is only fitting that we begin to 
commemorate this 50th anniversary of the end of World War II here at 
Hickam Air Force Base, for it was here, right here, that the guns of war 
shattered the peace of our land and drew America into the fight for 
freedom.
    Looking out at the active duty troops who are with us today, 
representatives of the greatest fighting force in the world, standing 
watch for freedom all over the world, it is hard to imagine just how far 
our Nation had to come to win World War II. Just before 8 o'clock on 
December the 7th, 1941, when the first wave of enemy bombers swooped 
down upon our planes, parked wingtip to wingtip on this tarmac, all 231 
aircraft at Hickam were either destroyed or damaged. At Pearl Harbor, as 
all of us know all too well, the pride of the Pacific's fleet lay in 
ruins.
    But just a few hours later, just a few hours later, in the depth of 
our darkest hour, a handful of Army and Navy planes that were still able 
to fly took to the skies from Hickam in search of the enemy fleet. The 
long journey to reclaim freedom for the Pacific and for the world began 
with that first mission from this very field. And it ended 50 years ago 
this week when the forces of freedom finally triumphed over tyranny.
    In the days ahead, we will commemorate that victory, honor its 
heroes, and remember their sacrifice. But we will also celebrate more 
than the end of war; we will pay tribute to the triumph of peace. 
Through war in World War II, our people came together as never before. 
But after the war, they used their newfound sense of unity and common 
purpose at home and a sense of mission abroad to build for all of us 50 
years of security, prosperity, and opportunity.
    Today, we turn toward a new century, in a very different set of 
economic and political and social challenges. We now must draw on the 
legacy of those who won World War II and built peace and prosperity 
afterward to do our job to fulfill the spirit of that most remarkable of 
American generations. They understood the duty they owed to one another, 
to their communities, to their Nation, and to the world. After they won 
the war, they advanced the peace, the values, the liberties, and the 
opportunities that they fought and died to win.
    Here on this island of peace that knows all too well the horror of 
war, let us vow to carry forward their legacy. The World War II 
generation taught us that when the American people find strength in 
their diversity and unity in a common purpose, when we stop arguing 
about our differences and start embracing what we have in common, 
nothing, nothing, can stop us. And so I say to you, if we apply the 
lessons that the World War II generation handed down to us to the 
challenges of the 21st century, nothing will stop us.
    Thank you, and God bless you, and God bless America.
    Thank you very much. And now, as we proceed with the program, I 
would like to introduce and call forward for some remarks my friend and 
colleague, your distinguished Governor, Governor Ben Cayetano.

Note: The President spoke at 12:17 p.m. at Hickam Air Force Base. In his 
remarks, he referred to Robert May, World War II veteran and founder of 
the 11th Bomb Group Association; Gov. Benjamin J. Cayetano of Hawaii; 
Gen. John

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Lorber, USAF, Commander, Pacific Air Forces; Adm. Richard C. Macke, USN, 
Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Command; and Mayor Jeremy Harris of 
Honolulu.